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README.md |
Official Urbit Docker Image
This is the official Docker image for Urbit.
Urbit is a clean-slate OS and network for the 21st century.
Using
To use this image, you should mount a volume with a keyfile, comet file, or existing pier at /urbit
, and map ports
as described below.
Volume Mount
This image expects a volume mounted at /urbit
. This volume should initially contain one of
- A keyfile
<shipname>.key
for a galaxy, star, planet, or moon. See the setup instructions for Urbit for information on obtaining a keyfile.- e.g.
sampel-palnet.key
for the planetsampel-palnet
.
- e.g.
- An empty file with the extension
.comet
. This will cause Urbit to boot a comet in a pier named for the.comet
file (less the extension).- e.g. starting with an empty file
my-urbit-bot.comet
will result in Urbit booting a comet into the piermy-urbit-bot
under your volume.
- e.g. starting with an empty file
- An existing pier as a directory
<shipname>
. You can migrate an existing ship to a new docker container in this way by placing its pier under the volume.- e.g. if your ship is
sampel-palnet
then you likely have a directorysampel-palnet
whose path you pass to./urbit
when starting. Move your pier directory to the volume and then start the container.
- e.g. if your ship is
The first two options result in Urbit attempting to boot either the ship named by the name of the keyfile, or a comet. In both cases, after that boot is successful, the .key
or .comet
file will be removed from the volume and the pier will take its place.
In consequence, it is safe to remove the container and start a new container which mounts the same volume, e.g. to upgrade the version of the urbit binary by running a later container version. It is also possible to stop the container and then move the pier away e.g. to a location where you will run it directly with the Urbit binary.
Ports
The image includes EXPOSE
directives for TCP port 80 and UDP port 34343. Port 80
is used for Urbit's HTTP interface for both Landscape and for API calls to the ship. Port 34343
is used by Ames for ship-to-ship communication.
You can either pass the -P
flag to docker to map ports directly to the corresponding ports on the host, or map them individually with -p
flags. For local testing the latter is often convenient, for instance to remap port 80 to an unprivileged port.
Extending
You likely do not want to extend this image. External applications which interact with Urbit do so primarily via an HTTP API, which should be exposed as described above. For containerized applications using Urbit, it is more appropriate to use a container orchestration service such as Docker Compose or Kubernetes to run Urbit alongside other containers which will interface with its API.
Development
The docker image is built by a Nix derivation in the nix/pkgs/docker-image/default.nix
file under the Urbit git repository.