An on demand Docker virtual machine, thanks to Vagrant and boot2docker. Works great on Macs and other platforms that don't natively support the Docker daemon. Under the covers this is downloading and booting Mitchell Hashimoto's boot2docker Vagrant Box image.
The driving need for something like dvm was for running infrastructure testing, like Test Kitchen using the kitchen-docker driver. For the driver to work it needs access to all the dynamically assigned ports, not just the Docker daemon port. That's why dvm uses a private network segment and address (192.168.42.43
by default). Once Docker started supporting the DOCKER_HOST
environment variable, the actual IP address was less important and consequently made the docker command on non-Linux distros feel almost native.
Are you already a Vagrant user using Virtualbox? Use Homebrew? Great!
# Install Docker Mac binary
brew install docker
# Install dvm
brew tap fnichol/dvm
brew install dvm
# Bring up your Vagrant/Docker VM
dvm up
# Set a DOCKER_HOST environment variable that points to your VM
eval $(dvm env)
# Run plain 'ol Docker commands right from your Mac
docker run ubuntu cat /etc/lsb-release
p.s. No Vagrant or VirtualBox installed? Check out the Requirements section below.
- VirtualBox, version 4.3.4+, VMware Fusion/VMware Workstation, or Parallels Desktop
- Vagrant, version 1.4.0+
- (Optional) Docker, version 0.7.3+ or use the Docker Remote API
Use Homebrew Cask? For Vagrant and VirtualBox, too easy!
brew cask install vagrant --appdir=/Applications
brew cask install virtualbox --appdir=/Applications
Installation is supported for any Unixlike platform that Vagrant and VirtualBox/VMware support.
wget -O dvm-0.9.0.tar.gz https://github.com/fnichol/dvm/archive/v0.9.0.tar.gz
tar -xzvf dvm-0.9.0.tar.gz
cd dvm-0.9.0/
sudo make install
There is a Homebrew tap with a formula which can be installed with:
brew tap fnichol/dvm
brew install dvm
You can follow the instructions for installing dvm.
Please note however that if the underlying boot2docker basebox is upgraded between versions, you will effectively get a new virtual machine when dvm restarts. A good idea before upgrading is to destroy your current dvm instance with dvm destroy
.
If using the dvm Homebrew tap, simply:
brew update
brew upgrade dvm
Also please read the above note about destroying in between upgrades.
Bring up help with:
$ dvm --help
Usage: dvm [-v|-h] command [<args>]
Options
--version, -v - Print the version and exit
--help, -h - Display CLI help (this output)
Commands
check Ensure that required software is installed and present
destroy Stops and deletes all traces of the vagrant machine
env Outputs environment variables for Docker to connect remotely
halt, stop Stops the vagrant machine
ip Outputs the IP address of the vagrant machine
reload Restarts vagrant machine, loads new configuration
resume Resume the suspended vagrant machine
ssh Connects to the machine via SSH
status Outputs status of the vagrant machine
suspend, pause Suspends the machine
up, start Starts and provisions the vagrant environment
vagrant Issue subcommands directly to the vagrant CLI
Keep in mind that dvm thinly wraps Vagrant so don't hesitate to use raw Vagrant commands in your $HOME/.dvm
directory. Or use the dvm vagrant
subcommand from anywhere:
$ dvm vagrant --version
Vagrant 1.5.2
Bring up your VM with dvm up
:
$ dvm up
Bringing machine 'dvm' up with 'virtualbox' provider...
...<snip>...
==> dvm: Configuring and enabling network interfaces...
==> dvm: Running provisioner: shell...
dvm: Running: inline script
Or maybe you want to use the vmware_fusion
Vagrant provider which isn't your default?
$ dvm up --provider=vmware_fusion
Need to free up some memory? Pause your VM with dvm suspend
:
$ dvm suspend
==> dvm: Saving VM state and suspending execution...
When you come back to your awesome Docker project, resume your VM with dvm resume
:
$ dvm resume
==> dvm: Resuming suspended VM...
==> dvm: Booting VM...
==> dvm: Waiting for machine to boot. This may take a few minutes...
dvm: SSH address: 127.0.0.1:2222
dvm: SSH username: docker
dvm: SSH auth method: private key
dvm: Warning: Connection refused. Retrying...
==> dvm: Machine booted and ready!
Your local docker
binary needs to be told that it is targetting a remote system and to not try the local Unix socket, which is the default behavior. Version 0.7.3 of Docker introduced the DOCKER_HOST
environment variable that will set the target Docker host. By default, dvm will run your VM on a private network at 192.168.42.43 with Docker listening on port 2375. The dvm env
subcommand will print a suitable DOCKER_HOST
line that can be used in your environment. If you want this loaded into your session, evaluate the resulting config with:
$ echo $DOCKER_HOST
$ eval `dvm env`
$ echo $DOCKER_HOST
tcp://192.168.42.43:2375
Check your VM status with dvm status
:
$ dvm status
Current machine states:
dvm running (virtualbox)
The VM is running. To stop this VM, you can run `vagrant halt` to
shut it down forcefully, or you can run `vagrant suspend` to simply
suspend the virtual machine. In either case, to restart it again,
simply run `vagrant up`.
Log into your VM (via SSH) with dvm ssh
:
$ dvm ssh
## .
## ## ## ==
## ## ## ## ===
/""""""""""""""""\___/ ===
~~~ {~~ ~~~~ ~~~ ~~~~ ~~ ~ / ===- ~~~
\______ o __/
\ \ __/
\____\______/
_ _ ____ _ _
| |__ ___ ___ | |_|___ \ __| | ___ ___| | _____ _ __
| '_ \ / _ \ / _ \| __| __) / _` |/ _ \ / __| |/ / _ \ '__|
| |_) | (_) | (_) | |_ / __/ (_| | (_) | (__| < __/ |
|_.__/ \___/ \___/ \__|_____\__,_|\___/ \___|_|\_\___|_|
boot2docker: 1.0.0
master : 16013ee - Mon Jun 9 16:33:25 UTC 2014
docker@boot2docker:~$
As the core of dvm is a Vagrantfile (surprise!), you can simply download the dvm Vagrantfile into your project using the http://git.io/dvm-vagrantfile shortlink:
wget -O Vagrantfile http://git.io/dvm-vagrantfile
If you wish to change the Docker TCP port or memory settings of the virtual machine, edit $HOME/.dvm/dvm.conf
for the configuration to be used. By default the following configuration is used:
DOCKER_IP
:192.168.42.43
DOCKER_PORT
:2375
DOCKER_MEMORY
:512
(in MB)DOCKER_CPUS
:1
DOCKER_ARGS
:-H unix:// -H tcp://
If you wish to change the network range Docker uses for the docker0
bridge, set DOCKER0_CIDR
to the range required.
See dvm.conf for more details.
- Source hosted at GitHub
- Report issues/questions/feature requests on GitHub Issues
Pull requests are very welcome! Make sure your patches are well tested. Ideally create a topic branch for every separate change you make. For example:
- Fork the repo
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Created and maintained by Fletcher Nichol (fnichol@nichol.ca)
- Steeve Morin (steeve) for boot2docker
- Mitchell Hashimoto (mitchellh) for Vagrant and boot2docker Vagrant Box
- Postmodern (postmodern) for awesome examples of killer project skeletons in chruby and ruby-install
Apache 2.0 (see LICENSE.txt)