NOTE: These instructions for creating a Vircadia Docker image ARE NOT CURRENT and probably do not apply to the current Vircadia sources and build process. Use this as a hint at how to create a Docker image, but otherwise, this repository should be ignored.
Docker version of Vircadia domain-server built with vircadia-builder.
This repository includes files to build the Docker image (build*.sh) and run the Docker image (*-domain-server.sh).
The Dockerfile is broken into two halves to make building and
debugging a little easier. buildBase.sh
builds an image that
contains all the required libraries and package (Qt, ...).
buildDS.sh
uses the base image to pull the Vircadia sources
and just build Vircadia.
This makes testing quicker as a new domain-server image build
doesn't include all the library builds.
So, you can build the base only once for each version of Qt and
supporting libraries and then buildDS
when you want to
rebuild with a new version of Vircadia.
The build argument TAG
specifies the GIT pull tag. This defaults
to master
.
The script pushDocker.sh
pushes the image to my repository.
Modify it to your purposes.
Thus, the steps to build are:
./buildBase.sh
./buildDS.sh
./pushDocker.sh
There are running scripts supplied that can be used when running
the domain-server container.
On the system the domain-server is to be run on, pull this
repository and then run-domain-server.sh
. This will pull
the image from hub.docker.com
and start the docker container.
The domain-server can be stopped with stop-domain-server.sh
and an update/restart (stop container, pull new image, start container)
is done with update-domain-server.sh
.
The above run scripts generate local files saving the domain-server
configuration, cache, and state. Domain-server files show up in
server-dotlocal
. There are several layers of sub-directories
which are used if you are running multiple grids and multiple
domain-server instances.
Log files for the running domain-server are found in the
directory server-logs
with sub-directories for the grids
and instances.
By default, the domain-server will point to the metaverse-server
https://metaverse.vircadia.com/live
but this can be changed
by passing the metaverse URL to the run script:
./run-domain-server.sh https://metaverse.example.com ice.example.com
run-domain-server.sh
uses "--networking=host" because the assignment
clients use ports all over the place. The assignment-clients need some
taming on their port usage and some parameterization for running
multiple domain-servers on one processor.
TODO: Break out all the assignment clients into separate containers running
on the 'internal' virtual network. Use docker-compose
or similar to
start them all up and to do scaling for things like audio load, etc.
The Docker image also contains an ice-server which you can run if you
are running your own grid (using your own metaverse-server, etc).
The script run-ice-server.sh
will run the ice server.
It requires the URL of the metaverse-server.
There is a special kludge to get the version of the built domain-server.
docker run --rm --entrypoint /home/cadia/getVersion.sh misterblue/vircadia-domain-server
This runs the image and outputs JSON text giving the version the domain-server was built with:
{
"GIT_COMMIT": "GitCommitString",
"GIT_COMMIT_SHORT": "FirstEightCharactersOfGitCommitString",
"GIT_TAG": "GitBranchTag",
"BUILD_DATE": "YYYYMMDD.HHMM",
"BUILD_DAY": "YYYYMMDD"
"VERSION_TAG": "TAG-YYYYMMDD-xxxxxxxx"
}