3.4 KiB
Docker guide
You can quickly get a server running using Docker. You need to have docker and docker-compose installed.
Production
Install
PeerTube does not support webserver host change. Keep in mind your domain name is definitive after your first PeerTube start.
PeerTube needs a PostgreSQL and a Redis instance to work correctly. If you want
to quickly set up a full environment, either for trying the service or in
production, you can use a docker-compose
setup.
$ cd /your/peertube/directory
$ mkdir ./docker-volume && mkdir ./docker-volume/traefik
$ curl "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/chocobozzz/PeerTube/master/support/docker/production/config/traefik.toml" > ./docker-volume/traefik/traefik.toml
$ touch ./docker-volume/traefik/acme.json && chmod 600 ./docker-volume/traefik/acme.json
$ curl -s "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/chocobozzz/PeerTube/master/support/docker/production/docker-compose.yml" -o docker-compose.yml "https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Chocobozzz/PeerTube/master/support/docker/production/.env" -o .env
View the source of the files you're about to download: docker-compose.yml and the traefik.toml
Update the reverse proxy configuration:
$ vim ./docker-volume/traefik/traefik.toml
Tweak the docker-compose.yml
file there according to your needs:
$ vim ./docker-compose.yml
Then tweak the .env
file to change the environment variables:
$ vim ./.env
Other environment variables are used in
support/docker/production/config/custom-environment-variables.yaml
and can be
intuited from usage.
You can use the regular up
command to set it up:
$ docker-compose up
Obtaining Your Automatically Generated Admin Credentials
Now that you've installed your PeerTube instance you'll want to grep your peertube container's logs for the root
password.
You're going to want to run docker-compose logs peertube | grep -A1 root
to search the log output for your new PeerTube's instance admin credentials which will look something like this.
user@s:~/peertube|master⚡ ⇒ docker-compose logs peertube | grep -A1 root
peertube_1 | [example.com:443] 2019-11-16 04:26:06.082 info: Username: root
peertube_1 | [example.com:443] 2019-11-16 04:26:06.083 info: User password: abcdefghijklmnop
What now?
See the production guide "What now" section.
Upgrade
Important: Before upgrading, check you have all the storage
fields in your production.yaml file.
Pull the latest images and rerun PeerTube:
$ cd /your/peertube/directory
$ docker-compose pull
$ docker-compose up -d
Build your own Docker image
$ git clone https://github.com/chocobozzz/PeerTube /tmp/peertube
$ cd /tmp/peertube
$ docker build . -f ./support/docker/production/Dockerfile.buster
Development
We don't have a Docker image for development. See the CONTRIBUTING guide for more information on how you can hack PeerTube!