You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Go to file
Anthony Lapenna 8c769148ad
refactor(ui): remove console logging
8 years ago
app refactor(ui): remove console logging 8 years ago
assets feat(ui): replace repository field with tags field in image view (#79) 8 years ago
examples/nginx-basic-auth
test/unit
.dockerignore
.gitignore
.godir
Dockerfile
LICENSE
Procfile
README.md docs(docker): add info about Docker version support (#64) 8 years ago
bower.json chore(version): bump version number 8 years ago
dashboard.png
dockerui.go chore(version): bump version number 8 years ago
gruntFile.js
index.html
package.json chore(version): bump version number 8 years ago

README.md

Cloudinovasi UI for Docker

A fork of the amazing UI for Docker by Michael Crosby and Kevan Ahlquist (https://github.com/kevana/ui-for-docker) using the rdash-angular theme (https://github.com/rdash/rdash-angular).

Dashboard

UI For Docker is a web interface for the Docker Remote API. The goal is to provide a pure client side implementation so it is effortless to connect and manage docker.

Goals

  • Minimal dependencies - I really want to keep this project a pure html/js app.
  • Consistency - The web UI should be consistent with the commands found on the docker CLI.

Supported Docker versions

The current Docker version support policy is the following: N to N-2 included where N is the latest version.

At the moment, the following versions are supported: 1.9, 1.10 & 1.11.

Run

Quickstart

  1. Run: docker run -d -p 9000:9000 --privileged -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock cloudinovasi/cloudinovasi-ui

  2. Open your browser to http://<dockerd host ip>:9000

Bind mounting the Unix socket into the UI For Docker container is much more secure than exposing your docker daemon over TCP.

The --privileged flag is required for hosts using SELinux.

Specify socket to connect to Docker daemon

By default UI For Docker connects to the Docker daemon with/var/run/docker.sock. For this to work you need to bind mount the unix socket into the container with -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock.

You can use the --host, -H flags to change this socket:

# Connect to a tcp socket:
$ docker run -d -p 9000:9000 cloudinovasi/cloudinovasi-ui -H tcp://127.0.0.1:2375
# Connect to another unix socket:
$ docker run -d -p 9000:9000 cloudinovasi/cloudinovasi-ui -H unix:///path/to/docker.sock

Swarm support

Supported Swarm version: 1.2.3

You can access a specific view for you Swarm cluster by defining the --swarm flag:

# Connect to a tcp socket and enable Swarm:
$ docker run -d -p 9000:9000 cloudinovasi/cloudinovasi-ui -H tcp://<SWARM_HOST>:<SWARM_PORT> --swarm

NOTE: Due to Swarm not exposing information in a machine readable way, the app is bound to a specific version of Swarm at the moment.

Change address/port UI For Docker is served on

UI For Docker listens on port 9000 by default. If you run UI For Docker inside a container then you can bind the container's internal port to any external address and port:

# Expose UI For Docker on 10.20.30.1:80
$ docker run -d -p 10.20.30.1:80:9000 --privileged -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock cloudinovasi/cloudinovasi-ui

Access a Docker engine protected via TLS

Ensure that you have access to the CA, the cert and the public key used to access your Docker engine.

These files will need to be named ca.pem, cert.pem and key.pem respectively. Store them somewhere on your disk and mount a volume containing these files inside the UI container:

$ docker run -d -p 9000:9000 cloudinovasi/cloudinovasi-ui -v /path/to/certs:/certs -H https://my-docker-host.domain:2376 --tlsverify

You can also use the --tlscacert, --tlscert and --tlskey flags if you want to change the default path to the CA, certificate and key file respectively:

$ docker run -d -p 9000:9000 cloudinovasi/cloudinovasi-ui -v /path/to/certs:/certs -H https://my-docker-host.domain:2376 --tlsverify --tlscacert /certs/myCa.pem --tlscert /certs/myCert.pem --tlskey /certs/myKey.pem

Note: Replace /path/to/certs to the path to the certificate files on your disk.

Hide containers with specific labels

You can hide specific containers in the containers view by using the -hide-label or -l options and specifying a label.

For example, take a container started with the label owner=acme:

$ docker run -d --label owner=acme nginx

You can hide it in the view by starting the ui with:

$ docker run -d -p 9000:9000 --privileged -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock cloudinovasi/cloudinovasi-ui -l owner=acme

Available options

The following options are available for the ui-for-docker binary:

  • --host, -H: Docker daemon endpoint (default: "unix:///var/run/docker.sock")
  • --bind, -p: Address and port to serve UI For Docker (default: ":9000")
  • --data, -d: Path to the data folder (default: ".")
  • --assets, -a: Path to the assets (default: ".")
  • --swarm, -s: Swarm cluster support (default: false)
  • --hide-label, -l: Hide containers with a specific label in the UI
  • --tlsverify: TLS support (default: false)
  • --tlscacert: Path to the CA (default /certs/ca.pem)
  • --tlscert: Path to the TLS certificate file (default /certs/cert.pem)
  • --tlskey: Path to the TLS key (default /certs/key.pem)