.. include:: /_includes/all.rst .. _install_the_devilbox: ******************** Install the Devilbox ******************** .. important:: Ensure you have read and followed the :ref:`prerequisites` **Table of Contents** .. contents:: :local: Download the Devilbox ===================== The Devilbox does not need to be installed. The only thing that is required is its git directory. To download that, open a terminal and copy/paste the following command. .. code-block:: bash host> git clone https://github.com/cytopia/devilbox .. seealso:: * :ref:`howto_open_terminal_on_mac` * :ref:`howto_open_terminal_on_win` * :ref:`checkout-different-devilbox-release` Create ``.env`` file ==================== Inside the cloned Devilbox git directory, you will find a file called ``env-example``. This file is the main configuration with sane defaults for Docker Compose. In order to use it, it must be copied to a file named ``.env``. (Pay attention to the leading dot). .. code-block:: bash host> cp env-example .env The ``.env`` file does nothing else then providing environment variables for Docker Compose and in this case it is used as the main configuration file for the Devilbox by providing all kinds of settings (such as which version to start up). .. seealso:: * |ext_lnk_docker_compose_env_file| * :ref:`env_file` Set uid and gid =============== To get you started, there are only two variables that need to be adjusted: * ``NEW_UID`` * ``NEW_GID`` The values for those two variables refer to your local (on your host operating system) user id and group id. To find out what the values are required in your case, issue the following commands on a terminal: Find your user id ----------------- .. code-block:: bash host> id -u Find your group id ------------------ .. code-block:: bash host> id -g In most cases both values will be ``1000``, but for the sake of this example, let's assume a value of ``1001`` for the user id and ``1002`` for the group id. Open the ``.env`` file with your favorite text editor and adjust those values: .. code-block:: bash :caption: .env :emphasize-lines: 3,4 host> vi .env NEW_UID=1001 NEW_GID=1002 .. seealso:: * |ext_lnk_uid| * :ref:`howto_find_uid_and_gid_on_mac` * :ref:`howto_find_uid_and_gid_on_win` * :ref:`syncronize_container_permissions` OS specific setup ================= Linux: SELinux -------------- If you have SELinux enabled, you will also have to adjust the :ref:`env_mount_options` to allow shared mounts among multiple container: .. code-block:: bash :caption: .env :emphasize-lines: 3 host> vi .env MOUNT_OPTIONS=,z .. seealso:: * https://github.com/cytopia/devilbox/issues/255 * :ref:`env_mount_options` * |ext_lnk_docker_selinux_label| * |ext_lnk_docker_mount_z_flag| .. _install_the_devilbox_osx_performance: OSX: Performance ---------------- Out of the box, Docker for Mac has some performance issues when it comes to mount directories with a lot of files inside. To mitigate this issue, you can adjust the caching settings for mounted directories. To do so, you will want to adjust the :ref:`env_mount_options` to allow caching on mounts. .. code-block:: bash :caption: .env :emphasize-lines: 3 host> vi .env MOUNT_OPTIONS=,cached Ensure to read the links below to understand why this problem exists and how the fix works. The Docker documentation will also give you alternative caching options to consider. .. seealso:: * https://github.com/cytopia/devilbox/issues/105#issuecomment-426229921 * https://forums.docker.com/t/file-access-in-mounted-volumes-extremely-slow-cpu-bound/8076/281 * https://docs.docker.com/docker-for-mac/osxfs-caching/#tuning-with-consistent-cached-and-delegated-configurations * :ref:`env_mount_options` Checklist ========= 1. Devilbox is cloned 2. ``.env`` file is created 3. User and group id have been set in ``.env`` file That's it, you have finished the first section and have a working Devilbox ready to be started. .. seealso:: :ref:`troubleshooting`