7.7 KiB
Enable and configure Ngrok
This section will guide you through getting Ngrok integrated into the Devilbox.
* * * custom_container_enable_all_additional_container
* docker_compose_override_yml_how_does_it_work
Table of Contents
- local
Overview
Available overwrites
Ngrok settings
In case of Ngrok, the file is compose/docker-compose.override.yml-ngrok
. This file must be copied into the root of the Devilbox git directory.
What | How and where |
---|---|
Example compose file | compose/docker-compose.override.yml-all or compose/docker-compose.override.yml-ngrok |
Container IP address | 172.16.238.202 |
Container host name | ngrok |
Container name | ngrok |
Mount points | none |
Exposed port | 4040 (can be changed via .env ) |
Available at | http://localhost:4040 |
Further configuration | NGROK_HTTP_TUNNELS and NGROK_AUTHTOKEN |
Ngrok env variables
Additionally the following .env
variables can be created for easy configuration:
Variable | Default value | Description |
---|---|---|
HOST_PORT_NGROK |
4040 |
Controls the host port on which Ngrok admin UI will be available at. |
NGROK_HTTP_TUNNELS |
httpd:httpd:80 |
Defines one or more Ngrok tunnels (depending on your license) |
NGROK_AUTHTOKEN |
empty | Free or paid license token for Ngrok (can also be empty) |
NGROK_HTTP_TUNNELS
Ngrok tunnel definitions can be in the form of:
<domain.tld>:<addr>:<port>
<domain1.tld>:<addr>:<port>,<domain2.tld>:<addr>:<port>
Note
If you don't use a license you can only specify a single tunnel. If your license is pro enough, you can have multiple comma separated tunnels.
<domain.tld>
is the virtual hostname that you want to serve via Ngrok<addr>
is the hostname or IP address of the web server<port>
is the port on which the web server is reachable via HTTP
# Make vhost "project1.loc" which runs on localhost:8080 available
HTTP_TUNNELS=project1.loc:localhost:8080
# Make two vhosts available which run on host apache:80
HTTP_TUNNELS=project1.loc:apache:80,project2.loc:apache:80
# Make two vhosts from two different web server addresses available
HTTP_TUNNELS=project1.loc:localhost:8080,project2.loc:apache:80
Instructions
1. Copy docker-compose.override.yml
Copy the Ngrok Docker Compose overwrite file into the root of the Devilbox git directory. (It must be at the same level as the default docker-compose.yml
file).
host> cp compose/docker-compose.override.yml-ngrok docker-compose.override.yml
* docker_compose_override_yml
* add_your_own_docker_image
* overwrite_existing_docker_image
2. Adjust .env
settings (optional)
By Default Ngrok will forward the httpd
domain, which is represents the default virtual host (the Devilbox intranet) to your web server (also named httpd
) and makes the admin UI available on port 4040
on your local machine.
You can of course change the domain as well as where to forward it to (e.g.: to Varnish or HAProxy instead).
Additionally you can also specify a license token in order to allow for more tunnels via NGROK_AUTHTOKEN
.
HOST_PORT_NGROK=4040
# Share project1.loca over the internet
NGROK_HTTP_TUNNELS=project1.loc:httpd:80
# No license token specified
NGROK_AUTHTOKEN=
env_file
3. Start the Devilbox
The final step is to start the Devilbox with Ngrok.
Let's assume you want to start php
, httpd
, bind
and ngrok
.
host> docker-compose up -d php httpd bind ngrok
start_the_devilbox
4. Start using it
- Once the Devilbox is running, visit http://localhost:4040 in your browser.
- Get URL for public available project
TL;DR
For the lazy readers, here are all commands required to get you started. Simply copy and paste the following block into your terminal from the root of your Devilbox git directory:
# Copy compose-override.yml into place
cp compose/docker-compose.override.yml-ngrok docker-compose.override.yml
# Create .env variable
echo "HOST_PORT_NGROK=4040" >> .env
echo "# Share project1.loca over the internet" >> .env
echo "NGROK_HTTP_TUNNELS=project1.loc:httpd:80" >> .env
echo "# No license token specified" >> .env
echo "NGROK_AUTHTOKEN=" >> .env
# Start container
docker-compose up -d php httpd bind ngrok