1.8 KiB
Host requirements
- Docker >= 18.05.0
- Docker Compose >= 1.11
- OpenSSL >= 1.0.0
- Python >= 2.7 or >=3.4
Installation
Make sure you have the software listed above installed.
In a terminal, clone the project with:
$ git clone https://github.com/balena-io/open-balena.git
Change into the open-balena
directory and run the configuration script.
This will create a new directory, config
, and generate appropriate SSL
certificates and configuration for the instance.
$ ./scripts/quickstart
You may optionally configure the instance to run under a custom domain name.
The default is openbalena.local
. For example:
$ ./scripts/quickstart -d mydomain.com
For more available options, see the script's help:
$ ./scripts/quickstart -h
Start the instance with:
$ ./scripts/compose up -d
Stop the instance with:
$ ./scripts/compose stop
To remove all traces of the instance, run the following commands and finally delete the configuration folder.
WARNING: This will remove all data.
$ ./scripts/compose kill
$ ./scripts/compose down
$ docker volume rm openbalena_s3 openbalena_redis openbalena_db openbalena_registry
macOS & Windows
On macOS and Windows you need Vagrant. open-balena
is not being tested with
docker-machine. open-balena
comes with an appropriate Vagrantfile
for
setting up the VM, installing dependencies and starting the platform.
- Install Vagrant >= 2.0
$ vagrant plugin install vagrant-docker-compose
$ vagrant up
When provisioning completes and the VM has started, open-balena
services
should be running inside the VM. You will need to expose these services to
the outside in order for them to be reachable by devices. To do so, you must
setup DNS for the domain name you've deployed the instance as to point to the
VM's IP address.