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The LXC driver was deprecated in Docker 1.8. Following the deprecation rules, we can remove a deprecated feature after two major releases. LXC won't be supported anymore starting on Docker 1.10. Signed-off-by: David Calavera <david.calavera@gmail.com> |
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README.md |
README.md
Vagrant integration
Currently there are at least 4 different projects that we are aware of that deals with integration with Vagrant at different levels. One approach is to use Docker as a provisioner which means you can create containers and pull base images on VMs using Docker's CLI and the other is to use Docker as a provider, meaning you can use Vagrant to control Docker containers.
Provisioners
Providers
Setting up Vagrant-docker with the Remote API
The initial Docker upstart script will not work because it runs on 127.0.0.1
, which is not accessible to the host machine. Instead, we need to change the script to connect to 0.0.0.0
. To do this, modify /etc/init/docker.conf
to look like this:
description "Docker daemon"
start on filesystem
stop on runlevel [!2345]
respawn
script
/usr/bin/docker daemon -H=tcp://0.0.0.0:2375
end script
Once that's done, you need to set up a SSH tunnel between your host machine and the vagrant machine that's running Docker. This can be done by running the following command in a host terminal:
ssh -L 2375:localhost:2375 -p 2222 vagrant@localhost
(The first 2375 is what your host can connect to, the second 2375 is what port Docker is running on in the vagrant machine, and the 2222 is the port Vagrant is providing for SSH. If VirtualBox is the VM you're using, you can see what value "2222" should be by going to: Network > Adapter 1 > Advanced > Port Forwarding in the VirtualBox GUI.)
Note that because the port has been changed, to run docker commands from within the command line you must run them like this:
sudo docker -H 0.0.0.0:2375 < commands for docker >