4.3 KiB
Guide for running on docker
Host system
This guide will assume an updated installation of Debian bullseye (11), it should work on a lot of different linux OS and architectures.
You will need to install the libraries and supporting sw/fw for your sdr device, including udev rules and blacklists.
Additional software such as soapysdr is not needed on the host, but can certainly be installed.
sudo apt install rtl-sdr
echo "blacklist dvb_usb_rtl28xxu" | sudo tee /etc/modprobe.d/blacklist-rtlsdr.conf
sudo modprobe -r dvb_usb_rtl28xxu
See the docker installation at the bottom of this page.
Building the image
If the docker image is not available, or you want to build from your own branch etc.
git clone https://github.com/projecthorus/horusdemodlib.git
cd horusdemodlib
docker-compose build
Configuration
Start with creating a directory with a name representing the station, this will be shown in several places in the resulting stack.
mkdir -p projecthorus
cd projecthorus
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/projecthorus/horusdemodlib/master/docker-compose.yml
wget -O user.cfg https://raw.githubusercontent.com/projecthorus/horusdemodlib/master/user.cfg.example
wget -O user.env https://raw.githubusercontent.com/projecthorus/horusdemodlib/master/user.env.example
The file user.env
contains all the station variables (earlier in each script), the DEMODSCRIPT is used by compose.
The user.cfg
sets the details sent to Sondehub.
Use your favourite editor to configure these:
nano user.env
nano user.cfg
Please note that the values in user.env should not be escaped with quotes or ticks.
Bringing the stack up
The docker-compose
(on some systems it's docker compose
without the hyphen) is the program controlling the creation, updating, building and termination of the stack.
The basic commands you will use is docker-compose up
and docker-compose down
.
When you edit the compose file or configuration it will try to figure out what needs to be done to bring the stack in sync of what has changed.
Starting the stack in foreground (terminate with Ctrl-C):
docker-compose up
Starting the stack in background:
docker-compose up -d
Stopping the stack:
docker-compose down
Updating the images and bringing the stack up:
docker-compose pull
docker-compose up -d
Over time there will be old images accumulating, these can be removed with docker image prune -af
Using SoapySDR with rx_tools
If you want to use other SDR than rtl_sdr, the docker build includes rx_tools.
Select docker_soapy_single.sh and add the extra argument to select the sdr in SDR_EXTRA:
# Script name
DEMODSCRIPT="docker_soapy_single.sh"
SDR_EXTRA="-d driver=rtlsdr"
Monitoring and maintenance
Inside each container, the logs are output to stdout, which makes them visible from outside the container in the logs. Starting to monitor the running stack:
docker-compose logs -f
If you want to run commands inside the containers, this can be done with the following command:
docker-compose exec horusdemod bash
The container needs to be running. Exit with Ctrl-D or typing exit
.
Install Docker.io
(Or you can install Docker.com engine via the convenience script)
In Debian bullseye there's already a docker package, so installation is easy:
sudo apt install docker.io apparmor
sudo apt -t bullseye-backports install docker-compose
sudo adduser $(whoami) docker
Re-login for the group permission to take effect.
The reason for using backports is the version of compose in bullseye is 1.25 and lacks cgroup support, the backport is version 1.27
If your dist doesn't have backports, enable with this, and try the installation of docker-compose again:
echo "deb http://deb.debian.org/debian bullseye-backports main contrib non-free" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/backports.list
suod apt-key adv --keyserver keyserver.ubuntu.com --recv-keys 648ACFD622F3D138 0E98404D386FA1D9
sudo apt update
If you cannot get a good compose version with your dist, please follow the official guide.