Setting up the addon
To get started with using addons inside containers you will need
- Docker (See getting started)
- A folder with the addon
.zip
file and a Python file called bpy_activate_addon.py
Running the container
When running the container, you will need to mount the folder where the addon zip file and the Python script live as a Docker volume. cd
into the folder where the addon and Python script live and run
docker run --gpus all \
-w /addon-test \
--rm -it \
-v $(pwd):/addon-test \
-t nytimes/blender:latest \
/bin/bash
This should launch bash
in the container. If you run the ls
command, you should be able to see the addon .zip
file and Python script.
Installing and enabling the addon from Python
Open the bpy_activate_addon.py
in a code editor and use the following snippet to install and enable your addon (make sure you change the name of the addon to the actual name)
import bpy
# Register the addon and enable it
bpy.ops.preferences.addon_install(filepath='./your-addon-file.zip')
bpy.ops.preferences.addon_enable(module='your-addon')
# Use the addon directly from Python
# ...
Now run Blender headless inside the container with the Python file, it would look something like
blender --background --python ./bpy_activate_addon.py
Here is an example log of running the above with the Stop-motion-OBJ
addon.

If everything worked and you see a similar print you are ready to use the addon inside the container.