How to open Ubuntu GUI inside a Docker image
You can directly connect a Docker container to your X server.
See Stack Overflow question Can you run GUI applications in a Docker container?.
fcwu/docker-ubuntu-vnc-desktop
https://github.com/fcwu/docker-ubuntu-vnc-desktop provides a convenient setup:
sudo docker run --name ubvnc -p 6080:80 -p 5900:5900 dorowu/ubuntu-desktop-lxde-vnc:bionic
Then on host either:
visit: http://127.0.0.1:6080/#/ which runs a noVNC more limited JavaScript VNC client
run:
sudo apt-get install tigervnc-viewer xtigervncviewer :5900
To go into fullscreen mode, hit F8 and click on menu entry, or just F8 followed by T: https://superuser.com/questions/285843/how-do-i-switch-in-out-of-fullscreen-mode-from-the-command-line-in-realvnc You might need to close and reopen the screen after that for the image to get larger.
I also tried
vinagre
, but it was much laggier when scrolling Firefox on YouTube.Inside
vinagre
, you might want to go into full screen mode to be able to see the full desktop
To quit just kill docker
on the terminal. And to restart the machine:
sudo docker start ubvnc
and then reconnect with VNC. Then to quit the machine:
sudo docker stop ubvnc
You have to wait a few seconds for the VNC server on the guest to start before you can connect.
Chromium inside the guest won't start from the menu. If you try to launch it from the command line it explains why:
Running as root without --no-sandbox is not supported. See https://crbug.com/638180.
so just run it from the CLI with:
chromium-browser --no-sandbox
Firefox does not care however.
TODO: no audio. --device /dev/snd
did not help:
- How to play sound in a Docker container on Mac OS Yosemite
- https://forums.docker.com/t/how-to-get-sound/36527
- https://github.com/fcwu/docker-ubuntu-vnc-desktop/issues/49
EDIT: they added a section for it: https://github.com/fcwu/docker-ubuntu-vnc-desktop/tree/e4922ce92f945fc482994b7a0fd95ca5de7295b3#sound-preview-version-and-linux-only
See also:
- Can you run GUI applications in a Linux Docker container?
Tested on:
- Ubuntu 19.04 host,
fcwu/docker-ubuntu-vnc-desktop
,dorowu/ubuntu-desktop-lxde-vnc
image id: 70516b87e92d. - Ubuntu 21.10 host,
dorowu/ubuntu-desktop-lxde-vnc:focal
(Ubuntu 20.04)
Generally, the approach for developing with Docker is to keep the IDE on the workstation, and build images with the binary produced from the sources.
You can find many example of such a workflow (local compilation, deployment in Docker containers) in domeide.github.io/ (Docker meets the IDE!)
For example: Docker Tools for VisualStudio allows for a tight integration between your editor and Docker processes.
(But this is for Visual Studio 2015, not Visual Studio Code.)