This question is inspired by Can you run GUI apps in a docker container?.
The basic idea is to run apps with audio and ui (vlc, firefox, skype, ...)
I was se
After trying most of the solutions described here I found only PulseAudio over network to be really working. However you can make it safe by keeping the authentication.
Install paprefs (on host machine):
$ apt-get install paprefs
Launch paprefs
(PulseAudio Preferences) > Network Server > [X] Enable network access to local sound devices.
Restart PulseAudio:
$ service pulseaudio restart
Check it worked or restart machine:
$ (pax11publish || xprop -root PULSE_SERVER) | grep -Eo 'tcp:[^ ]*'
tcp:myhostname:4713
Now use that socket:
$ docker run \
-e PULSE_SERVER=tcp:$(hostname -i):4713 \
-e PULSE_COOKIE=/run/pulse/cookie \
-v ~/.config/pulse/cookie:/run/pulse/cookie \
...
Check that the user running inside the container has access to the cookie file ~/.config/pulse/cookie
.
To test it works:
$ apt-get install mplayer
$ mplayer /usr/share/sounds/alsa/Front_Right.wav
For more info may check Docker Mopidy project.
it took me some time until i found out what is needed. (Ubuntu)
we start with the docker run command docker run -ti --rm myContainer sh -c "echo run something"
ALSA:
we need /dev/snd
and some hardware access as it looks like.
when we put this together we have
docker run -ti --rm \
-v /dev/snd:/dev/snd \
--lxc-conf='lxc.cgroup.devices.allow = c 116:* rwm' \
myContainer sh -c "echo run something"`
In new docker versions without lxc flags you shoud use this:
docker run -ti --rm \
-v /dev/snd:/dev/snd \
--privileged \
myContainer sh -c "echo run something"`
PULSEAUDIO:
Here we need basically /dev/shm
, /etc/machine-id
and /run/user/$uid/pulse
. But that is not all (maybe because of Ubuntu and how they did it in the past). The envirorment variable XDG_RUNTIME_DIR
has to be the same in the host system and in your docker container. You may also need /var/lib/dbus
because some apps are accessing the machine id from here (may only containing a symbolic link to the 'real' machine id). And at least you may need the hidden home folder ~/.pulse
for some temp data (i am not sure about this).
docker run -ti --rm \
-v /dev/shm:/dev/shm \
-v /etc/machine-id:/etc/machine-id \
-v /run/user/$uid/pulse:/run/user/$uid/pulse \
-v /var/lib/dbus:/var/lib/dbus \
-v ~/.pulse:/home/$dockerUsername/.pulse \
myContainer sh -c "echo run something"
In new docker versions you might need to add --privileged
.
Of course you can combine both together and use it together with xServer
ui forwarding like here: https://stackoverflow.com/a/28971413/2835523
Just to mention:
dockerfile
uid=$(id -u)
to get the user id and gid with id -g
create user script:
mkdir -p /home/$dockerUsername && \
echo "$dockerUsername:x:${uid}:${gid}:$dockerUsername,,,:/home/$dockerUsername:/bin/bash" >> /etc/passwd && \
echo "$dockerUsername:x:${uid}:" >> /etc/group && \
mkdir /etc/sudoers.d && \
echo "$dockerUsername ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: ALL" > /etc/sudoers.d/$dockerUsername && \
chmod 0440 /etc/sudoers.d/$dockerUsername && \
chown ${uid}:${gid} -R /home/$dockerUsername
Inspired by the links you've posted, I was able to create the following solution. It is as lightweight as I could get it. However, I'm not sure if it is (1) secure, and (2) entirely fits your use-case (as it still uses the network).
paprefs
on your host system, e.g. using sudo apt-get install paprefs
on an Ubuntu machine.sudo apt-get install -y pulseaudio
export "PULSE_SERVER=tcp:<host IP address>:<host Pulseaudio port>"
. For example, export "PULSE_SERVER=tcp:172.16.86.13:4713"
[2]. You can find out your IP address using ifconfig
and the Pulseaudio port using pax11publish
[1].PULSE_SERVER
: If it doesn't then you have to initialize it after each container start.Suggestions to make my approach even better would be greatly appreciated, since I'm currently working on a similar problem as the OP.
References:
[1] https://github.com/jlund/docker-chrome-pulseaudio
[2] https://github.com/jlund/docker-chrome-pulseaudio/blob/master/Dockerfile
UPDATE (and probably the better solution):
This also works using a Unix socket instead of a TCP socket:
-v /run/user/$UID/pulse/native:/path/to/pulseaudio/socket
export "PULSE_SERVER=unix:/path/to/pulseaudio/socket"
The /path/to/pulseaudio/socket
can be anything, for testing purposes I used /home/user/pulse
.
Maybe it will even work with the same path as on the host (taking care of the $UID part) as the default socket, this way the ultimate solution would be -v /run/user/$UID/pulse/native:/run/user/<UID in container>/pulse
; I haven't tested this however.
Assuming pulseaudio is installed on host and in image, one can provide pulseaudio sound over tcp with only a few steps. pulseaudio does not need to be restarted, and no configuration has to be done on host or in image either. This way it is included in x11docker, without the need of VNC or SSH:
First, find a free tcp port:
read LOWERPORT UPPERPORT < /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_local_port_range
while : ; do
PULSE_PORT="`shuf -i $LOWERPORT-$UPPERPORT -n 1`"
ss -lpn | grep -q ":$PULSE_PORT " || break
done
Get ip adress of docker daemon. I always find it being 172.17.42.1/16
ip -4 -o a | grep docker0 | awk '{print $4}'
Load pulseaudio tcp module, authenticate connection to docker ip:
PULSE_MODULE_ID=$(pactl load-module module-native-protocol-tcp port=$PULSE_PORT auth-ip-acl=172.17.42.1/16)
On docker run, create environment variable PULSE_SERVER
docker run -e PULSE_SERVER=tcp:172.17.42.1:$PULSE_PORT yourimage
Afterwards, unload tcp module. (Note: for unknown reasons, unloading this module can stop pulseaudio daemon on host):
pactl unload-module $PULSE_MODULE_ID
Edit: How-To for ALSA and Pulseaudio in container