Marcel Otte b20b6abf3b | ||
---|---|---|
Dockerfile | ||
Jenkinsfile | ||
README.md | ||
build.sh | ||
docker-compose.yml |
README.md
docker-terasology
Automatic builds are provided by dockerhub and my own jenkins instance. For all enthusiasts who just want to have a running server:
docker pull qwick/terasology:latest
- or with version:
docker pull qwick/terasology:1.2.1-alpha
For all developers who want a unstable build for debugging or just testing purposes:
docker pull qwick/terasology:unstable-latest
- a versioned tag is available too.
Versioned tags may change over time.
Versioning
To avoid confusion here the docker image tag schema:
Stable:
<engineVersion>-<displayVersion>
e.g.1.2.1-alpha
Unstable:
unstable-<engineVersion>-<buildNumber>
e.g.unstable-1.2.2-SNAPSHOT-1806
Small guide
Be aware that this image provides a bare terasology server, if you want to enable specific modules, you have to do this yourself.
Just bind the provided volume of the container to a local directory and edit the generated config.cfg after the first run of the container.
Best practice would be cloning this repository and using docker-compose to pull and start the image.
- Edit the
docker-compose.yml
file for the location of the volume mount. - Pull the image with
docker-compose pull
. - Start it with
docker-compose up
and watch the output for errors. - Edit the generated config.cfg at the location of the mount and proceed with until your server runs like you want.
There may be standard configurations in the future for specific use cases, may be... ;-)
More information about terasology can be found on following sites: