# Docker ## Prerequisites The only prerequisites are: 1. This repo, and 2. Docker Building the docker image pulls in all the dev dependencies to build loop within the image itself. Having a `go` development environment is not required. ## Building the Docker Image The docker image can be built using this command within the `loop` directory: ``` docker build --tag loop . ``` This command pulls down a `go` build container, builds `loop` and `loopd` executables, then publishes those binaries to a fresh, smaller image, and marks that image with the tag 'loop'. ## Running the Docker Image The docker image contains: * The binary `loopd`, at `/go/bin/loopd` * The binary `loop`, at `/go/bin/loop` Docker is very flexible so you can use that information however you choose. This guide isn't meant to be prescriptive. ### Example: Running loopd One way of running `loopd` is ``` docker run --rm -it --name loopd -v $HOME/.lnd:/root/.lnd -v $HOME/.loop:/root/.loop loop:latest loopd --network=testnet --lnd.host :10009 ``` Things to note from this docker command: * You can stop the server with Control-C, and it'll clean up the associated stopped container automatically. * The name of the running container is 'loopd' (which you may need to know to run the `loop` command). * The '.lnd' directory in your home directory is mapped into the container, and `loopd` will look for your tls.cert and macaroon in the default locations. If this isn't appropriate for your case you can map whatever directories you choose and override where `loopd` looks for them using additional command-line parameters. * The '.loop' directory in your home directory is mapped into the container, and `loopd` will use that directory to store some state. * You probably need to specify your LND server host and port explicitly, since by default `loopd` looks for it on localhost and there is no LND server on localhost within the container. * No ports are mapped, so it's not possible to connect to the running `loopd` from outside the container. (This is deliberate. You can map ports 8081 and 11010 to connect from outside the container if you choose.) ### Example: Running loop If you're using the example above to run `loopd`, you can then run the `loop` command inside that running container to execute loops. One way would be: ``` docker exec -it loopd loop out --channel --amt ``` Things to note about this docker command: * `docker exec` runs a command on an already-running container. In this case `docker exec loopd` says effectively 'run the rest of this command-line as a command on the already-running container 'loopd'. * The `-it` flags tell docker to run the command interatively and act like it's using a terminal. This helps with commands that do more than just write to stdout. * The remainder `loop out --channel --amt ` is the actual loop command you want to run. All the regular `loop` documentation applies to this bit. ### A Handy Script If you're using the example above to run `loopd`, creating a script can simplify running `loop`. Create a file with the following contents: ``` #!/usr/bin/env bash TERMINAL_FLAGS= if [ -t 1 ] ; then TERMINAL_FLAGS="-it" fi docker exec $TERMINAL_FLAGS loopd loop "${@}" ``` Call this script 'loop', put it somewhere in your $PATH, and make it executable. Then you can just run commands like: ``` loop out --channel --amt ``` without having to remember (or use) the docker part explicitly. ## Caveats Running `loopd` the way shown above won't restart `loopd` if it is stopped or if the computer is restarted. You may want to investigate running the 'loop' container at startup, or when your LND server starts. (For example, `docker` has restart options, or grouping of containers via `docker-compose`.)