I installed a few different distros, landed on Cinnamon Mint. I’m not a tech dummy, but I feel I’m in over my head.
I installed Docker in the terminal (two things I’m not familiar with) but I can’t find it anywhere. Googled some stuff, tried to run stuff, and… I dunno.
I’m TRYING to learn docker so I can set up audiobookshelf and Sonarr with Sabnzbd.
Once it’s installed in the terminal, how the hell do I find docker so I can start playing with it?
Is there a Linux for people who are deeply entrenched in how Windows works? I’m not above googling command lines that I can copy and paste but I’ve spent HOURS trying to figure this out and have gotten no where…
Thanks! Sorry if this is the wrong place for this
EDIT : holy moly. I posted this and went to bed. Didn’t quite realize the hornets nest I was going to kick. THANK YOU to everyone who has and is about to comment. It tells you how much traction I usually get because I usually answer every response on lemmy and the former. For this one I don’t think I’ll be able to do it.
I’ve got a few little ones so time to sit and work on this is tough (thus 5h last night after they were in bed) but I’m going to start picking at all your suggestions (and anyone else who contributes as well)
Thank you so much everyone! I think windows has taught me to be very visually reliant and yelling into the abyss that is the terminal is a whole different beast - but I’m willing to give it a go!
Ok, so I don’t know the specifics, this might not be entirely accurate, but this is a general step-by-step guide for Debian based distros like Mint.
Install docker
The first thing you need to do is install docker, this can be done via whatever GUI you use for a package manager or via the terminal using
sudo apt install docker
(I’m not sure docker is the name of the package, I’m just guessing, you can do anapt search docker
to see what’s available)Add yourself to dockers
This is likely not needed on Mint, but just in case your user should be in the docker group, i.e. run
sudo gpasswd -a docker
. I’m almost sure Mint does this by default.Enable docker systemd
This also might not be needed, again I’m almost sure Mint does this for you when you install docker, but just in case the command is
sudo systemctl enable docker
Reboot
Because there have been changes to your user groups you need to relogin, easier to reboot.
use docker
Now you have a system with docker, you can test this by running the following command
docker run hello-world
, if you see a bunch of text that contains “Hello from docker” docker is working.setup a docker-compose file
Create a folder, and in that folder create a text file called
docker-compose.yaml
in that file. This file will tell docker what you want to run, for example to have Nextcloud (which is an awesome self-hosted drive alternative. I’m not going to teach you the specific services you want, you can figure those out by looking at their page on the linuxserver page or something) you can look here https://hub.docker.com/r/linuxserver/nextcloud on how to write your docker-compose file, for example you could write:services: nextcloud: image: lscr.io/linuxserver/nextcloud:latest container_name: nextcloud environment: - PUID=1000 - PGID=1000 - TZ=Etc/UTC volumes: - ./config:/config - ./data:/data ports: - 8080:80 - 443:443 restart: unless-stopped
Then open a terminal on that folder and run
docker compose up -d
after that is done open a browser and go tohttp://localhost:8080
and begin using Nextcloud.