Follow these instructions to get Docker running on your server.
docker pull f0rc3/barcodebuddy:latest
docker run -d -v bbconfig:/config -p 8080:80 -p 4433:443 f0rc3/barcodebuddy:latest
Replace the ports 8080 and 4433 with a port of your choice, which will be exposed on your local machine.
Please have a look at the documentation, for more information on how to install and use the docker image.
The architectures supported by this image are:
Architecture | Tag |
---|---|
amd64 | latest |
arm64 | latest |
armhf | latest |
x86 | latest |
If you would like to use the unstable channel, which includes all commits and might be more up to date than the release, use the following command:
docker pull f0rc3/barcodebuddy:latest-dev
The architectures supported by this image are:
Architecture | Tag |
---|---|
amd64 | latest-dev |
arm64 | latest-dev |
armhf | latest-dev |
x86 | latest-dev |
docker build --no-cache --pull -t forceu/barcodebuddy .
docker build --no-cache --pull -t forceu/barcodebuddy-dev -f Dockerfile.dev .
In the current version, the websockets are only used for internal communication. Everything will work out of the box.
- 80: HTTP
- 443: HTTPS
The docker images build are based on Alpine, with an extremely low footprint (about 70MB in total).
The MIT License (MIT)
Based on: https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-grocy
As with all Free software, the power is less in the finances and more in the collective efforts. I really appreciate every pull request and bug report offered up by BarcodeBuddy's users, so please keep that stuff coming. If however, you're not one for coding/design/documentation, and would like to contribute financially, you can do so with the link below. Every help is very much appreciated!