Bitcoin uses peer-to-peer technology to operate with no central authority or banks; managing transactions and the issuing of bitcoin is carried out collectively by the network. Bitcoin is open-source; its design is public, nobody owns or controls Bitcoin and everyone can take part. Through many of its unique properties, Bitcoin allows exciting uses that could not be covered by any previous payment system.
This Docker image provides bitcoin
, bitcoin-cli
and bitcoin-tx
applications which can be used to run and interact with a bitcoin server.
Images are provided for a range of current and historic Bitcoin forks. To see the available versions/tags, please visit the appropriate pages on Docker Hub:
To start a bitcoind instance running the latest version:
$ docker run NicolasDorier/bitcoin
This docker image provides different tags so that you can specify the exact version of bitcoin you wish to run. For example, to run the latest minor version in the 0.11.x
series (currently 0.11.2
):
$ docker run NicolasDorier/bitcoin:0.11
Or, to run the 0.11.1
release specifically:
$ docker run NicolasDorier/bitcoin:0.11.1
To run a bitcoin container in the background, pass the -d
option to docker run
, and give your container a name for easy reference later:
$ docker run -d --rm --name bitcoind NicolasDorier/bitcoin
Once you have a bitcoin service running in the background, you can show running containers:
$ docker ps
Or view the logs of a service:
$ docker logs -f bitcoind
To stop and restart a running container:
$ docker stop bitcoind
$ docker start bitcoind
Images are also provided for btc1, Bitcoin Unlimited, Bitcoin Classic, and Bitcoin XT, which are separately maintained forks of the original Bitcoin Core codebase.
To run the latest version of btc1 Core:
$ docker run NicolasDorier/btc1
To run the latest version of Bitcoin Classic:
$ docker run NicolasDorier/bitcoinclassic
To run the latest version of Bitcoin Unlimited:
$ docker run NicolasDorier/bitcoinunlimited
To run the latest version of Bitcoin XT:
$ docker run NicolasDorier/bitcoinxt
Specific versions of these alternate clients may be run using the command line options above.
The best method to configure the bitcoin server is to pass arguments to the bitcoind
command. For example, to run bitcoin on the testnet:
$ docker run --name bitcoind-testnet NicolasDorier/bitcoin bitcoind -testnet
Alternatively, you can edit the bitcoin.conf
file which is generated in your data directory (see below).
By default, Docker will create ephemeral containers. That is, the blockchain data will not be persisted, and you will need to sync the blockchain from scratch each time you launch a container.
To keep your blockchain data between container restarts or upgrades, simply add the -v
option to create a data volume:
$ docker run -d --rm --name bitcoind -v bitcoin-data:/data NicolasDorier/bitcoin
$ docker ps
$ docker inspect bitcoin-data
Alternatively, you can map the data volume to a location on your host:
$ docker run -d --rm --name bitcoind -v "$PWD/data:/data" NicolasDorier/bitcoin
$ ls -alh ./data
By default, Docker runs all containers on a private bridge network. This means that you are unable to access the RPC port (8332) necessary to run bitcoin-cli
commands.
There are several methods to run bitcoin-cli
against a running bitcoind
container. The easiest is to simply let your bitcoin-cli
container share networking with your bitcoind
container:
$ docker run -d --rm --name bitcoind -v bitcoin-data:/data NicolasDorier/bitcoin
$ docker run --rm --network container:bitcoind NicolasDorier/bitcoin bitcoin-cli getinfo
If you plan on exposing the RPC port to multiple containers (for example, if you are developing an application which communicates with the RPC port directly), you probably want to consider creating a user-defined network. You can then use this network for both your bitcoind
and bitclin-cli
containers, passing -rpcconnect
to specify the hostname of your bitcoind
container:
$ docker network create bitcoin
$ docker run -d --rm --name bitcoind -v bitcoin-data:/data --network bitcoin NicolasDorier/bitcoin
$ docker run --rm --network bitcoin NicolasDorier/bitcoin bitcoin-cli -rpcconnect=bitcoind getinfo
For a complete example of running a bitcoin node using Docker Compose, see the Docker Compose example.
Configuration files and code in this repository are distributed under the MIT license.
All files are generated from templates in the root of this repository. Please do not edit any of the generated Dockerfiles directly.
- To add a new Bitcoin version, update versions.yml, then run
make update
. - To make a change to the Dockerfile which affects all current and historical Bitcoin versions, edit Dockerfile.erb then run
make update
.
If you would like to build and test containers for all versions (similar to what happens in CI), run make
. If you would like to build and test all containers for a specific Bitcoin fork, run BRANCH=core make
.