Rancher Desktop is an open-source project that brings Kubernetes and container management to the desktop. It runs on Windows, macOS and Linux. This README pertains to the development of Rancher Desktop. For user-oriented information about Rancher Desktop, please see rancherdesktop.io. For user-oriented documentation, please see docs.rancherdesktop.io.
Rancher Desktop is an Electron application with the primary business logic written in TypeScript and JavaScript. It leverages several other pieces of technology to provide the platform elements which include k3s, kubectl, nerdctl WSL, QEMU, and more. The application wraps numerous pieces of technology to provide one cohesive application.
There are two options for building from source on Windows: with a Development VM Setup or Manual Development Environment Setup with an existing Windows installation.
-
Download a Microsoft Windows 10 development virtual machine. All of the following steps should be done in that virtual machine.
-
Open a PowerShell prompt (hit Windows Key +
X
and openWindows PowerShell
). -
Run the automated setup script:
Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned -Scope CurrentUser iwr -useb 'https://github.com/rancher-sandbox/rancher-desktop/raw/main/scripts/windows-setup.ps1' | iex
-
Close the privileged PowerShell prompt.
-
Ensure
msbuild_path
andmsvs_version
are configured correctly in.npmrc
file. Run the following commands to set these properties:npm config set msvs_version <visual-studio-version-number> npm config set msbuild_path <path/to/MSBuild.exe>
For example for Visual Studio 2022:
npm config set msvs_version 2022 npm config set msbuild_path "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\2022\Community\MSBuild\Current\Bin\MSBuild.exe"
You can now clone the repository and run npm install
.
-
Install Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) on your machine. Skip this step, if WSL is already installed.
-
Open a PowerShell prompt (hit Windows Key +
X
and openWindows PowerShell
). -
Install Scoop via
iwr -useb get.scoop.sh | iex
. -
Install git, go, nvm, and unzip via
scoop install git go nvm python unzip
. Check node version withnvm list
. If node v16 is not installed or set as the current version, then install usingnvm install 16
and set as current usingnvm use 16.xx.xx
. -
Install Visual Studio 2017 or higher. Make sure you have the
Windows SDK
component installed. This Visual Studio docs describes steps to install components. The Desktop development with C++ workload needs to be selected, too. -
Ensure
msbuild_path
andmsvs_version
are configured correctly in.npmrc
file. Run the following commands to set these properties:npm config set msvs_version <visual-studio-version-number> npm config set msbuild_path <path/to/MSBuild.exe>
For example for Visual Studio 2022:
npm config set msvs_version 2022 npm config set msbuild_path "C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio\2022\Community\MSBuild\Current\Bin\MSBuild.exe"
You can now clone the repository and run npm install
.
Install nvm
to get Node.js and npm:
See https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm#installing-and-updating and run the curl
or wget
command to install nvm.
Note that this script adds code dealing with nvm
to a profile file
(like ~/.bash_profile
). To add access to nvm
to a current shell session,
you'll need to source
that file.
Currently we build Rancher Desktop with Node 16. To install it, run:
nvm install 16
You'll also need to run brew install go
if you haven't installed go.
Then you can install dependencies with:
npm install
Ensure you have the following installed:
-
Node.js v16. Make sure you have any development packages installed. For example, on openSUSE Leap 15.3 you would need to install
nodejs16
andnodejs16-devel
. -
Go 1.18 or later.
-
Dependencies described in the
node-gyp
docs installation. This is required to install theffi-napi
npm package. These docs mention "a proper C/C++ compiler toolchain". You can installgcc
andg++
for this.
Then you can install dependencies with:
npm install
You can then run Rancher Desktop as described below. It may fail on the first run - if this happens, try doing a factory reset and re-running, which has been known to solve this issue.
Once you have your dependencies installed you can run a development version of Rancher Desktop with:
npm run dev
To run the unit tests:
npm test
To run the integration tests:
npm run test:e2e
Rancher can be built from source on Windows, macOS or Linux. Cross-compilation is currently not supported. To run a build do:
npm run build
The build output goes to dist/
.
Each commit triggers a GitHub Actions run that results in application bundles
(.exe
s and .dmg
s) being uploaded as artifacts. This can be useful if you
want to test the latest build of Rancher Desktop as built by the build system.
You can download these artifacts from the Summary page of completed package
actions.
Similar to Windows and macOS, Linux builds of Rancher Desktop are made from each commit. However on Linux, only part of the process is done by GitHub Actions. The final part of it is done by Open Build Service.
There are two channels of the Rancher Desktop repositories: dev
and stable
.
stable
is the channel that most users use. It is the one that users are
instructed to add in the official documentation, and the one that contains
builds that are created from official releases. dev
is the channel that we are
interested in here: it contains builds created from the latest commit made on
the main
branch, and on any branches that match the format release-*
. To
learn how to install the development repositories, see below.
When using the dev
repositories, it is important to understand the format of
the versions of Rancher Desktop available from the dev
repositories.
The versions are in the format:
<priority>.<branch>.<commit_time>.<commit>
where:
priority
is a meaningless number that exists to give versions built from the main
branch priority over versions built from the release-*
branches when updating.
branch
is the branch name; dashes are removed due to constraints imposed by
package formats.
commit_time
is the UNIX timestamp of the commit used to make the build.
commit
is the shortened hash of the commit used to make the build.
You can add the repo with the following steps:
curl -s https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/isv:/Rancher:/dev/deb/Release.key | gpg --dearmor | sudo dd status=none of=/usr/share/keyrings/isv-rancher-dev-archive-keyring.gpg
echo 'deb [signed-by=/usr/share/keyrings/isv-rancher-dev-archive-keyring.gpg] https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/isv:/Rancher:/dev/deb/ ./' | sudo dd status=none of=/etc/apt/sources.list.d/isv-rancher-dev.list
sudo apt update
You can see available versions with:
apt list -a rancher-desktop
Once you find the version you want to install you can install it with:
sudo apt install rancher-desktop=<version>
This works even if you already have a version of Rancher Desktop installed.
You can add the repo with:
sudo zypper addrepo https://download.opensuse.org/repositories/isv:/Rancher:/dev/rpm/isv:Rancher:dev.repo
sudo zypper refresh
You can see available versions with:
zypper search -s rancher-desktop
Finally, install the version you want with:
zypper install --oldpackage rancher-desktop=<version>
This works even if you already have a version of Rancher Desktop installed.
There are no repositories for AppImages, but you can access the latest development AppImage builds here.
Please see the document about contributing.
Please see the docs directory for further developer documentation.