# Running FreeDATA in Docker This image was built to allow FreeDATA to be run on MacOS. These instructions are for MacOS, but should work on any platform that supports Docker. ## Prerequisites - An install of Docker (eg. [Docker Desktop for MacOS](https://docs.docker.com/desktop/setup/install/mac-install/)). - Some familiarity with the command line (eg: via `Terminal.app`). - [Brew](https://brew.sh/) - I've tried to avoid this as a requirement but it is the easiest way to install `pulseaudio` on MacOS. ## Setting up ### PulseAudio A lot of this is taken from [this gist](https://gist.github.com/seongyongkim/b7d630a03e74c7ab1c6b53473b592712) and [this Dockerfile](https://github.com/KEINOS/Dockerfile_of_Speaker-Test-for-MacHost/blob/master/Dockerfile) Firstly, install. ```bash brew install pulseaudio ``` Now run the daemon. ```bash pulseaudio --load=module-native-protocol-tcp --exit-idle-time=-1 --daemon ``` Confirm it is running. ```bash pulseaudio --check -v ``` Setup the audio output, this will list your audio output devices. The `*` will show the default output. ```bash pacmd list-sinks | grep -e 'name:' -e 'index:' -e 'card:' ``` If you need to change your default output then this can be done by specifying the index: ```bash pacmd set-default-sink 1 ``` As will above, setup the the audio source. ```bash pacmd list-sources | grep -e 'name:' -e 'index:' -e 'card:' ``` Any updates to sources can be triggered with: ```bash pacmd set-default-source 1 ``` ### FreeDATA Image This can be run in one of two ways. By running the docker image with a long command line or via `docker compose`. Lets start with the long command line. On first run, this will copy the sample config file into the `./freedata-data` directory. This can be edited to suit your needs via the GUI. However, to get the GUI to run you will need to update the `NETWORK` section in `config.ini` file to be: ```bash [NETWORK] modemaddress = 0.0.0.0 modemport = 5050 ``` Now we can start the server. ```bash docker run --rm -it \ -v ./freedata-data:/data -e PULSE_SERVER=host.docker.internal -v /$HOME/.config/pulse:/home/freedata/.config/pulse \ -p 5050:5050 \ --name freedata \ ghcr.io/dj2ls/freedata:latest ``` If you'd like to start a `rigctld` instance in the container (see [the wiki](https://wiki.freedata.app/en/usage/radio-control#hamlib-rigctld-commands)), the arguments can be provided with the `RIGCTL_ARGS` environment variable. In the examples below I'm passing a model for a FlexRadio at IP `192.168.0.10` listening on port `6701`: ```bash docker run --rm -it \ -v ./freedata-data:/data -e PULSE_SERVER=host.docker.internal -e RIGCTLD_ARGS="--model=2036 --port=4532 --rig-file=192.168.0.10:6701" -v /$HOME/.config/pulse:/home/freedata/.config/pulse \ -p 5050:5050 \ --name freedata \ ghcr.io/dj2ls/freedata:latest ``` A slightly more tidy method of provding the same config is via `docker compose`. Create a `docker-compose.yml` file with the following content: ```yaml services: freedata: container_name: freedata image: ghcr.io/dj2ls/freedata:latest pull_policy: always volumes: - ./freedata-data:/data - /$HOME/.config/pulse:/home/freedata/.config/pulse environment: - PULSE_SERVER=host.docker.internal - RIGCTLD_ARGS=--model=2036 --port=4532 --rig-file=192.168.0.10:6701 ports: - 5050:5050 ``` This can then be run with: ```bash docker-compose up -d ``` And its logs viewed with: ```bash docker-compose logs -f ``` ## Usage Once the server is running, you can access the GUI by visiting `http://localhost:5050/gui` in your browser. You will need to set up your audio device and radio config.