How to run docker on Windows without Docker Desktop

_nicolas_louis_

Nicolas Louis

Posted on September 26, 2021

How to run docker on Windows without Docker Desktop

Since Docker announced a new subscription for Docker Desktop for personal use, educational institutions, non-commercial open-source projects and small businesses, other enterprises need to acquire licences for all installations of Docker Desktop.

So is there an alternative on Windows to continue to legally use containers with a docker command and a nice UI like VSCode without paying a licence : the answer is YES !

We are doing magic with Windows 10, Ubuntu on WSL2, docker builder cli for windows and a little elbow grease.

Big Thanks to Jonathan Bowman for his article.

I reused and I adapted it to make VisualCode working with dockerd under WSL2.

Installation on Windows

On your windows, you need to install a couple of things :

Installation of dockerd in WSL2/Ubuntu

(Inspired from the Jonathan Bowman's article)

Is your user a "sudoer" ?

Check if sudo is installed if not : *apt install sudo*`

grep -E 'sudo|wheel' /etc/group

You would see something like sudo: x:27:myusername

Otherwise, We use usermod to add an user to the sudoer group

usermod -aG sudo myusername

Finally you can check with this command :

sudo grep -E '%sudo|%wheel' /etc/sudoers

You'll have something like

%wheel ALL=(ALL) ALL

If you see a # at the first position, the line is commented, run sudo visudo, find the corresponding line and remove the #, save and check again.

Update your Ubuntu distro

sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade

Remove Residue from previous docker installations

sudo apt remove docker docker-engine docker.io containerd runc

Debian/Ubuntu package repository configuration

source /etc/os-release

Trust the repo :

curl -fsSL https://download.docker.com/linux/${ID}/gpg | sudo apt-key add -

Update repo info :

echo "deb [arch=amd64] https://download.docker.com/linux/${ID} ${VERSION_CODENAME} stable" | sudo tee /etc/apt/sources.list.d/docker.list
sudo apt update

Install official Docker release

sudo apt install docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io

Add user to docker group

sudo usermod -aG docker $USER

"Then close that WSL window, and launch WSL again. You should see docker when you run the command groups to list group memberships."

Get IP address in WSL2

echo `ifconfig eth0 | grep -E "([0-9]{1,3}.){3}[0-9]{1,3}" | grep -v 127.0.0.1 | awk '{ print $2 }' | cut -f2 -d:`

You should have something like 172.20.5.64

Launch dockerd

In WSL, there is no systemd or other init system. So we need to launch manually docker with the automatic collect of the IP address

sudo dockerd -H `ifconfig eth0 | grep -E "([0-9]{1,3}.){3}[0-9]{1,3}" | grep -v 127.0.0.1 | awk '{ print $2 }' | cut -f2 -d:`

There should be several lines of info, warnings related to tls, and the like, with something like API listen on 172.20.5.64:2375 at the end. If so, you have success.

Test docker command

Get the IP address given with the line API listen and In another WSL terminal, you can test the following command :

docker -H 172.20.5.64 run --rm hello-world

You'll get something like this :

Hello from Docker!

...

Installing Docker.exe on Windows

Stefan Scherer is maintaining the project docker-cli-builder on GitHub where we can download the docker.exe command in standalone :

  • Download the exe
  • Put it in the directory like c:\bin
  • Add this directory in the path for executables : System Properties\Environement Variables\System Variables\Path

Add path to docker binary

Check if docker is working

Once done, logout from your session and log again
In a windows terminal (Windows Power Shell) , launch :

docker --version

You would get something like :

Docker version 20.10.5, build 55c4c8896

Launch dockerd

Open a terminal in Wsl2, you execute

sudo dockerd -H `ifconfig eth0 | grep -E "([0-9]{1,3}.){3}[0-9]{1,3}" | grep -v 127.0.0.1 |awk '{ print $2 }' | cut -f2 -d:`

And you get the IP address, as described before

Test docker on Windows

In the Powershell windows of the terminal, you can run the following command
c:\bin\docker -H tcp://172.20.5.64 run --rm hello-world

And you would get :

Hello from Docker!

...

Great we have now docker in windows running with WSL2.
But let's continue magic !

Configure VSCode to access to WSL2 docker

If you launch Visual Code and you select the docker extension, you'll get error in the panel asking if docker is installed... Yes of course it's installed but not configured to access to WSL2

VSCode with docker extension errors

To do so, click on the icon (?) on the top right of the section "Containers" and select "Edit settings..."

VSCode edit docker settings

You'll get around 56 settings and you search for "Docker:Host" where you put the line "tcp://172.20.5.64:2375" where you can replace the highlighted ip address by the one you got before

VSCode set Docker:Host

Once done, you come back to the panel and you click on "refresh" icon (top right of each sections) and you would get information from your dockerd running in WSL2

VSCode it works

Making everything works without knowing IP

Now, how to run dockerd and docker without copy&paste IP address in command line nor VSCode.

In WSL2, it's not possible to assign IP address but, I can use the windows port forwarding to redirect a local port from the host to a specific one of my distribution. Hence I could put "tcp://localhost:2375" in VsCode and the calls will be redirected to dockerd running in WSL2-Ubuntu.

For this, I run the powershell script lines in windows terminal running as administrator :

$ip = (wsl sh -c "hostname -I").Split(" ")[0]

netsh interface portproxy add v4tov4 listenport=2375 connectport=2375 connectaddress=$ip

wsl sh -c "sudo dockerd -H tcp://$ip"

Script explanation :

  • First, I collect the IP address of my default distro with the wsl command.
  • Second, I set the port forwarding 2375 to my distro
  • Third, I launch in my distro dockerd with the IP

When executing these lines you'll be prompted to enter your distro password (sudo) and I'll see after the log of dockerd. Everything will work fine when I'll see the message "API listen on 172.18.75.23:2375".

In parallel, in a windows terminal opened in my distro, I can check with top or htop if dockerd processes are running.

In VSCode, I update my Docker:Host setting with tcp://localhost:2375 :

VSCode Docker host to localhost

And the magic is there :

VSCode Docker extension working with localhost

Now I can know create a dedicated powershell script with the previous line : start_docker.ps1

In a windows terminal running with administrator privileges, I set the Execution policy with :

Set-ExecutionPolicy RemoteSigned

And every time I want to run dockerd, I launch the start_docker.ps1 script:

Launch docked from Windows

And if you see API Listen on 172.18.75.23:2375

Everything works !

Logs 1

Now, I want to use docker without -H parameter, for this, I add a new system environment variable called DOCKER_HOST set to tcp://localhost:2375

Add DOCKER_HOST as system variable

Finally, in a windows terminal, I can simply run a command like this:

docker image ls

Simple use of docker command

In conclusion

This article shows how we can use docker in windows and WSL2 without Docker Workstation
To do so, we just need first to run a powershell script launching dockerd in WSL2 and once dockerd is listening we can simply use the command docker (maintained by Stefan Scherer).

Yes ! We can continue to develop with containers without Docker Workstation.

Enjoy !

💖 💪 🙅 🚩
_nicolas_louis_
Nicolas Louis

Posted on September 26, 2021

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