The LinuxServer.io team brings you another container release featuring:
- regular and timely application updates
- easy user mappings (PGID, PUID)
- custom base image with s6 overlay
- weekly base OS updates with common layers across the entire LinuxServer.io ecosystem to minimise space usage, down time and bandwidth
- regular security updates
Find us at:
- Blog - all the things you can do with our containers including How-To guides, opinions and much more!
- Discord - realtime support / chat with the community and the team.
- Discourse - post on our community forum.
- Fleet - an online web interface which displays all of our maintained images.
- GitHub - view the source for all of our repositories.
- Open Collective - please consider helping us by either donating or contributing to our budget
Thelounge (a fork of shoutIRC) is a web IRC client that you host on your own server.
We utilise the docker manifest for multi-platform awareness. More information is available from docker here and our announcement here.
Simply pulling lscr.io/linuxserver/thelounge:latest
should retrieve the correct image for your arch, but you can also pull specific arch images via tags.
The architectures supported by this image are:
Architecture | Available | Tag |
---|---|---|
x86-64 | âś… | amd64-<version tag> |
arm64 | âś… | arm64v8-<version tag> |
armhf | ❌ |
This image provides various versions that are available via tags. Please read the descriptions carefully and exercise caution when using unstable or development tags.
Tag | Available | Description |
---|---|---|
latest | âś… | Stable releases. |
next | âś… | Next Pre-Releases. |
nightly | âś… | Nightly images from commits in master. |
-
When the application first runs, it will populate its /config
-
Stop the container
-
Now from the host, edit
/config/config.js
, wherever you've mapped it -
In most cases you want the value
public: false
to allow named users only -
Setting the two prefetch values to true improves usability, but uses more storage
-
Once you have the configuration you want, save it and start the container again
-
For each user, run the command
-
docker exec -it thelounge s6-setuidgid abc thelounge add <user>
-
You will be prompted to enter a password that will not be echoed.
-
Saving logs to disk is the default, this consumes more space but allows scrollback.
-
To log in to the application, browse to
http://<hostip>:9000
-
You should now be prompted for a username and password on the web interface.
-
Once logged in, you can add an IRC network. Some defaults are preset for Freenode
This image can be run with a read-only container filesystem. For details please read the docs.
To help you get started creating a container from this image you can either use docker-compose or the docker cli.
Note
Unless a parameter is flaged as 'optional', it is mandatory and a value must be provided.
docker-compose (recommended, click here for more info)
---
services:
thelounge:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/thelounge:latest
container_name: thelounge
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
- TZ=Etc/UTC
volumes:
- /path/to/thelounge/config:/config
ports:
- 9000:9000
restart: unless-stopped
docker cli (click here for more info)
docker run -d \
--name=thelounge \
-e PUID=1000 \
-e PGID=1000 \
-e TZ=Etc/UTC \
-p 9000:9000 \
-v /path/to/thelounge/config:/config \
--restart unless-stopped \
lscr.io/linuxserver/thelounge:latest
Containers are configured using parameters passed at runtime (such as those above). These parameters are separated by a colon and indicate <external>:<internal>
respectively. For example, -p 8080:80
would expose port 80
from inside the container to be accessible from the host's IP on port 8080
outside the container.
Parameter | Function |
---|---|
-p 9000:9000 |
Application WebUI |
-e PUID=1000 |
for UserID - see below for explanation |
-e PGID=1000 |
for GroupID - see below for explanation |
-e TZ=Etc/UTC |
specify a timezone to use, see this list. |
-v /config |
Persistent config files |
--read-only=true |
Run container with a read-only filesystem. Please read the docs. |
You can set any environment variable from a file by using a special prepend FILE__
.
As an example:
-e FILE__MYVAR=/run/secrets/mysecretvariable
Will set the environment variable MYVAR
based on the contents of the /run/secrets/mysecretvariable
file.
For all of our images we provide the ability to override the default umask settings for services started within the containers using the optional -e UMASK=022
setting.
Keep in mind umask is not chmod it subtracts from permissions based on it's value it does not add. Please read up here before asking for support.
When using volumes (-v
flags), permissions issues can arise between the host OS and the container, we avoid this issue by allowing you to specify the user PUID
and group PGID
.
Ensure any volume directories on the host are owned by the same user you specify and any permissions issues will vanish like magic.
In this instance PUID=1000
and PGID=1000
, to find yours use id your_user
as below:
id your_user
Example output:
uid=1000(your_user) gid=1000(your_user) groups=1000(your_user)
We publish various Docker Mods to enable additional functionality within the containers. The list of Mods available for this image (if any) as well as universal mods that can be applied to any one of our images can be accessed via the dynamic badges above.
-
Shell access whilst the container is running:
docker exec -it thelounge /bin/bash
-
To monitor the logs of the container in realtime:
docker logs -f thelounge
-
Container version number:
docker inspect -f '{{ index .Config.Labels "build_version" }}' thelounge
-
Image version number:
docker inspect -f '{{ index .Config.Labels "build_version" }}' lscr.io/linuxserver/thelounge:latest
Most of our images are static, versioned, and require an image update and container recreation to update the app inside. With some exceptions (noted in the relevant readme.md), we do not recommend or support updating apps inside the container. Please consult the Application Setup section above to see if it is recommended for the image.
Below are the instructions for updating containers:
-
Update images:
-
All images:
docker-compose pull
-
Single image:
docker-compose pull thelounge
-
-
Update containers:
-
All containers:
docker-compose up -d
-
Single container:
docker-compose up -d thelounge
-
-
You can also remove the old dangling images:
docker image prune
-
Update the image:
docker pull lscr.io/linuxserver/thelounge:latest
-
Stop the running container:
docker stop thelounge
-
Delete the container:
docker rm thelounge
-
Recreate a new container with the same docker run parameters as instructed above (if mapped correctly to a host folder, your
/config
folder and settings will be preserved) -
You can also remove the old dangling images:
docker image prune
Tip
We recommend Diun for update notifications. Other tools that automatically update containers unattended are not recommended or supported.
If you want to make local modifications to these images for development purposes or just to customize the logic:
git clone https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-thelounge.git
cd docker-thelounge
docker build \
--no-cache \
--pull \
-t lscr.io/linuxserver/thelounge:latest .
The ARM variants can be built on x86_64 hardware and vice versa using lscr.io/linuxserver/qemu-static
docker run --rm --privileged lscr.io/linuxserver/qemu-static --reset
Once registered you can define the dockerfile to use with -f Dockerfile.aarch64
.
- 06.06.24: - Rebase to Alpine 3.20.
- 23.12.23: - Rebase to Alpine 3.19.
- 25.05.23: - Rebase to Alpine 3.18, deprecate armhf.
- 18.12.22: - Rebasing master to alpine 3.17.
- 24.10.22: - Fix sqlite3 build.
- 12.04.22: - Install from source using yarn.
- 11.04.22: - Rebasing to alpine 3.15 and switching from python2-dev to python3-dev for building node sqlite on arm.
- 23.01.21: - Rebasing to alpine 3.13.
- 02.06.20: - Rebasing to alpine 3.12.
- 19.12.19: - Rebasing to alpine 3.11.
- 28.06.19: - Rebasing to alpine 3.10.
- 15.05.19: - Update Arm variant images to build sqlite3 module.
- 23.03.19: - Switching to new Base images, shift to arm32v7 tag.
- 22.02.19: - Rebasing to alpine 3.9.
- 28.01.19: - Add pipeline logic and multi arch.
- 25.08.18: - Use global install, simplifies adding users.
- 20.08.18: - Rebase to alpine 3.8.
- 06.01.18: - Rebase to alpine 3.7.
- 26.05.17: - Rebase to alpine 3.6.
- 06.02.17: - Rebase to alpine 3.5.
- 14.10.16: - Bump to pickup 2.10 release.
- 14.10.16: - Add version layer information.
- 11.09.16: - Add layer badges to README.
- 31.08.16: - Initial Release.