Difference between revisions of "Installing Docker on RedHat Enterprise Linux 8"
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On the system (most likely a virtual machine) dedicated to Command Center, make sure you have the latest version of docker up and running. The following steps may help. |
On the system (most likely a virtual machine) dedicated to Command Center, make sure you have the latest version of docker up and running. The following steps may help. |
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− | A user with '''sudo''' privileges is required to run most commands. |
+ | A user with '''sudo''' privileges is required to run most commands. The Red Hat user may be 'ec2-user'. |
==Uninstall old docker versions== |
==Uninstall old docker versions== |
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This command will run a test container and display a message indicating that the installation is working properly. |
This command will run a test container and display a message indicating that the installation is working properly. |
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− | Return to the [[Command Center Installation|Installation page |
+ | Return to the [[Command Center Installation|Installation page]] to continue installing Command Center on the system |
Revision as of 16:55, 24 April 2023
Contents
Introduction
On the system (most likely a virtual machine) dedicated to Command Center, make sure you have the latest version of docker up and running. The following steps may help.
A user with sudo privileges is required to run most commands. The Red Hat user may be 'ec2-user'.
Uninstall old docker versions
This is an optional step in case your docker version is out of date:
sudo yum remove docker \ docker-client \ docker-client-latest \ docker-common \ docker-latest \ docker-latest-logrotate \ docker-logrotate \ docker-engine
Install docker using the repository
sudo yum install -y yum-utils sudo yum-config-manager \ --add-repo \ https://download.docker.com/linux/centos/docker-ce.repo sudo yum install docker-ce docker-ce-cli containerd.io docker-compose-plugin
Start Docker.
Start docker using the following command:
$ sudo systemctl start docker
Enable the Docker service to start automatically on system boot by running the following command:
$ sudo systemctl enable docker
Verify that Docker Engine is installed correctly
Run the hello-world image.
$ sudo docker run hello-world
This command will run a test container and display a message indicating that the installation is working properly.
Return to the Installation page to continue installing Command Center on the system