mirror of https://github.com/Lissy93/dashy.git
📝 Adds docs for deployment to RPi and ARM-based architecutures
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@ -25,6 +25,8 @@ Once you've got Dashy up and running, you'll want to configure it with your own
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### Deploy with Docker
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[![Dashy on Docker Hub](https://dockeri.co/image/lissy93/dashy)](https://hub.docker.com/r/lissy93/dashy)
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Dashy has a built container image hosted on [Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/r/lissy93/dashy). You will need [Docker](https://docs.docker.com/get-docker/) installed on your system.
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@ -43,10 +45,12 @@ Explanation of the above options:
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- `-v` Specify volumes, to pass data from your host system to the container, in the format of `[host-path]:[container-path]`, you can use this to pass your config file, directory of assets (like icons), custom CSS or web assets (like favicon.ico, manifest.json etc)
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- `--name` Give your container a human-readable name
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- `--restart=always` Spin up the container when the daemon starts, or after it has been stopped
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- `lissy93/dashy:latest` This last option is the image the container should be built from, you can also use a specific version, by replacing `:latest` with one of tthe [tags](https://hub.docker.com/r/lissy93/dashy/tags)
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- `lissy93/dashy:latest` This last option is the image the container should be built from, you can also use a specific version, by replacing `:latest` with one of the [tags](https://hub.docker.com/r/lissy93/dashy/tags)
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For all available options, and to learn more, see the [Docker Run Docs](https://docs.docker.com/engine/reference/commandline/run/)
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If you're deploying Dashy on a modern ARM-based board, such as a Raspberry Pi (2+), then you'll need to use one of Dashy's ARM images. Set the base image + tag to either `lissy93/dashy:arm64v8` or `lissy93/dashy:arm32v7`, depending on your system architecture.
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### Using Docker Compose
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Using Docker Compose can be useful for saving your specific config in files, without having to type out a long run command each time. Save compose config as a YAML file, and then run `docker compose up` (optionally use the `-f` flag to specify file location, if it isn't located at `./docker-compose.yml`).
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