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Remote Host Setup

Dozzle supports connecting to remote Docker hosts. This is useful when running Dozzle in a container and you want to monitor a different Docker host.

However, with Dozzle agents, you can connect to remote hosts without exposing the Docker socket. See the agent page for more information.

WARNING

Remote hosts have been replaced with agents. Agents provide a more secure way to connect to remote hosts. Although remote hosts are still supported, it is recommended to use agents. See the agent page for more information and examples. For comparison, see the comparing agents with remote connections section.

Connecting to remote hosts with TLS

Remote hosts can be configured with --remote-host or DOZZLE_REMOTE_HOST. All certs must be mounted to /certs directory. The /certs directory expects to have /certs/{ca,cert,key}.pem or /certs/{host}/{ca,cert,key}.pem in case of multiple hosts.

Note the {host} value referred to here is the IP or FQDN configured and not the optional label.

Multiple --remote-host flags can be used to specify multiple hosts. However, using DOZZLE_REMOTE_HOST the value should be comma separated.

sh
$ docker run -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -v /path/to/certs:/certs -p 8080:8080 amir20/dozzle --remote-host tcp://167.99.1.1:2376 --remote-host tcp://167.99.1.2:2376
yaml
services:
  dozzle:
    image: amir20/dozzle:latest
    volumes:
      - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
      - /path/to/certs:/certs
    ports:
      - 8080:8080
    environment:
      DOZZLE_REMOTE_HOST: tcp://167.99.1.1:2376,tcp://167.99.1.2:2376

Connecting with a socket proxy

If you are in a private network then you can use Docker Socket Proxy which expose docker.sock file without the need of TLS. Dozzle will never try to write to Docker but it will need access to list APIs. The following command will start a proxy with minimal access.

sh
docker container run --privileged -e CONTAINERS=1 -e INFO=1 -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -p 2375:2375 tecnativa/docker-socket-proxy

TIP

Using CONTAINERS=1 is required to list running containers. EVENTS is also needed but it is enabled by default. INFO=1 is needed to list system information.

Running Dozzle without any certs should work. Here is an example:

sh
docker run --volume=/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -p 8080:8080 amir20/dozzle --remote-host tcp://123.1.1.1:2375

WARNING

Docker Socket Proxy is not recommended for production use. It is only for private networks.

Adding labels to hosts

--remote-host supports host labels by appending them to the connection string with |. For example, --remote-host tcp://123.1.1.1:2375|foobar.com will use foobar.com as the label in the UI. A full example of this using the CLI or compose are:

sh
docker run --volume=/var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock -p 8080:8080 amir20/dozzle --remote-host tcp://123.1.1.1:2375|foobar.com
yaml
services:
  dozzle:
    image: amir20/dozzle:latest
    volumes:
      - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
      - /path/to/certs:/certs
    ports:
      - 8080:8080
    environment:
      DOZZLE_REMOTE_HOST: tcp://167.99.1.1:2376|foo.com,tcp://167.99.1.2:2376|bar.com

WARNING

Dozzle uses the Docker API to gather information about hosts. Each aget needs a unique host ID. They use Docker's system ID or node ID to identify the host. If you are using swarm, then the node ID is used. If you don't see all hosts, then you may have duplicate hosts configured that have the same host ID. To fix this, remove /var/lib/docker/engine-id file. See FAQ for more information.

Changing localhost label

localhost is a special connection and uses different configuration than --remote-host. Changing the label for localhost can be done using the --hostname or DOZZLE_HOSTNAME env variable. See hostname page for examples on how to use this flag.

Released under the MIT License. Open sourced and sponsored by Docker OSS.