This is a plugin for Docker Machine allowing to create Docker hosts locally on Parallels Desktop for Mac
- OS X 10.9+
- Docker Machine 0.5.1+ (is bundled to Docker Toolbox 1.9.1+)
- Parallels Desktop 11.0.0+ Pro or Business edition (Standard edition is not supported!)
Install via Homebrew:
$ brew install docker-machine-parallelsTo install this plugin manually, download the binary docker-machine-driver-parallels
and make it available by $PATH, for example by putting it to /usr/local/bin/:
$ curl -L https://github.com/Parallels/docker-machine-parallels/releases/download/v1.3.0/docker-machine-driver-parallels > /usr/local/bin/docker-machine-driver-parallels
$ chmod +x /usr/local/bin/docker-machine-driver-parallelsThe latest version of docker-machine-driver-parallels binary is available on
the "Releases" page.
Official documentation for Docker Machine is available here.
To create a Parallels Desktop virtual machine for Docker purposes just run this command:
$ docker-machine create --driver=parallels prl-dev
Available options:
--parallels-boot2docker-url: The URL of the boot2docker image.--parallels-disk-size: Size of disk for the host VM (in MB).--parallels-memory: Size of memory for the host VM (in MB).--parallels-cpu-count: Number of CPUs to use to create the VM (-1 to use the number of CPUs available).--parallels-video-size: Size of video memory for host (in MB).--parallels-no-share: Disable the sharing of/Usersdirectory.--parallels-nested-virutalization: Enable nested virtualization.
The --parallels-boot2docker-url flag takes a few different forms. By
default, if no value is specified for this flag, Machine will check locally for
a boot2docker ISO. If one is found, that will be used as the ISO for the
created machine. If one is not found, the latest ISO release available on
boot2docker/boot2docker will be
downloaded and stored locally for future use. Note that this means you must run
docker-machine upgrade deliberately on a machine if you wish to update the "cached"
boot2docker ISO.
This is the default behavior (when --parallels-boot2docker-url=""), but the
option also supports specifying ISOs by the http:// and file:// protocols.
Environment variables and default values:
| CLI option | Environment variable | Default |
|---|---|---|
--parallels-boot2docker-url |
PARALLELS_BOOT2DOCKER_URL |
Latest boot2docker url |
--parallels-cpu-count |
PARALLELS_CPU_COUNT |
1 |
--parallels-disk-size |
PARALLELS_DISK_SIZE |
20000 |
--parallels-memory |
PARALLELS_MEMORY_SIZE |
1024 |
--parallels-video-size |
PARALLELS_VIDEO_SIZE |
64 |
--parallels-no-share |
- | false |
--parallels-nested-virtualization |
- | false |
If you wish to work on Parallels Driver for Docker machine, you'll first need Go installed (version 1.7+ is required). Make sure Go is properly installed, including setting up a GOPATH.
Run these commands to build the plugin binary:
$ go get -d github.com/Parallels/docker-machine-parallels
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/Parallels/docker-machine-parallels
$ make buildAfter the build is complete, bin/docker-machine-driver-parallels binary will
be created. If you want to copy it to the ${GOPATH}/bin/, run make install.
We use Bats for acceptance testing, so, install it first.
You also need to build the plugin binary by calling make build.
Then you can run acceptance tests using this command:
$ make test-acceptanceAcceptance tests will invoke the general docker-machine binary available by
$PATH. If you want to specify it explicitly, just set MACHINE_BINARY env variable:
$ MACHINE_BINARY=/path/to/docker-machine make test-acceptance- Mikhail Zholobov (@legal90)
- Rickard von Essen (@rickard-von-essen)