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THIS PAGE IS UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Get Ubuntu

Get the Ubuntu ISO image from ubuntu.com. The recommended version is 16.04.3 LTS (Long Term Support).  You can use the server or , desktop edition.  I used the server edition.

Get VirtualBox and VirtualBox Guest Additions

Make sure you have the VirtualBox Guest Additions ISO for your version of VirtualBox.  I'm using VirtualBox 5.1.28.  Save the Guest Additions ISO on your host computer along with the Ubuntu ISO.  Get the Guest Additions ISO from here:

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NOTE: Guest Additions versions prior to 5.1 will not work with Ubuntu 16.04.3.  If you have an earlier version of VirtualBox, you should upgrade to the latest 5.1 version.

Create a new VM in VirtualBox for Ubuntu

Type: Linux

Version: Ubuntu (64-bit)

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Network: Attached to: NAT

Create a port-forwarding rule for SSH

Create a port-forwarding rule so that you can use PuTTY (or other SSH client) to connect to the VM.

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Guest IP: <leave blank>

Guest Port: 22


Create Shared Folder

This is oriented to Windows users.  If you're using a MAC or a Linux host computer, the details may be different.  You can share any folder on the host computer with the Ubuntu VM.  On Windows, a practical choice is to share the C:\Users folder, so that your Windows home directory will be accessible from the Ubuntu VM.

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Auto-mount: <checked>

Read-only: <unchecked>


Install Ubuntu in the VM

On the "Storage" panel in VirtualBox, click on "[ optical drive ]" and then "Choose Disk Image".  Select your Ubuntu ISO image.

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Follow the prompts to install Ubuntu.

Proxy Configuration (optional)

If you're behind a corporate firewall, configure some proxy settings.  NOTE: your proxy configuration may require username and password credentials, not shown here.

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Acquire::http::Proxy "http://proxyhost:port";

Reboot the VM.

Install SSH Server

sudo apt update

sudo apt install openssh-server

Connect to the VM from your host computer

The PuTTY SSH client is popular.  A connection to localhost:1022 (or whatever port you have forwarded) will go to the VM.

Install VirtualBox Guest Additions

On the "Storage" panel in VirtualBox, click on "[ optical drive ]" and then "Choose Disk Image".  Select your VirtualBox Guest Additions ISO image.

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In a VM terminal window, verify that you can access your home directory on the host computer, which should be mounted under here:

/media/sf_Users

Install Docker

Make sure curl is installed:

sudo apt update

sudo apt install curl

If you are behind a corporate firewall (replace "proxyhost:port" with your actual proxy information)

https_proxy="https://proxyhost:port" curl -fsSL https://apt.dockerproject.org/gpg | sudo apt-key add -

Otherwise:

curl -fsSL https://apt.dockerproject.org/gpg | sudo apt-key add -

Expected Response:

OK

Add the docker package repository:

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Install packages:

sudo apt update

sudo apt-cache policy docker-engine

sudo apt install docker-engine

sudo apt install docker-compose

If you are behind a corporate firewall, you will need to configure proxy settings for docker so that images may be obtained from internet repositories.  In the commands shown here, replace "proxyhost:port", "yourdomain1.com", and "yourdomain2.com" with appropriate values.

Make the docker configuration directory:

mkdir -p /etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d

Edit (create) this file:

/etc/systemd/system/docker.service.d/http-proxy.conf

Add these lines:

[Service]
Environment="HTTP_PROXY=https://proxyhost:port"
Environment="HTTPS_PROXY=https://proxyhost:port"
Environment="NO_PROXY=localhost,127.0.0.1,.yourdomain1.com,.yourdomain2.com"

Restart docker:

sudo systemctl daemon-reload

sudo systemctl restart docker

Add yourself to the docker user group (replace "userid" with your user ID):

sudo usermod -a -G docker userid

Log out and log back in so that the user group change will takeeffect.

Verify that you can connect to docker as yourself (i.e. not as root):

docker ps

Verify that you can download and run the hello-world container

docker run hello-world

Image Removed

Create Shared Folder

This is for Windows users.  If you're using a MAC or a Linux host, things may be quite different.  The shared folder allows you to easily transfer files between the guest VM and the host computer.

Create Shared Folder

This is for Windows users.  If you're using a MAC or a Linux host, things may be quite different.  The shared folder allows you to easily transfer files between the guest VM and the host computer.

Create Shared Folder

This is for Windows users.  If you're using a MAC or a Linux host, things may be quite different.  The shared folder allows you to easily transfer files between the guest VM and the host computer.

Create Shared Folder

This is for Windows users.  If you're using a MAC or a Linux host, things may be quite different.  The shared folder allows you to easily transfer files between the guest VM and the host computer.

Create Shared Folder

This is for Windows users.  If you're using a MAC or a Linux host, things may be quite different.  The shared folder allows you to easily transfer files between the guest VM and the host computer.

Create Shared Folder

This is for Windows users.  If you're using a MAC or a Linux host, things may be quite different.  The shared folder allows you to easily transfer files between the guest VM and the host computer.

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