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Getting Started using Docker
One option to get your receiver up and running quickly is to pick one of the available docker images. They come preloaded with all the requirements and OpenWebRX itself, and if you already have a running docker setup, they should get you started very easily.
I am currently providing specialized images for each of the supported hardware types, and I also have a "full" variant that includes support for all hardwares.
Check out my docker hub page for a list of all the available images.
The docker images are built for both x86_64, armv7l and aarch64 architectures, so you can use these on your desktop, laptop as well as many single board computers, including the Raspberry Pi.
Here is a quick setup guide for Raspberry Pi; to cut to the chase, all you need to do is run curl -sSL https://get.docker.com | sh
to get started.
In order to download and run the full image, simply use these commands:
docker volume create openwebrx-settings
docker run --device /dev/bus/usb -p 8073:8073 -v openwebrx-settings:/var/lib/openwebrx jketterl/openwebrx:stable
or you can use docker-compose
version: "3"
services:
openwebrx:
image: jketterl/openwebrx:stable
volumes:
- ./openwebrx/settings:/var/lib/openwebrx
ports:
- 8073:8073
devices:
- /dev/bus/usb/002/002:/dev/bus/usb/002/002
tmpfs:
- /tmp/openwebrx
If your host is running any kind of flash-based storage (e.g. SSDs or the SD-card of a Raspberry Pi) it is highly recommended to offload the temporary files to memory-based storage. you can do this by adding --tmpfs=/tmp/openwebrx
to the docker commandline. Please note that this is not just an example, the path matches the container setup. If you wish to use a different path, you will need to update the container configuration.
This setup allows modification of all settings in the web configuration. If you wish to modify any settings in the configuration files in /etc/openwebrx
, please set up an additional volume and mount for /etc/openwebrx
.
If you run into problems accessing your USB devices inside the docker container (e.g. usb_claim_interface error -6
), please make sure to apply any relevant Linux kernel module blacklisting to the docker host. The following kernel modules should be blacklisted:
SDR device | kernel module(s) |
---|---|
RTL-SDR | dvb_usb_rtl28xxu |
SDRplay | sdr_msi3101 msi001 msi2500 |
HackRF | hackrf |
Please check your distributions documentation on how to perform the actual blacklisting. For Debian users, you should create a file in /etc/modprobe.d/
ending in .conf
that contains a single line blacklist $module
, where $module is the module from the table above.
Supported Hardware
Setup Guide
Docker
Manual installation
Upgrading an installation
Migrating to OpenWebRX 1.0
RHEL specific notes
User Management
Configuration
Bookmarks
Background decoding
How to get openwebrx stats into collectd
Airspy HF+ and Discovery
Airspy R2 / Mini
HackRF
Perseus HF receiver
RTL-SDR
Radioberry
SDRPlay
HPSDR / Hermes-Lite 2
FiFi-SDR
AMBE vocoder