Docker ARM Synology
Introduction
Synology only offer a docker package on their x64
based NAS. Using this method to install docker on an aarch64
NAS is totally unsupported/untested and totally at your own risk. It is entirely possible it will destroy your NAS.
Installation
Log in as root
to your synology. Execute the following command:
curl https://gist.githubusercontent.com/ta264/2b7fb6e6466b109b9bf9b0a1d91ebedc/raw/7b11f25c3dce181faa5206aed8051f176cc4e406/get-docker.sh | sh
If all goes well you should see the message:
Done. Please add your user to the docker group in the Synology GUI and reboot your NAS.
Do as it says:
- Add your user to the new
docker
group using the Synology GUI - Reboot.
Hopefully you have functioning docker
and docker-compose
commands, which should work when logged in as your normal user.
Caveats
- It seems most ARM Synology don't support seccomp, so the docker container has unfettered access to your system (even more so than with a regular docker).
- Again, due to Synology constraints, all containers need to use
--network=host
(ornetwork: host
in compose) and everything will be directly accessible from the host. There are no port maps. - Obviously you can only run aarch64 images, but most hotio and linuxserver images offer an aarch64 version.
Setting up a docker GUID
If you want a GUI you can run Portainer using the following example compose:
version: '2' services: portainer: image: portainer/portainer restart: unless-stopped network_mode: host volumes: - /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock - portainer_data:/data volumes: portainer_data:
Place this in a file called docker-compose.yml
in an otherwise empty directory. Run:
docker-compose up -d
Visit http://ip:9000
to complete setup (where ip
is the IP address of your synology).
Setting up Sonarr/Radarr/Lidarr/Readarr
For guidance setting up Sonarr/Radarr/Lidarr/Readarr, see the Docker Guide, and remember caveat 2 above.