/WebRTC-Docker

Out-of-the-box docker images for AppRTC dev/test purpose.

Primary LanguageShellMIT LicenseMIT

WebRTC-Docker

Out-of-the-box docker images for AppRTC dev/test purpose.

AppRTC-Server

macOS host:

docker run --rm \
  -p 8080:8080 -p 8089:8089 -p 3478:3478 -p 3478:3478/udp -p 3033:3033 \
  -p 59000-65000:59000-65000/udp \
  -e PUBLIC_IP=<server public IP> \
  -it piasy/apprtc-server

Linux host:

docker run --rm --net=host \
  -e PUBLIC_IP=<server public IP> \
  -it piasy/apprtc-server

About port publish:

  • TCP 8080 is used for room server;
  • TCP 8089 is used for signal server;
  • TCP 3033 is used for ICE server;
  • TCP 3478, UDP 3478 and UDP 59000-65000 is used for TURN/STUN server;

So make sure your firewall has opened those ports.

WebRTC-Build

Only Android/Linux is supported.

docker run --rm \
  -e ENABLE_SHADOW_SOCKS=true \
  -e SHADOW_SOCKS_SERVER_ADDR=<your shadowsocks server ip> \
  -e SHADOW_SOCKS_SERVER_PORT=<your shadowsocks server port> \
  -e SHADOW_SOCKS_ENC_METHOD=<your shadowsocks encrypt method> \
  -e SHADOW_SOCKS_ENC_PASS=<your shadowsocks encrypt password> \
  -v <path to place webrtc source>:/webrtc \
  -it piasy/webrtc-build

Note: if your encrypt password contains special characters, remember to escape it with \, e.g. &bDmc! to \&bDmc\!.

If you don't need run shadowsocks proxy, you can run:

docker run --rm \
  -v <path to place webrtc source>:/webrtc \
  -it piasy/webrtc-build

After the docker image started, you can run fetch, gclient, gn, and ninja commands to download and build webrtc code.