To quickly install rockerc
and its executables, follow these steps:
-
Install uv:
curl -Ls https://astral.sh/uv/install.sh | bash
-
Install rockerc and executables from rocker:
uv tool install rockerc --with-executables-from rocker
This will install rockerc
and make its CLI tools available in your environment.
rockerc follows a layered architecture designed for maximum code reuse between terminal and VSCode workflows:
- rockerc: Core container management tool that reads
rockerc.yaml
files and launches containers - rockervsc: Light wrapper on rockerc with the same interface, adds VSCode integration
- renv: Multi-repository environment manager that collects configuration arguments and passes them to rockerc
- renvvsc: Functions the same as renv, but passes arguments to rockervsc instead of rockerc
- Maximum code reuse: Changes in core functionality automatically benefit both terminal and VSCode workflows
- Consistent interfaces: All tools share the same command-line interface and configuration format
- Easy maintenance: Bug fixes and features only need to be implemented once in the base layer
This design ensures that whether you're using terminal-based development or VSCode integration, you get the same robust container management with your preferred interface.
navigate to a directory with a rockerc.yaml
file and run:
rockerc
This will search recursively for rockerc.yaml and pass those arguments to rocker
rockerc
now always launches (or reuses) the container in detached mode and then opens an interactive shell via docker exec
. This avoids stdin/TTY interference and enables a reliable VS Code attach workflow.
Basic run (detached + shell):
rockerc
Attach VS Code as well (exact same container) using the new flag:
rockerc --vsc
For convenience, the rockervsc
command is just an alias for:
rockerc --vsc
- Merge global (
~/.rockerc.yaml
) and projectrockerc.yaml
config. - If a
dockerfile
key exists, build a tagged image and strip thepull
extension. - Ensure required rocker flags are injected:
--detach
--name <container>
/--image-name <container>
- Workspace volume mount:
<project>:/workspaces/<container>
- Run
rocker
only if the container does not already exist. - (Optional) Launch VS Code:
code --folder-uri vscode-remote://attached-container+<hex>/workspaces/<container>
- Open an interactive shell with
docker exec -it <container> $SHELL
.
If a container with the derived name already exists, rockerc reuses it (skips rocker invocation) and simply attaches shell / VS Code (if --vsc
).
Force a fresh container (timestamp-rename the old one):
rockerc --force
rockerc --vsc --force
You can tune startup wait timing (useful on slower hosts) with:
ROCKERC_WAIT_TIMEOUT
(default: 20 seconds)ROCKERC_WAIT_INTERVAL
(default: 0.25 seconds)
If you include create-dockerfile
in args or pass --create-dockerfile
, a Dockerfile.rocker
and run_dockerfile.sh
script are generated using rocker's dry-run output.
- Using
--rm
in custom extra args is discouraged with--vsc
since closing the shell would remove the container out from under VS Code. - The volume mount path is standardized to
/workspaces/<container>
to match VS Code's remote container expectations. - Existing behavior of merging & deduplicating extensions (
args
) and blacklist remains unchanged.
rockervsc
forwards all arguments to rockerc
, so you can use any rockerc
options:
rockervsc --gemini
The command will:
- Run
rockerc
with your arguments plus container configuration for VS Code - Launch VS Code and attach it to the container
- If the container already exists, it will just attach VS Code without recreating it
For multi-repository development with git worktrees and VS Code, use renvsc
:
renvsc owner/repo@branch
renvsc
combines the full functionality of renv
(repository and worktree management) with automatic VS Code integration. See renv.md for complete documentation.
Rocker is an alternative to docker-compose that makes it easier to run containers with access to features of the local environment and add extra capabilities to existing docker images. However rocker has many configurable options and it can get hard to read or reuse those arguments. This is a naive wrapper that read a rockerc.yaml file and passes them to rocker. There are currently no plans to integrate docker-compose like functionality directly into rocker so I made this as a proof of concept to see what the ergonomics of it would be like.
I'm not sure this is the best way of implementing rockerc like functionality. It might be better to implemented it as a rocker extension, or in rocker itself. This was just the simplest way to get started. I may explore those other options in more detail in the future.
You need to pass either a docker image, or a relative path to a dockerfile
rockerc.yaml
image: ubuntu:22.04
or
dockerfile: Dockerfile
will look for the dockerfile relative to the rockerc.yaml file