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  3. Cloudron on a Raspberry pi?

Cloudron on a Raspberry pi?

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armraspberry-pi
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  • LonkleL Lonkle

    @nebulon Let me know when you send are finished with your branch (and how we'd build it differently) and I'll make sure my OpenVPN Client is ready!

    girishG Offline
    girishG Offline
    girish
    Staff
    wrote on last edited by
    #108

    @lonk Can you make a new post for the VPN Client with the current status? I would like to discuss a bit whether it should be part of the Cloudron box code or an app.

    LonkleL 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • girishG girish

      @lonk Can you make a new post for the VPN Client with the current status? I would like to discuss a bit whether it should be part of the Cloudron box code or an app.

      LonkleL Offline
      LonkleL Offline
      Lonkle
      wrote on last edited by
      #109

      @girish On it.

      1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • LonkleL Offline
        LonkleL Offline
        Lonkle
        wrote on last edited by
        #110

        @malvim / @nebulon - I just picked up a Raspberry Pi, I'm going to start working on this myself. Have either of you gotten any further since your last posts in Nov?

        nebulonN 1 Reply Last reply
        1
        • LonkleL Lonkle

          @malvim / @nebulon - I just picked up a Raspberry Pi, I'm going to start working on this myself. Have either of you gotten any further since your last posts in Nov?

          nebulonN Away
          nebulonN Away
          nebulon
          Staff
          wrote on last edited by
          #111

          @lonk I basically got this working already, there are only a few changes required to make the base system work. That is very minor and has more to do with Ubuntu setup rather than our code base.

          However the main reason we have not pursued this further is, that in order to support arm (arm64 to be precise), we have to rebuild all addon docker images for a start and patch up the code which creates addon container accordingly with different image tags and even once that is done, we then have to rebuild all app packages for arm as well, which means a lot of testing and potentially fixing apps upstream. This is a lot of work and this has to be done and tested for every app package update of course.

          To give one simple example, any app using the go language, where we take the release builds, has to get some logic or separate Dockerfile to deal with arm.

          I do think it is worth it in the long run to support arm, also because VPS provider start adding arm options and at least the raspberrypi 400 showed okish performance while I was doing the proof-of-concept, however we will need a different way to build packages and run the selenium tests for both architectures reliably. This is currently done manually by us due to the lack of such CI/CD pipelines in place.

          So all this is certainly doable but unless we see higher demand, it is hard to justify the extra work and for the time being essentially at least double the work per app update.

          LonkleL iamthefijI 2 Replies Last reply
          3
          • nebulonN nebulon

            @lonk I basically got this working already, there are only a few changes required to make the base system work. That is very minor and has more to do with Ubuntu setup rather than our code base.

            However the main reason we have not pursued this further is, that in order to support arm (arm64 to be precise), we have to rebuild all addon docker images for a start and patch up the code which creates addon container accordingly with different image tags and even once that is done, we then have to rebuild all app packages for arm as well, which means a lot of testing and potentially fixing apps upstream. This is a lot of work and this has to be done and tested for every app package update of course.

            To give one simple example, any app using the go language, where we take the release builds, has to get some logic or separate Dockerfile to deal with arm.

            I do think it is worth it in the long run to support arm, also because VPS provider start adding arm options and at least the raspberrypi 400 showed okish performance while I was doing the proof-of-concept, however we will need a different way to build packages and run the selenium tests for both architectures reliably. This is currently done manually by us due to the lack of such CI/CD pipelines in place.

            So all this is certainly doable but unless we see higher demand, it is hard to justify the extra work and for the time being essentially at least double the work per app update.

            LonkleL Offline
            LonkleL Offline
            Lonkle
            wrote on last edited by
            #112

            @nebulon Well, that sounds to me like like not much work needs to be done, I'll do some PoC stuff myself and see the difficulty of converting the app. Docker is supposed to support multi arch so it's a matter of getting all the developer's to support multi arch upstream. So, I'll start submitting tickets for those things. Thanks for telling me where you were at, do you have your POC up anywhere yet?

            nebulonN 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • LonkleL Lonkle

              @nebulon Well, that sounds to me like like not much work needs to be done, I'll do some PoC stuff myself and see the difficulty of converting the app. Docker is supposed to support multi arch so it's a matter of getting all the developer's to support multi arch upstream. So, I'll start submitting tickets for those things. Thanks for telling me where you were at, do you have your POC up anywhere yet?

              nebulonN Away
              nebulonN Away
              nebulon
              Staff
              wrote on last edited by
              #113

              @lonk for the core box code, essentially only two things were needed. The branch is at https://git.cloudron.io/cloudron/box/-/commits/arm64/

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • nebulonN nebulon

                @lonk I basically got this working already, there are only a few changes required to make the base system work. That is very minor and has more to do with Ubuntu setup rather than our code base.

                However the main reason we have not pursued this further is, that in order to support arm (arm64 to be precise), we have to rebuild all addon docker images for a start and patch up the code which creates addon container accordingly with different image tags and even once that is done, we then have to rebuild all app packages for arm as well, which means a lot of testing and potentially fixing apps upstream. This is a lot of work and this has to be done and tested for every app package update of course.

                To give one simple example, any app using the go language, where we take the release builds, has to get some logic or separate Dockerfile to deal with arm.

                I do think it is worth it in the long run to support arm, also because VPS provider start adding arm options and at least the raspberrypi 400 showed okish performance while I was doing the proof-of-concept, however we will need a different way to build packages and run the selenium tests for both architectures reliably. This is currently done manually by us due to the lack of such CI/CD pipelines in place.

                So all this is certainly doable but unless we see higher demand, it is hard to justify the extra work and for the time being essentially at least double the work per app update.

                iamthefijI Offline
                iamthefijI Offline
                iamthefij
                App Dev
                wrote on last edited by
                #114

                @nebulon said in Cloudron on a Raspberry pi?:

                To give one simple example, any app using the go language, where we take the release builds, has to get some logic or separate Dockerfile to deal with arm.

                I have some experience with this and have set up my own multi-arch go build pipelines using a single Dockerfile for some of my other apps: minitor-go, dockron, tag-checker, and for Python ones too: original minitor.

                Here's a sample repo demonstrating my process: multiarch-pipeline-test. It's easier these days if your server has docker buildx though.

                Also, since with Cloudron we're most often building things that exist upstream, here's an example multi-arch build repo I have for the Golang project cadvisor. It will auto build a particular cadvisor version on a git tag so I just need to create a release on my Gitea server and the build is started and deployed. With cadvisor, I have to clone the whole repo and cross-compile the cadvisor binary for arm becaue there is no pre-compiled binary. If there is, it should be even easier to just pull that binary.

                Anyway, I'm happy to help if there are any applications that may be critical to be ported.

                nebulonN 1 Reply Last reply
                3
                • iamthefijI iamthefij

                  @nebulon said in Cloudron on a Raspberry pi?:

                  To give one simple example, any app using the go language, where we take the release builds, has to get some logic or separate Dockerfile to deal with arm.

                  I have some experience with this and have set up my own multi-arch go build pipelines using a single Dockerfile for some of my other apps: minitor-go, dockron, tag-checker, and for Python ones too: original minitor.

                  Here's a sample repo demonstrating my process: multiarch-pipeline-test. It's easier these days if your server has docker buildx though.

                  Also, since with Cloudron we're most often building things that exist upstream, here's an example multi-arch build repo I have for the Golang project cadvisor. It will auto build a particular cadvisor version on a git tag so I just need to create a release on my Gitea server and the build is started and deployed. With cadvisor, I have to clone the whole repo and cross-compile the cadvisor binary for arm becaue there is no pre-compiled binary. If there is, it should be even easier to just pull that binary.

                  Anyway, I'm happy to help if there are any applications that may be critical to be ported.

                  nebulonN Away
                  nebulonN Away
                  nebulon
                  Staff
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #115

                  @iamthefij nice thanks for the pointers, when we got started on this this will help. I tried to use docker buildx but I couldn't get it to work and produce binaries which would actually run on the raspberrypi, so I ended up using the raspberrypi to build the images itself, which surprisingly showed how beefy that board has become πŸ™‚

                  robiR M iamthefijI 3 Replies Last reply
                  1
                  • nebulonN nebulon

                    @iamthefij nice thanks for the pointers, when we got started on this this will help. I tried to use docker buildx but I couldn't get it to work and produce binaries which would actually run on the raspberrypi, so I ended up using the raspberrypi to build the images itself, which surprisingly showed how beefy that board has become πŸ™‚

                    robiR Offline
                    robiR Offline
                    robi
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #116

                    @nebulon careful with compiling on rPi's as they can overheat and burn out πŸ˜‰ Having a small heatsink or fan handy helps a lot.

                    Conscious tech

                    nebulonN 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • robiR robi

                      @nebulon careful with compiling on rPi's as they can overheat and burn out πŸ˜‰ Having a small heatsink or fan handy helps a lot.

                      nebulonN Away
                      nebulonN Away
                      nebulon
                      Staff
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #117

                      @robi yup, I have a case for it with cooling

                      yusfY 1 Reply Last reply
                      2
                      • nebulonN nebulon

                        @robi yup, I have a case for it with cooling

                        yusfY Offline
                        yusfY Offline
                        yusf
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #118

                        @nebulon You have that case that is the heatsink? It’s very nice. πŸ˜ƒ

                        nebulonN 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • nebulonN nebulon

                          @iamthefij nice thanks for the pointers, when we got started on this this will help. I tried to use docker buildx but I couldn't get it to work and produce binaries which would actually run on the raspberrypi, so I ended up using the raspberrypi to build the images itself, which surprisingly showed how beefy that board has become πŸ™‚

                          M Offline
                          M Offline
                          malvim
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #119

                          @nebulon yup! I tried it as well, and could not get it to work. building on the pi itself proved to be
                          the easiest way...

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • yusfY yusf

                            @nebulon You have that case that is the heatsink? It’s very nice. πŸ˜ƒ

                            nebulonN Away
                            nebulonN Away
                            nebulon
                            Staff
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #120

                            @yusf yes exactly that, makes it feel like a strong brick you could throw around

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            1
                            • nebulonN nebulon

                              @iamthefij nice thanks for the pointers, when we got started on this this will help. I tried to use docker buildx but I couldn't get it to work and produce binaries which would actually run on the raspberrypi, so I ended up using the raspberrypi to build the images itself, which surprisingly showed how beefy that board has become πŸ™‚

                              iamthefijI Offline
                              iamthefijI Offline
                              iamthefij
                              App Dev
                              wrote on last edited by iamthefij
                              #121

                              @nebulon would all binaries not run (eg. /bin/sh from within the base) or just Go binaries that you compiled within the buildx pipeline? If it's the former, it may not be using the right base image. If it's the latter and the former works, perhaps setting the GOARCH variable via a build-arg would solve it.

                              Note: I personally have not used buildx yet, but from what I can see it's a simpler, automatic version of what I'm trying to do with qemu that handles the manifest for you. So I think you should just be able to build without the muckiness of all the build-args I pass, but if not you can play with mixing those in until it works.

                              I think buildx is supported on my laptop, so I can give it a try, but it's not supported on my CI box yet, so I haven't switched.

                              MOrochenaM 1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • iamthefijI iamthefij

                                @nebulon would all binaries not run (eg. /bin/sh from within the base) or just Go binaries that you compiled within the buildx pipeline? If it's the former, it may not be using the right base image. If it's the latter and the former works, perhaps setting the GOARCH variable via a build-arg would solve it.

                                Note: I personally have not used buildx yet, but from what I can see it's a simpler, automatic version of what I'm trying to do with qemu that handles the manifest for you. So I think you should just be able to build without the muckiness of all the build-args I pass, but if not you can play with mixing those in until it works.

                                I think buildx is supported on my laptop, so I can give it a try, but it's not supported on my CI box yet, so I haven't switched.

                                MOrochenaM Offline
                                MOrochenaM Offline
                                MOrochena
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #122

                                I was wondering what the current state of this is, as I would be extremely interested in migrating my Cloudron setup to a Raspberry pi.

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • girishG Offline
                                  girishG Offline
                                  girish
                                  Staff
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #123

                                  The project has stalled a bit unfortunately 😞 So far, there's not much interest in ARM server (apart from hosting on pi), I was hoping we will see more ARM servers mainstream...

                                  M potemkin_aiP 2 Replies Last reply
                                  1
                                  • girishG girish

                                    The project has stalled a bit unfortunately 😞 So far, there's not much interest in ARM server (apart from hosting on pi), I was hoping we will see more ARM servers mainstream...

                                    M Offline
                                    M Offline
                                    malvim
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #124

                                    Hey! I was working on this, but stumbled upon two issues:

                                    1. As @girish said, there's not much interest in ARM servers, so it would be very low priority to integrate having different architectures into cloudron main code; and

                                    2. I wanted to do this so I could host my cloudron at home, but since mos ISPs where I live won't let you expose port 80, 443, 25, etc., I lost interest in pursuing this.

                                    If cloudron would support having nginx on custom ports, that would be cool for people wanting to host at home and with the same problem, but I think this is also not a priority now, as not too many people seem to be interested in this.

                                    It's not too hard to make cloudron's install script work on a raspberry pi, though, but you'd have to maintain a fork, which was also not my interest at the time. If you want to, though, DM me and I can give you a few pointers.

                                    robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • M malvim

                                      Hey! I was working on this, but stumbled upon two issues:

                                      1. As @girish said, there's not much interest in ARM servers, so it would be very low priority to integrate having different architectures into cloudron main code; and

                                      2. I wanted to do this so I could host my cloudron at home, but since mos ISPs where I live won't let you expose port 80, 443, 25, etc., I lost interest in pursuing this.

                                      If cloudron would support having nginx on custom ports, that would be cool for people wanting to host at home and with the same problem, but I think this is also not a priority now, as not too many people seem to be interested in this.

                                      It's not too hard to make cloudron's install script work on a raspberry pi, though, but you'd have to maintain a fork, which was also not my interest at the time. If you want to, though, DM me and I can give you a few pointers.

                                      robiR Offline
                                      robiR Offline
                                      robi
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #125

                                      @malvim There's a nice thread on all the different tools you can use to expose apps under dev or home run services:
                                      https://forum.cloudron.io/topic/6231/ngrok-alternatives-awesome-tunneling

                                      Even if you don't have a domain, any subdomain provider will work, and I'm sure many of the forum members could offer a container that does just that on one of their subdomains if you don't already have one and a VPS.

                                      Conscious tech

                                      M 1 Reply Last reply
                                      0
                                      • robiR robi

                                        @malvim There's a nice thread on all the different tools you can use to expose apps under dev or home run services:
                                        https://forum.cloudron.io/topic/6231/ngrok-alternatives-awesome-tunneling

                                        Even if you don't have a domain, any subdomain provider will work, and I'm sure many of the forum members could offer a container that does just that on one of their subdomains if you don't already have one and a VPS.

                                        M Offline
                                        M Offline
                                        malvim
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #126

                                        @robi hey, thanks for the reply!

                                        I'll take a look.

                                        I currently do own a domain and run cloudron on a rented server, but I'm from Brazil and stuff is pretty bad here right now, and it's starting to be a bit too expensive for my purposes.

                                        I thought about hosting at home, but stumbled upon this problem. I'll take a look ad that thread and see what I can use. Thanks again!

                                        robiR 1 Reply Last reply
                                        0
                                        • M malvim

                                          @robi hey, thanks for the reply!

                                          I'll take a look.

                                          I currently do own a domain and run cloudron on a rented server, but I'm from Brazil and stuff is pretty bad here right now, and it's starting to be a bit too expensive for my purposes.

                                          I thought about hosting at home, but stumbled upon this problem. I'll take a look ad that thread and see what I can use. Thanks again!

                                          robiR Offline
                                          robiR Offline
                                          robi
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #127

                                          @malvim said in Cloudron on a Raspberry pi?:

                                          I currently do own a domain and run cloudron on a rented server, but I'm from Brazil and stuff is pretty bad here right now

                                          We also have a thread on that.. search for "cheap vps" ..
                                          my profile has a link to the affordable VPS servers I use.

                                          Conscious tech

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