Fedora container for testing GNOME Shell extensions on GitHub Actions (and also locally).
Based on https://github.com/Schneegans/gnome-shell-pod
This container runs systemd, both system and user instances. Probably, you could make it work in Docker with oci-systemd-hook, but it's not packaged for Arch (which I use as my workstation distro), or Ubuntu (used on GitHub Actions runners). So using Podman seems to be the only viable option.
Note: currently, rootless Podman doesn't work on GitHub Actions runners,
you'll have to run it under sudo
.
1. Start the container using Podman, mount extension sources into ~/.local/share/gnome-shell/extensions/
:
SOURCE_DIR="${PWD}"
EXTENSION_UUID="ddterm@amezin.github.com"
IMAGE="ghcr.io/ddterm/gnome-shell-pod/fedora-39:master"
PACKAGE_MOUNTPATH="/home/gnomeshell/.local/share/gnome-shell/extensions/${EXTENSION_UUID}"
CID=$(podman run --rm --cap-add=SYS_ADMIN,SYS_NICE,SYS_PTRACE,SETPCAP,NET_RAW,NET_BIND_SERVICE,IPC_LOCK --security-opt=label=disable -v "${SOURCE_DIR}:${PACKAGE_MOUNTPATH}:ro" -td "${IMAGE}")
Wait for system D-Bus to start:
podman exec "${CID}" busctl --watch-bind=true status
Wait for the system to complete startup:
podman exec "${CID}" systemctl is-system-running --wait
podman exec --user gnomeshell "${CID}" set-env.sh gnome-extensions enable "${EXTENSION_UUID}"
The default systemd command line sets systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy=0
(CGroups v1 mode) for compatibility with older distributions on the host side.
By default, X11 session starts.
To start Wayland session, add systemd.unit=gnome-session-wayland.target
to
the systemd command line:
podman run --rm --cap-add=SYS_ADMIN,SYS_NICE,SYS_PTRACE,SETPCAP,NET_RAW,NET_BIND_SERVICE,DAC_READ_SEARCH,IPC_LOCK -v "${SOURCE_DIR}:${PACKAGE_MOUNTPATH}:ro" -td "${IMAGE}" /sbin/init systemd.unified_cgroup_hierarchy=0 systemd.unit=gnome-session-wayland.target
It still runs in Xvfb, but in nested mode. Without window manager running on the "top level", the window has no decorations, and is effectively full screen.
If you don't want GNOME session to start automatically, you could pass
systemd.unit=multi-user.target
. Then you could activate the necessary target
manually:
podman exec "${CID}" systemctl start gnome-session-wayland.target
Session D-Bus daemon is listening on TCP port 1234
. To access it from host,
add --publish
/--publish-all
option to podman run
(see podman
docs).
To get the host-side port number, use podman port
command:
podman port "${CID}" 1234
It will output something like:
127.0.0.1:42325
or
0.0.0.0:42325
It will translate into D-Bus address tcp:host=localhost,port=42325
.
For example:
dbus-send --bus=tcp:host=localhost,port=42325 --print-reply --dest=org.freedesktop.DBus /org/freedesktop/DBus org.freedesktop.DBus.Peer.Ping
Container-side port number (1234
) is also stored in user-dbus-port
label.
You could get it using the following command:
podman container inspect --format='{{index .Config.Labels "user-dbus-port"}}'
Xvfb starts on display :99
. If you want to run some X11 utility, you should
add -e DISPLAY=:99
to podman exec
.
Also, Xvfb display is available over TCP, on port 6099
. It will be published
by --publish-all
too.
To get the host-side port number, use podman port
command:
podman port "${CID}" 6099
It will output something like:
127.0.0.1:42325
or
0.0.0.0:42325
You'll need to subtract 6000
from the port number to get X11 display number.
Then run X11 utilities on the host like this:
DISPLAY=127.0.0.1:36325 xte "mousedown 1"
Container-side port number (6099
) is also stored in x11-port
label. You
could get it using the following command:
podman container inspect --format='{{index .Config.Labels "x11-port"}}'
podman build -f debian.dockerfile --format docker .
By default it builds on top of the latest stable Debian release (debian:latest
on Docker Hub).
--format docker
is necessary for health check support.
To choose another base image/distro, pass --build-arg base_image=...
:
podman build -f debian.dockerfile --format docker --build-arg base_image=ubuntu:20.04 .
podman build -f fedora.dockerfile --format docker .
By default it builds on top of the latest stable Fedora release (fedora:latest
on registry.fedoraproject.org).
--format docker
is necessary for health check support.
To choose another base image/distro, pass --build-arg base_image=...
:
podman build -f fedora.dockerfile --format docker --build-arg base_image=registry.fedoraproject.org/fedora:34 .