Run CoCalc for free for a small group on your own server!
This is a free open-source multiuser CoCalc server that you can very easily install on your own computer.
LICENSE AND SUPPORT:
- Much of this code is licensed under the AGPL. If you would instead like a more company-friendly MIT license instead (or you just want to support CoCalc), please contact help@cocalc.com, and we will sell you a single-instance 1-year license for $799. This also includes some support, though with no guarantees (that costs more).
- Email the mailing list for community support.
SECURITY STATUS:
- This is not blatantly insecure from outside attack: the database has a long random password, user accounts are separate, encrypted SSL communication is used by default, etc.
- That said, a determined user with an account can easily access or change files of other users in the same container! Use this for personal use, behind a firewall, or with an account creation token, so that only other people you trust create accounts. Don't make one of these publicly available with important data in it and no account creation token! See issue 2031. Basically, use this only with people you trust.
- See the open docker-related CoCalc issues.
Install Docker on your computer (e.g., apt-get install docker.io
on Ubuntu). Make sure you have at least 15GB disk space free, then type:
docker run --name=cocalc -d -v ~/cocalc:/projects -p 443:443 sagemathinc/cocalc
wait a few minutes for the image to pull, decompress and the container to start, then visit https://localhost. It is expected that you'll see a "Your connection is not private" warning, since you haven't set up a security certificate. Click "Show advanced" and "Proceed to localhost (unsafe)".
NOTES:
- This Docker image only supports 64-bit Intel.
- If you get an error about the Docker daemon, instead run
sudo docker ...
. - CoCalc will NOT work over insecure port 80. A previous version of these direction suggested using -p 80:80 above and visiting http://localhost, which will not work.
- If you are using Microsoft Windows, instead make a docker volume and use that for storage (I'm not sure how easy it is though then to backup files):
docker volume create cocalc-volume docker run --name=cocalc -d -v cocalc-volume:/projects -p 443:443 sagemathinc/cocalc
The above command will first download the image, then start CoCalc, storing your data in the directory ~/cocalc
on your computer. If you want to store your worksheets and edit history elsewhere, change ~/cocalc
to something else. Once your local CoCalc is running, open your web browser to https://localhost.
The docker container is called cocalc
and you can refer to the container and use commands like:
$ docker stop cocalc
$ docker start cocalc
You can watch the logs:
$ docker logs cocalc -f
However, these logs sometimes don't work. In that case get a bash shell in the terminal and look at the logs using tail:
$ docker exec -it cocalc bash
$ tail -f /var/log/hub.log
It is critical that the Docker container have the correct time, since CoCalc assumes that the server has the correct time. On a laptop running Docker under OS X, the clock will probably get messed up any time you suspend/resume your laptop. This workaround might work for you: https://github.com/arunvelsriram/docker-time-sync-agent/.
If you're running this docker image on a remote server and want to use ssh port forwarding to connect, type:
ssh -L 8080:localhost:443 username@remote_server
then open your web browser to https://localhost:8080
For enhanced security, make the container only listen on localhost:
docker stop cocalc
docker rm cocalc
docker run --name=cocalc -d -v ~/cocalc:/projects -p 127.0.0.1:443:443 sagemathinc/cocalc
Then the only way to access your CoCalc server is to type the following on your local computer:
ssh -L 8080:localhost:443 username@remote_server
and open your web browser to https://localhost:8080
Instead of doing:
docker run --name=cocalc -d -v ~/cocalc:/projects -p 443:443 sagemathinc/cocalc
do this:
docker run --name=cocalc -d -v ~/cocalc:/projects -p 443:443 -p <your ip address>:2222:22 sagemathinc/cocalc
Then you can do:
ssh projectid@<your ip address> -p 2222
Note that project_id
is the hex id string for the project without hyphens. One way to show project id in this format is to open a .term file in the project and run this command: (This only works in CoCalc in Docker; USER is set differently in production CoCalc.)
echo $USER
To use SSH key authentication with the Docker container, have your private key file in the usual place in the host computer, for example ~/.ssh/.id_cocalc
, and copy the matching public key into your project's home directory. For example, you could do the following in a .term in your project:
cd
mkdir .ssh
chmod 700 .ssh
vi .ssh/authorized_keys
... paste in contents of ~/.ssh/id_cocalc.pub from host computer ...
chmod 600 .ssh/authorized_keys
Get a bash shell insider the container, then connect to the database and make a user (me!) an admin as follows:
$ docker exec -it cocalc bash
root@931045eda11f:/# make-user-admin wstein@gmail.com
Obviously, you should really make the user you created (with its email address) an admin, not me! Refresh your browser, and then you should see an extra admin panel in the lower right of accounts settings; you can also open any project by directly visiting its URL.
It's imposible to recover a password, since only a hash of the password is stored. However, you can change any user's password.
Basically, do what it says in the previous section, but use reset_password
instead of make_user_admin
:
$ docker exec -it cocalc bash
root@931045eda11f:/# coffee
coffee> require 'c'
coffee> db.reset_password(email_address:'a@b.c', cb:done())
undefined
coffee> Password changed for a@b.c
Random Password:
146dba6b28ba96ee555c7144a43c21f2
That will change the person's password to the big random string; you can then email it to them.
After making your main account an admin as above, search for "Account Creation Token" in the Admin tab. Put some random string there and other people will not be able to create accounts in your CoCalc container, without knowing that token.
If docker exec -it cocalc bash
doesn't seem to give you the right terminal height, e.g. content is only displayed in the uppper part of the terminal, this workaround may help when launching bash:
docker exec -e COLUMNS="`tput cols`" -e LINES="`tput lines`" -it cocalc bash
7957
More information on this issue is in moby issue 33794.
In order to build and run CoCalc on an SELinux box, first set SELinux to permissive:
$ setenforce 0
Tell docker and SELinux to "play nicely":
$ chcon -Rt svirt_sandbox_file_t cocalc
return SELinux to enabled:
$ setenforce 1
-- via discussion
If you started the container as above, there will be a directory ~/cocalc on your host computer that contains all data and files related to your projects and users -- go ahead and verify that it is there before upgrading. It might look like this:
Williams-MacBook-Pro:~ wstein$ ls cocalc
be889c14-dc96-4538-989b-4117ffe84148 postgres conf
The directory postgres
contains the database files, so all projects, users, file editing history, etc. The directory conf contains some secrets and log files. There will also be one directory (like be889c14-dc96-4538-989b-4117ffe84148
) for each project that is created.
To get the newest image, do this (which will take some time):
docker pull sagemathinc/cocalc
Once done, you can delete and recreate your CoCalc container: (This will not delete any of your project or user data, which you confirmed above is in ~/cocalc.)
docker stop cocalc
docker rm cocalc
docker run --name=cocalc -d -v ~/cocalc:/projects -p 443:443 sagemathinc/cocalc
Now visit https://localhost to see your upgraded server.
This section is for CoCalc developers.
Build the image:
make build-full # or make build
Run the image (to test):
make run
How I pushed this:
docker tag smc:latest sagemathinc/cocalc
docker login --username=sagemathinc
docker push sagemathinc/cocalc
Also to build at a specific commit:
docker build --build-arg commit=121b564a6b08942849372b9ffdcdddd7194b3e89 -t smc .