The LinuxServer.io team brings you another container release featuring:
- regular and timely application updates
- easy user mappings (PGID, PUID)
- custom base image with s6 overlay
- weekly base OS updates with common layers across the entire LinuxServer.io ecosystem to minimise space usage, down time and bandwidth
- regular security updates
Find us at:
- Blog - all the things you can do with our containers including How-To guides, opinions and much more!
- Discord - realtime support / chat with the community and the team.
- Discourse - post on our community forum.
- Fleet - an online web interface which displays all of our maintained images.
- GitHub - view the source for all of our repositories.
- Open Collective - please consider helping us by either donating or contributing to our budget
Nano is a digital payment protocol designed to be accessible and lightweight, with a focus on removing inefficiencies present in other cryptocurrencies. With ultrafast transactions and zero fees on a secure, green and decentralized network, this makes Nano ideal for everyday transactions.
We utilise the docker manifest for multi-platform awareness. More information is available from docker here and our announcement here.
Simply pulling lscr.io/linuxserver/nano:latest
should retrieve the correct image for your arch, but you can also pull specific arch images via tags.
The architectures supported by this image are:
Architecture | Available | Tag |
---|---|---|
x86-64 | âś… | amd64-<version tag> |
arm64 | âś… | arm64v8-<version tag> |
armhf | ❌ |
This image provides various versions that are available via tags. Please read the descriptions carefully and exercise caution when using unstable or development tags.
Tag | Available | Description |
---|---|---|
latest | âś… | Stable Nano releases |
beta | âś… | Beta Nano releases |
By default this container will launch with a genesis block based on the private key 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
, this should obviously only ever be used for testing purposes. Before you run your node you should use a script baked into this image to determine your private key and required environment variables:
docker run --rm --entrypoint /genesis.sh linuxserver/nano
Generating Genesis block
!!!!!!! ACCOUNT INFO SAVE THIS INFORMATION IT WILL NOT BE SHOWN AGAIN !!!!!!!!
Private Key: CD4CD6B1E5523D4B5AEDD2B1E5A447C6C6797E729A531A95F9AD7937FC7CD9EA
Public Key: 2D057DF2EB09E918D3F95B5FCA69A5FD3EA406EF7D1810106324CD7A99FAA32D
Account: nano_1da7hqsgp4hb55bzkptzsbntdzbyni5gyzar41a88b8fhcezoasfjkgmyk5y
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Container Environment Values:
-e LIVE_GENESIS_PUB=2D057DF2EB09E918D3F95B5FCA69A5FD3EA406EF7D1810106324CD7A99FAA32D \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_ACCOUNT=nano_1da7hqsgp4hb55bzkptzsbntdzbyni5gyzar41a88b8fhcezoasfjkgmyk5y \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_WORK=7fd88e48684600b7 \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_SIG=D1DF3A64BB43C131944401632215569A40AAE858ACF6CB59D5C77070E69DBF6435D93807877628A8B142DBF1AC4C562CD2F4CEBEB7D15486BDB7494A6146E007 \
These environment variables will be used for all of the peers in your payment network, but if you are running what you would consider a public or live network never share your private key even if you have drained the funds from that account it can be potentionally used to create valid forks. Even Better, you should never even trust our Docker image for generating a private key and open block. Do it on an airgapped machine and keep it on a paper wallet.
By default this container will enable RPC control and publish a custom service that acts as an RPC firewall giving you the ability to whitelist specific RPC calls and overide/add default values.
The default proxy config is stored in /config/rpc-proxy.json
:
{
"port":3000,
"httpsport":3001,
"rpchost":"127.0.0.1",
"rpcport":7076,
"certfile":"/config/ssl/cert.crt",
"keyfile":"/config/ssl/cert.key",
"whitelist":[
"account_info",
"account_history",
"block_count",
"block_info",
"pending",
"process"
],
"overrides":{
"account-history":{
"count":"64"
},
"pending":{
"count":"8"
}
}
}
This should be a minimal amount of RPC access needed to run a local light wallet against this endpoint. If you plan on having your network users only run clientside light wallets (local blake2b block generation and block process
call publishing) you should publically publish this port for access for both port 7076 and 7077. For functional light wallets on Https endpoints we will generate a self signed cert/key combo but you should add the ones associated with your domain. This will allow yours and other https hosted light wallets to hit your RPC endpoint clientside from the users web browser.
Outside of potential https tunneling and actual object parsing (will remove duplicate keys) this is not a conventional API, it simply acts as a firewall and will send and return data just like a local RPC server would. The goal is to be compatible with any existing Nano software if the developers decide to add the ability to connect to alternative network endpoints.
Our Proxy has not been audited by any security team and is provided as is, though we make the best effort to keep it simple and secure
Before you get started please review the configuration docs here
We will pass the CLI_OPTIONS
to the node, here is a run command example:
-e CLI_OPTIONS='--config node.preconfigured_peers=["peering.yourhost.com","peering.yourhost2.com"] \
--config node.enable_voting=true'
There are many options to know here to run an actual live node especially peering and voting, again please review the docs if you plan to run something outside of a local setup.
Here we are going to cover the bare minimum commands needed to spinup a local payment network and wallet.
First spinup your containers:
docker run -d \
--name node \
-e CLI_OPTIONS='--config node.enable_voting=true' \
-p 7076:3000 \
--restart unless-stopped \
linuxserver/nano
docker run -d \
--name=wallet \
-p 80:80 \
--restart unless-stopped \
linuxserver/nano-wallet
Then unlock the Genesis funds on the local node to allow it to confirm transactions:
docker exec -it node bash
root@f1df092971f0:/# curl -d '{ "action": "wallet_create" }' localhost:7076
{
"wallet": "A3D63F1B28AC68BCD9E0FF74278C7984A36841C803EF1A81DF92BCD6E3BB18F9"
}
root@f1df092971f0:/# curl -d '{ "action": "wallet_add", "wallet": "A3D63F1B28AC68BCD9E0FF74278C7984A36841C803EF1A81DF92BCD6E3BB18F9", "key": "0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000" }' localhost:7076
{
"account": "nano_18gmu6engqhgtjnppqam181o5nfhj4sdtgyhy36dan3jr9spt84rzwmktafc"
}
Here we are using the default private key of 0000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
for the image.
Navigate to http://localhost/#/localhost and enter this key. You should be greeted by the genesis account wallet with 340.28 Million Nano.
From here you can generate new wallets from the home screen and send/receive funds on your local network. Now you will be running an insecure centralized network with a single voting representative and a zero security private key using the commands above. To spinup a standard private or even public network you should read up on Nano's documentation HERE and continue reading the network design section below.
There are 4 main concepts to grasp from a network standpoint as far as types of endpoints. Before we get started here is a basic network diagram:
Principle nodes are network representatives with the ability to vote due to having a certain threshold of funds unlocked on that node or pointed to that unlocked address. These nodes should be as airgapped as possible while still being an active 24/7 peer of the network. From a tecnical perspective this is a node with an account private key that either has the funds it needs itself or enough users have pointed their accounts to it as a representative. In a live and secure configuration to protect the funds of this account you would use an inactive private key account with the funds in it and locally sign a change of representative block to point to the always online representative.
These nodes should never process external RPC calls even on a local network, the same rules go for any node with a local unlocked wallet.
Keep in mind the key to the security of the network is that 51% of the funds are pointed to trusted representatives that will generally not argue about chain forks.
In most deployments the best bet is to heavily centralize your voting nodes, this is unless you are intentionally trying to build a distributed ledger and security model like the main Nano live net. Achieving that will be a long and difficult task.
To a normal user simply transacting on the network using off the shelf tools like a web wallet and web based block explorers is generally all that is required. They get a number in a ledger somewhere and are able to locally sign and publish blocks using their private key using your published RPC endpoints.
For advanced users and just to generally make the network more robust, network operators should promote people running their own nodes. Using this image a network peer simply needs to run a docker run command with your pre-configured variables. IE given the generation example from above in the Your Genesis account
section:
docker create \
--name=nano \
-e PUID=1000 \
-e PGID=1000 \
-e TZ=Europe/London \
-e PEER_HOST=peering.mydomain.com \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_PUB=2D057DF2EB09E918D3F95B5FCA69A5FD3EA406EF7D1810106324CD7A99FAA32D \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_ACCOUNT=nano_1da7hqsgp4hb55bzkptzsbntdzbyni5gyzar41a88b8fhcezoasfjkgmyk5y \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_WORK=7fd88e48684600b7 \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_SIG=D1DF3A64BB43C131944401632215569A40AAE858ACF6CB59D5C77070E69DBF6435D93807877628A8B142DBF1AC4C562CD2F4CEBEB7D15486BDB7494A6146E007 \
-p 8075:8075 \
-p 7076:3000 \
-p 7077:3001 \
-v /path/to/data:/config \
--restart unless-stopped \
linuxserver/nano
When the container spins up it will reach out to the node to bootstrap it's local ledger from peering.mydomain.com . This node once fully synced will be able to run local RPC commands to plug into a wallet and default Nano node wallet commands for automated pocketing of transactions etc. It will also get a list of other peers on the network from it's initial network peering and start participating in your distributed cryptocurrency network.
The key to users going to a webpage and managing the funds on your network is the ability to get blockchain information and publish new blocks to theirs. As mentioned earlier we bundle a basic firewall with a core set of RPC functions whitelisted that should be safe to expose publically.
From a network design perspective these nodes should be purely what you would consider client peers and never have any wallets registered or private keys stored on them. Also for redundancy optmimally these peers should be run in a cluster behind a load balancer. For standard nodes you are building out a large P2P network, but in the case of the RPC endpoint and specifically the URL the end user is going to pass when accessing their wallet it is up to you to make that resilient.
Currently we publish a pure javascript clientside wallet located here:
https://github.com/linuxserver/nano-wallet
It is designed to be run 100% clientside in any web browser and use public RPC endpoints to hook into any network and conduct transactions by locally signing then publishing the result. This can be hosted locally with any simple webserver and pointed to a locally run peer, but for full functionality we reccomend providing a public Https URL with these files along with plugging in legitamite SSL certificates into your RPC endpoints running on 7077.
We maintain our own network which users can get funds to transact on from our Discord server. If you would like to run a node on our network here is our Docker run command:
docker create \
--name=lsio-node \
-e PUID=1000 \
-e PGID=1000 \
-e TZ=Europe/London \
-e PEER_HOST=peering.linuxserver.io \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_PUB=79F2E157B5667F1C8B6CCB6DF691DAC032B85DEC39E231D29976DCED05F5B1BE \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_ACCOUNT=nano_1yhkw7ducsmz5k7pskufytaxoi3kq3gyrgh489bbkxpwxn4zdefyn4rmrrkk \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_WORK=c51204c6b69384cb \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_SIG=90DDE7B4DC038811180FF5DDE8594F1774542A7AADE3DB71A57AA38A5AED42672E1E8D7ACFAC315BDB0EB5DCB542C610B9C49B2560AE575073855259AF065509 \
-p 8075:8075 \
-p 7076:3000 \
-p 7077:3001 \
-v /path/to/data:/config \
--restart unless-stopped \
linuxserver/nano
Here are some example snippets to help you get started creating a container.
docker-compose (recommended, click here for more info)
---
version: "2.1"
services:
nano:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/nano:latest
container_name: nano
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
- TZ=Europe/London
- PEER_HOST=localhost #optional
- LIVE_GENESIS_PUB=GENESIS_PUBLIC #optional
- LIVE_GENESIS_ACCOUNT=nano_xxxxxx #optional
- LIVE_GENESIS_WORK=WORK_FOR_BLOCK #optional
- LIVE_GENESIS_SIG=BLOCK_SIGNATURE #optional
- CLI_OPTIONS=--config node.enable_voting=true #optional
- LMDB_BOOTSTRAP_URL=http://example.com/Nano_64_version_20.7z #optional
volumes:
- /path/to/data:/config
ports:
- 8075:8075
- 7076:3000
- 7077:3001
restart: unless-stopped
docker cli (click here for more info)
docker run -d \
--name=nano \
-e PUID=1000 \
-e PGID=1000 \
-e TZ=Europe/London \
-e PEER_HOST=localhost `#optional` \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_PUB=GENESIS_PUBLIC `#optional` \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_ACCOUNT=nano_xxxxxx `#optional` \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_WORK=WORK_FOR_BLOCK `#optional` \
-e LIVE_GENESIS_SIG=BLOCK_SIGNATURE `#optional` \
-e CLI_OPTIONS=--config node.enable_voting=true `#optional` \
-e LMDB_BOOTSTRAP_URL=http://example.com/Nano_64_version_20.7z `#optional` \
-p 8075:8075 \
-p 7076:3000 \
-p 7077:3001 \
-v /path/to/data:/config \
--restart unless-stopped \
lscr.io/linuxserver/nano:latest
Container images are configured using parameters passed at runtime (such as those above). These parameters are separated by a colon and indicate <external>:<internal>
respectively. For example, -p 8080:80
would expose port 80
from inside the container to be accessible from the host's IP on port 8080
outside the container.
Parameter | Function |
---|---|
-p 8075 |
Nano communication port |
-p 3000 |
RPC interface filtered through a proxy |
-p 3001 |
Https RPC interface filtered through a proxy |
-e PUID=1000 |
for UserID - see below for explanation |
-e PGID=1000 |
for GroupID - see below for explanation |
-e TZ=Europe/London |
Specify a timezone to use EG Europe/London |
-e PEER_HOST=localhost |
Default peer host (can be overidden with an array by command line options) |
-e LIVE_GENESIS_PUB=GENESIS_PUBLIC |
Genesis block public key |
-e LIVE_GENESIS_ACCOUNT=nano_xxxxxx |
Genesis block account |
-e LIVE_GENESIS_WORK=WORK_FOR_BLOCK |
Genesis block proof of work |
-e LIVE_GENESIS_SIG=BLOCK_SIGNATURE |
Genesis block signature |
-e CLI_OPTIONS=--config node.enable_voting=true |
Node run command cli args |
-e LMDB_BOOTSTRAP_URL=http://example.com/Nano_64_version_20.7z |
HTTP/HTTPS endpoint to download a 7z file with the data.ldb to bootstrap to this node |
-v /config |
Main storage for config and blockchain |
You can set any environment variable from a file by using a special prepend FILE__
.
As an example:
-e FILE__PASSWORD=/run/secrets/mysecretpassword
Will set the environment variable PASSWORD
based on the contents of the /run/secrets/mysecretpassword
file.
For all of our images we provide the ability to override the default umask settings for services started within the containers using the optional -e UMASK=022
setting.
Keep in mind umask is not chmod it subtracts from permissions based on it's value it does not add. Please read up here before asking for support.
When using volumes (-v
flags) permissions issues can arise between the host OS and the container, we avoid this issue by allowing you to specify the user PUID
and group PGID
.
Ensure any volume directories on the host are owned by the same user you specify and any permissions issues will vanish like magic.
In this instance PUID=1000
and PGID=1000
, to find yours use id user
as below:
$ id username
uid=1000(dockeruser) gid=1000(dockergroup) groups=1000(dockergroup)
We publish various Docker Mods to enable additional functionality within the containers. The list of Mods available for this image (if any) as well as universal mods that can be applied to any one of our images can be accessed via the dynamic badges above.
- Shell access whilst the container is running:
docker exec -it nano /bin/bash
- To monitor the logs of the container in realtime:
docker logs -f nano
- container version number
docker inspect -f '{{ index .Config.Labels "build_version" }}' nano
- image version number
docker inspect -f '{{ index .Config.Labels "build_version" }}' lscr.io/linuxserver/nano:latest
Most of our images are static, versioned, and require an image update and container recreation to update the app inside. With some exceptions (ie. nextcloud, plex), we do not recommend or support updating apps inside the container. Please consult the Application Setup section above to see if it is recommended for the image.
Below are the instructions for updating containers:
- Update all images:
docker-compose pull
- or update a single image:
docker-compose pull nano
- or update a single image:
- Let compose update all containers as necessary:
docker-compose up -d
- or update a single container:
docker-compose up -d nano
- or update a single container:
- You can also remove the old dangling images:
docker image prune
- Update the image:
docker pull lscr.io/linuxserver/nano:latest
- Stop the running container:
docker stop nano
- Delete the container:
docker rm nano
- Recreate a new container with the same docker run parameters as instructed above (if mapped correctly to a host folder, your
/config
folder and settings will be preserved) - You can also remove the old dangling images:
docker image prune
-
Pull the latest image at its tag and replace it with the same env variables in one run:
docker run --rm \ -v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \ containrrr/watchtower \ --run-once nano
-
You can also remove the old dangling images:
docker image prune
Note: We do not endorse the use of Watchtower as a solution to automated updates of existing Docker containers. In fact we generally discourage automated updates. However, this is a useful tool for one-time manual updates of containers where you have forgotten the original parameters. In the long term, we highly recommend using Docker Compose.
- We recommend Diun for update notifications. Other tools that automatically update containers unattended are not recommended or supported.
If you want to make local modifications to these images for development purposes or just to customize the logic:
git clone https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-nano.git
cd docker-nano
docker build \
--no-cache \
--pull \
-t lscr.io/linuxserver/nano:latest .
The ARM variants can be built on x86_64 hardware using multiarch/qemu-user-static
docker run --rm --privileged multiarch/qemu-user-static:register --reset
Once registered you can define the dockerfile to use with -f Dockerfile.aarch64
.
- 02.06.20: - Rebase to Alpine 3.12.
- 28.05.20: - Add beta tag.
- 17.05.20: - Initial Release.