This is a container for running GUI applications completely inside a Docker container. You do not need to forward your running XAuth or allow Docker to draw onto your display. Nor do you need to use SSH to forward X11. This container exposes a VNC webclient to the host and therefore everything is contained within the container.
The VNC server is on port 5900 and a webclient is on port 5901.
This is based on Ubuntu 22.04 and installs TigerVNC for the VNC server, and uses noVNC for the HTML5-based webclient. This gets created as a multi-arch container which will run on ARMv7, ARM64 and of course x86_64.
You can start the container with:
docker run --shm-size=256m -it -p 5901:5901 -e VNC_PASSWD=123456 bandi13/gui-docker
The shm-size argument is to make sure that the webclient does not run out of shared memory and crash. You can change the default VNC password of '123456' on the docker run command to whatever you wish.
To use your own VNC client, you just need:
docker run --shm-size=256m -it -p 5900:5900 -e VNC_PASSWD=123456 bandi13/gui-docker
Where port 5900 is exposing the VNC Server port.
Containers that build on this will be able to have scripts run inside the Fluxbox window manager. Any custom scripts can be placed in /opt/startup_scripts.
Adding in additional menu items to the bottom is as easy as:
RUN echo "?package(bash):needs=\"X11\" section=\"DockerCustom\" title=\"Xterm\" command=\"xterm -ls -bg black -fg white\"" >> /usr/share/menu/custom-docker && update-menus
Or this for running shell scripts:
RUN echo "?package(bash):needs=\"text\" section=\"DockerCustom\" title=\"Some Script\" command=\"touch /tmp/file\"" >> /usr/share/menu/custom-docker && update-menus
An example for having Firefox installed can be found in Dockerfile.firefox. Check the 'build.sh' to see how to build it.
You can have a screenshot of the container by doing the following on the host:
docker exec -e DISPLAY=:0.0 -w /tmp $CONTAINER scrot -z -t 20 -e 'cat $m && rm $f $m' > screenshot.png
This will take a screenshot in the containerID=$CONTAINER and output it to 'screenshot.png' on the host.