1
0
mirror of https://github.com/coder/code-server.git synced 2024-12-05 07:13:06 +08:00
code-server/doc/self-hosted/cros-install.md
Hikari Kibo 70219d1071 doc: add CrOS install guide (#225)
* doc: add CrOS install guide

Signed-off-by: Hikari <enra@sayonika.moe>

* doc: change occurences of index to install guide

Signed-off-by: Hikari <enra@sayonika.moe>

* doc: add penguin.linux.test as alternative endpoint

Signed-off-by: Hikari <enra@sayonika.moe>

* doc: link Crostini and crouton info pages and describe install guide

Signed-off-by: Hikari <enra@sayonika.moe>

* doc: remove citations for dev mode requirement

Signed-off-by: Hikari <enra@sayonika.moe>

* doc: clarify more wording

Signed-off-by: Hikari <enra@sayonika.moe>

* doc: fix typo in Crostini section

Signed-off-by: Hikari <enra@sayonika.moe>
2019-03-20 09:24:07 -05:00

3.1 KiB

Installng code-server in your ChromiumOS/ChromeOS/CloudReady machine

This guide will show you how to install code-server into your CrOS machine.

Using Crostini

One of the easier ways to run code-server is via Crostini, the Linux apps support feature in CrOS. Make sure you have enough RAM, HDD space and your CPU has VT-x/ AMD-V support. If your chromebook has this, then you are qualified to use Crostini.

If you are running R69, you might want to enable this on Chrome Flags. If you run R72, however, this is already enabled for you.

After checking your prerequisites, follow the steps in the self-host install guide on installing code-server. Once done, make sure code-server works by running it. After running it, simply go to penguin.linux.test:8443 to access code-server. Now you should be greeted with this screen. If you did, congratulations, you have installed code-server in your Chromebook!

code-server on Chromebook

Alternatively, if you ran code-server in another container and you need the IP for that specific container, simply go to Termina's shell via crosh and type vsh termina.

Loading extra module: /usr/share/crosh/dev.d/50-crosh.sh
Welcome to crosh, the Chrome OS developer shell.

If you got here by mistake, don't panic!  Just close this tab and carry on.

Type 'help' for a list of commands.

If you want to customize the look/behavior, you can use the options page.
Load it by using the Ctrl+Shift+P keyboard shortcut.

crosh> vsh termina
(termina) chronos@localhost ~ $

While in termina, run lxc list. It should output the list of running containers.

(termina) chronos@localhost ~ $ lxc list
+---------+---------+-----------------------+------+------------+-----------+
|  NAME   |  STATE  |         IPV4          | IPV6 |    TYPE    | SNAPSHOTS |
+---------+---------+-----------------------+------+------------+-----------+
| penguin | RUNNING | 100.115.92.199 (eth0) |      | PERSISTENT | 0         |
+---------+---------+-----------------------+------+------------+-----------+
(termina) chronos@localhost ~ $ 

For this example, we show the default penguin container, which is exposed on eth0 at 100.115.92.199. Simply enter the IP of the container where the code-server runs to Chrome.

Using Crouton

Crouton is one of the old ways to get a running full Linux via chroot on a Chromebook. To use crouton, enable developer mode and go to crosh. This time, run shell, which should drop you to bash.

Make sure you downloaded crouton, if so, go ahead and run it under ~/Downloads. After installing your chroot container via crouton, go ahead and enter enter-chroot to enter your container.

Follow the instructions set in the self-host install guide to install code-server. After that is done, run code-server and verify it works by going to localhost:8443.

At this point in writing, localhost seems to work in this method. However, the author is not sure if it applies still to newer Chromebooks.