Centralized repository of containers designed for Toolbox/Distrobox with batteries included. These toolboxes strive for:
- Instant launch
- Include quadlets and systemd service units for management
- Intended to be used as general purpose toolboxes for "daily driver" usage
- Can be used with boxkit as base images to manage your own custom setup
ubuntu-toolbox
- an Ubuntu base imagefedora-toolbox
- a Fedora base imagewolfi-toolbox
- a WolfiOS base imagebluefin-cli
- a WolfiOS based image with Homebrew and a strongly opinionated default experiencepowershell-toolbox
- a WolfiOS based image with PowerShell and other Microsoft related toolingdocker-distrobox
- an Ubuntu distrobox with Docker-CE. It will export the docker socket to the host.incus-distrobox
- an Ubuntu distrobox with Incus packages from Zabbly.
It is strongly recommended that the Ptyxis terminal be used with these toolboxes and is the default experience in both Bazzite and Bluefin.
Podman supports starting containers via a systemd generator. Quadlets replaced the podman generate systemd
command and provide a method to create a systemd service for managing your container. The generated unit file can automatically start your container on login, automatically check for updates from the registry, and automatically clean-up the container and any transient volumes when the container stops. This provides an ideal way to have a clean slate on each login.
Inside the quadlets directory are example quadlets each of the toolboxes listed above. Distrobox and Toolbox provide a convenient way to integrate the containers into your host.ubuntu-toolbox
and fedora-toolbox
can use either toolbox or distrobox. wolfi-toolbox
, bluefin-cli
and powershell-toolbox
(WolfiOS base) are currently only compatible with distrobox.
The quadlets mimic the create and enter commands to setup the container. You can use these by copying them to ~/.config/containers/systemd
. When using the Prompt terminal, they will appear in the menu as available containers. The Exec=
line of the distrobox quadlets can be modified to include additional packages.
To get automatic updates you will need to enable podman-auto-update.timer
which by default will auto-update at midnight. Quadlets support creating volumes using a .volume
unit. These volumes can be accessed by other containers by prepending the name of .volume
with systemd
.
An alternative method for having automatic toolbox startup is to leverage systemd one-shot services and distrobox assemble commands.
Distrobox assemble enables the user to declare a setup without going through the process of creating a customized image. Instead, an ini style file can be used with distrobox-assemble
and distrobox-enter
to setup and enter a modified container. Example assemble files are available here and on the universal-blue discourse.
To utilize these, place the user service file in ~/.config/systemd/user
and make sure the assemble file is in place. The ones inside the repo are set to replace the existing container of the same to behave similar to the quadlet. Again you can access .volume
by using the name of the volume unit prepended with systemd
.
bluefin-cli
is built from wolfi-toolbox
. It contains Homebrew configured out of the box. The brew state is bind mounted to a directory from your $HOME
. Unlike the other toolboxes, bluefin-cli
is intended for CLI applications only.
Its primary purpose is to be the command line companion to Flathub-enabled systems by providing access to one of the largest command line repositories in the world via homebrew. Developer dependencies should be managed seperately via devcontainers.
The default configuration destroys and updates this container daily so that the toolbox is built from scratch.
Updates to brew itself happen automatically when the container rebuilds. Brew will automatically upgrade packages as you use it. Brew's state is also volume mounted to a file in your home directory so your container is fresh but your packages remain untouched. At this time it is strongly recommended to maintain a backup of your brew package list via the brew bundle subcommand.
The WolfiOS apk package manager is preferred for fully declarative setups with boxkit. You can file package requests on the WolfiOS repository for packages that you may need. We are working on a way to do this locally as well.
The intended endstate of bluefin-cli
is a fully automated declarative config managed via git using Wolfi packages for clean rebuilds daily. brew
is used to fill out the "long tail" of existing software.
Both bluefin-cli
and wolfi-toolbox
have Wolfi developer variants built from the Wolfi SDK image, intended for Wolfi package and image development. They include utilities such as melange, wolfictl, and apko. These images are labelled bluefin-dx-cli
and wolfi-dx-toolbox
.
powershell-toolbox
is based on WolfiOS
. Its primary purpose is to be a dedicated container for Microsoft related technologies used during development. It contains PowerShell, Azure CLI and .NET (latest LTS) configured out of the box. It also includes a small selection of other useful CLI utilities to improve the overall experience.
Both incus-distrobox
and docker-distrobox
are designed to be run with a rootful, init distrobox. Incus uses packages built by Zabbly. Docker uses the convience install script from Docker. Both are built from the ubuntu-toolbox built in this repo. Example distrobox-assemble files are with each of them. Both work well with a volume mount for their respective files in /var/lib/{docker,incus}
. Both can be setup to autostart on boot with a systemd service
. However, your user sockets for Xorg
, Wayland
, and Pulseaudio
will not be setup until you login. For the docker-distrobox
you can customize the group of the exported docker socket
by setting an environment variable at distrobox creation time for DOCKERGROUP
. The assemble file has more information. Both the incus-distrobox
and docker-distrobox
set the unix-groups. For incus, matching incus-admin
inside the distrobox and on the host will enable you to use the incus socket
from the host.