9.8 KiB
Install
- install.sh
- yarn, npm
- Standalone releases
- Debian, Ubuntu
- Fedora, CentOS, RHEL, SUSE
- Arch Linux
- macOS
- Docker
- Helm
- Windows
- Raspberry Pi
- Termux
- Cloud providers
- Uninstall
This document demonstrates how to install code-server
on various distros and
operating systems.
install.sh
The easiest way to install code-server is to use our install script for Linux, macOS and FreeBSD. The install script attempts to use the system package manager if possible.
You can preview what occurs during the install process:
curl -fsSL https://code-server.dev/install.sh | sh -s -- --dry-run
To install, run:
curl -fsSL https://code-server.dev/install.sh | sh
You can modify the installation process by including one or more of the following flags:
--dry-run
: echo the commands for the install process without running them.--method
: choose the installation method.--method=detect
: detect the package manager but fallback to--method=standalone
.--method=standalone
: install a standalone release archive into~/.local
.
--prefix=/usr/local
: install a standalone release archive system-wide.--version=X.X.X
: install versionX.X.X
instead of latest version.--help
: see usage docs.
When done, the install script prints out instructions for running and starting code-server.
If you're concerned about the install script's use of
curl | sh
and the security implications, please see this blog post by sandstorm.io.
If you prefer to install code-server manually, despite the detection
references and --dry-run
feature, then continue on for
information on how to do this. The install.sh
script runs the
exact same commands presented in the rest of this document.
Detection reference
-
For Debian and Ubuntu, code-server will install the latest deb package.
-
For Fedora, CentOS, RHEL and openSUSE, code-server will install the latest RPM package.
-
For Arch Linux, code-server will install the AUR package.
-
For any unrecognized Linux operating system, code-server will install the latest standalone release into
~/.local
.- Ensure that you add
~/.local/bin
to your$PATH
to run code-server.
- Ensure that you add
-
For macOS, code-server will install the Homebrew package (if you don't have Homebrew installed, code-server will install the latest standalone release into
~/.local
).- Ensure that you add
~/.local/bin
to your$PATH
to run code-server.
- Ensure that you add
-
For FreeBSD, code-server will install the npm package with
yarn
ornpm
. -
If you're installing code-server onto architecture with no releases, code-server will install the npm package with
yarn
ornpm
- We currently offer releases for amd64 and arm64.
- The npm package builds the native modules on post-install.
yarn, npm
We recommend installing with yarn
or npm
when:
- You aren't using a machine with
amd64
orarm64
. - You are installing code-server on Windows
- You're on Linux with
glibc
< v2.17,glibcxx
< v3.4.18 onamd64
,glibc
< v2.23, orglibcxx
< v3.4.21 onarm64
. - You're running Alpine Linux or are using a non-glibc libc. See #1430 for more information.
Installing code-server with yarn
or npm
builds native modules on install.
This process requires C dependencies; see our guide on [installing with yarn and npm]./npm.md for more information.
Standalone releases
We publish self-contained .tar.gz
archives for every release on
GitHub. The archives bundle the
node binary and node modules.
We create the standalone releases using the npm package, and we then create the remaining releases using the standalone version.
The only requirement to use the standalone release is glibc
>= 2.17 and
glibcxx
>= v3.4.18 on Linux (for macOS, there is no minimum system
requirement).
To use a standalone release:
- Download the latest release archive for your system from GitHub.
- Unpack the release.
- Run code-server by executing
./bin/code-server
.
You can add ./bin/code-server
to your $PATH
so that you can execute
code-server
without providing full path each time.
Here is a sample script for installing and using a standalone code-server release on Linux:
mkdir -p ~/.local/lib ~/.local/bin
curl -fL https://github.com/coder/code-server/releases/download/v$VERSION/code-server-$VERSION-linux-amd64.tar.gz \
| tar -C ~/.local/lib -xz
mv ~/.local/lib/code-server-$VERSION-linux-amd64 ~/.local/lib/code-server-$VERSION
ln -s ~/.local/lib/code-server-$VERSION/bin/code-server ~/.local/bin/code-server
PATH="~/.local/bin:$PATH"
code-server
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
Debian, Ubuntu
The standalone arm64 .deb does not support Ubuntu 16.04 or earlier. Please upgrade or build with yarn.
curl -fOL https://github.com/coder/code-server/releases/download/v$VERSION/code-server_$VERSION_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i code-server_$VERSION_amd64.deb
sudo systemctl enable --now code-server@$USER
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
Fedora, CentOS, RHEL, SUSE
The standalone arm64 .rpm does not support CentOS 7. Please upgrade or build with yarn.
curl -fOL https://github.com/coder/code-server/releases/download/v$VERSION/code-server-$VERSION-amd64.rpm
sudo rpm -i code-server-$VERSION-amd64.rpm
sudo systemctl enable --now code-server@$USER
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
Arch Linux
# Install code-server from the AUR using yay.
yay -S code-server
sudo systemctl enable --now code-server@$USER
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
# Install code-server from the AUR with plain makepkg.
git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/code-server.git
cd code-server
makepkg -si
sudo systemctl enable --now code-server@$USER
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
macOS
brew install code-server
brew services start code-server
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
Docker
# This will start a code-server container and expose it at http://127.0.0.1:8080.
# It will also mount your current directory into the container as `/home/coder/project`
# and forward your UID/GID so that all file system operations occur as your user outside
# the container.
#
# Your $HOME/.config is mounted at $HOME/.config within the container to ensure you can
# easily access/modify your code-server config in $HOME/.config/code-server/config.json
# outside the container.
mkdir -p ~/.config
docker run -it --name code-server -p 127.0.0.1:8080:8080 \
-v "$HOME/.config:/home/coder/.config" \
-v "$PWD:/home/coder/project" \
-u "$(id -u):$(id -g)" \
-e "DOCKER_USER=$USER" \
codercom/code-server:latest
Our official image supports amd64
and arm64
. For arm32
support, you can
use a community-maintained code-server
alternative.
Helm
You can install code-server using the Helm package manager.
Windows
We currently do not publish Windows releases. We recommend installing code-server onto Windows with yarn
or npm
.
Note: You will also need to build coder/cloud-agent manually if you would like to use
code-server --link
on Windows.
Raspberry Pi
We recommend installing code-server onto Raspberry Pi with yarn
or
npm
.
Termux
Please see code-server's Termux docs for more information.
Cloud providers
We maintain one-click apps and install scripts for cloud providers such as DigitalOcean, Railway, Heroku, and Azure.
Uninstall
code-server can be completely uninstalled by removing the application directory, and your user configuration directory.
To delete settings and data:
rm -rf ~/.local/share/code-server ~/.config/code-server
install.sh
If you installed with the install script, by default code-server will be in ~/.local/lib/code-server-<version>
and you can remove it with rm -rf
. e.g.
rm -rf ~/.local/lib/code-server-*
Homebrew
To remove the code-server homebrew package, run:
brew remove code-server
# Alternatively
brew uninstall code-server
yarn, npm
To remove the code-server global module, run:
yarn global remove code-server
or
npm uninstall -g code-server
Debian, Ubuntu
To uninstall, run:
sudo apt remove code-server