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Custom configuration

You can override some default properties if your environment requires that.

Configuration locations

The configuration will be loaded from multiple locations. Properties are considered in the following order:

  1. Environment variables
  2. .testcontainers.properties in user's home folder. Example locations:
    Linux: /home/myuser/.testcontainers.properties
    Windows: C:/Users/myuser/.testcontainers.properties
    macOS: /Users/myuser/.testcontainers.properties

Note that when using environment variables, configuration property names should be set in upper case with underscore separators, preceded by TESTCONTAINERS_ - e.g. ryuk.disabled becomes TESTCONTAINERS_RYUK_DISABLED.

Supported properties

Testcontainers for Go provides a struct type to represent the configuration:

// Config represents the configuration for Testcontainers
type Config struct {
    Host                    string        `properties:"docker.host,default="`
    TLSVerify               int           `properties:"docker.tls.verify,default=0"`
    CertPath                string        `properties:"docker.cert.path,default="`
    HubImageNamePrefix      string        `properties:"hub.image.name.prefix,default="`
    RyukDisabled            bool          `properties:"ryuk.disabled,default=false"`
    RyukPrivileged          bool          `properties:"ryuk.container.privileged,default=false"`
    RyukReconnectionTimeout time.Duration `properties:"ryuk.reconnection.timeout,default=10s"`
    RyukConnectionTimeout   time.Duration `properties:"ryuk.connection.timeout,default=1m"`
    RyukVerbose             bool          `properties:"ryuk.verbose,default=false"`
    TestcontainersHost      string        `properties:"tc.host,default="`
}

You can read it with the ReadConfig() function:

cfg := testcontainers.ReadConfig()

For advanced users, the Docker host connection can be configured via configuration in ~/.testcontainers.properties, but environment variables will take precedence. Please see Docker host detection for more information.

The example below illustrates how to configure the Docker host connection via properties file:

docker.host=tcp://my.docker.host:1234       # Equivalent to the DOCKER_HOST environment variable.
docker.tls.verify=1                         # Equivalent to the DOCKER_TLS_VERIFY environment variable
docker.cert.path=/some/path                 # Equivalent to the DOCKER_CERT_PATH environment variable

Customizing images

Please read more about customizing images in the Image name substitution section.

Customizing Ryuk, the resource reaper

  1. Ryuk must be started as a privileged container. For that, you can set the TESTCONTAINERS_RYUK_CONTAINER_PRIVILEGED environment variable, or the ryuk.container.privileged property to true.
  2. If your environment already implements automatic cleanup of containers after the execution, but does not allow starting privileged containers, you can turn off the Ryuk container by setting TESTCONTAINERS_RYUK_DISABLED environment variable to true.
  3. You can specify the connection timeout for Ryuk by setting the TESTCONTAINERS_RYUK_CONNECTION_TIMEOUT environment variable, or the ryuk.connection.timeout property. The default value is 1 minute.
  4. You can specify the reconnection timeout for Ryuk by setting the TESTCONTAINERS_RYUK_RECONNECTION_TIMEOUT environment variable, or the ryuk.reconnection.timeout property. The default value is 10 seconds.
  5. You can configure Ryuk to run in verbose mode by setting any of the ryuk.verbose property or the TESTCONTAINERS_RYUK_VERBOSE environment variable. The default value is false.

Info

For more information about Ryuk, see Garbage Collector.

Docker host detection

Testcontainers for Go will attempt to detect the Docker environment and configure everything to work automatically.

However, sometimes customization is required. Testcontainers for Go will respect the following order:

  1. Read the tc.host property in the ~/.testcontainers.properties file. E.g. tc.host=tcp://my.docker.host:1234

  2. Read the DOCKER_HOST environment variable. E.g. DOCKER_HOST=unix:///var/run/docker.sock See Docker environment variables for more information.

  3. Read the Go context for the DOCKER_HOST key. E.g. ctx.Value("DOCKER_HOST"). This is used internally for the library to pass the Docker host to the resource reaper.

  4. Read the default Docker socket path, without the unix schema. E.g. /var/run/docker.sock

  5. Read the docker.host property in the ~/.testcontainers.properties file. E.g. docker.host=tcp://my.docker.host:1234

  6. Read the rootless Docker socket path, checking in the following alternative locations:

    1. ${XDG_RUNTIME_DIR}/.docker/run/docker.sock.
    2. ${HOME}/.docker/run/docker.sock.
    3. ${HOME}/.docker/desktop/docker.sock.
    4. /run/user/${UID}/docker.sock, where ${UID} is the user ID of the current user.
  7. The default Docker socket including schema will be returned if none of the above are set.

Docker socket path detection

Testcontainers for Go will attempt to detect the Docker socket path and configure everything to work automatically.

However, sometimes customization is required. Testcontainers for Go will respect the following order:

  1. Read the tc.host property in the ~/.testcontainers.properties file. E.g. tc.host=tcp://my.docker.host:1234. If this property is set, the returned Docker socket path will be the default Docker socket path: /var/run/docker.sock.

  2. Read the TESTCONTAINERS_DOCKER_SOCKET_OVERRIDE environment variable. Path to Docker's socket. Used by Ryuk, Docker Compose, and a few other containers that need to perform Docker actions.

    Example: /var/run/docker-alt.sock

  3. If the Operative System retrieved by the Docker client is "Docker Desktop", and the host is running on Windows, it will return the //var/run/docker.sock UNC Path. Else return the default docker socket path for rootless docker.

  4. Get the current Docker Host from the existing strategies: see Docker host detection.

  5. If the socket contains the unix schema, the schema is removed (e.g. unix:///var/run/docker.sock -> /var/run/docker.sock)

  6. Else, the default location of the docker socket is used: /var/run/docker.sock

In any case, if the docker socket schema is tcp://, the default docker socket path will be returned.