- install.sh
- Debian, Ubuntu
- Fedora, CentOS, RHEL, SUSE
- Arch Linux
- yarn, npm
- macOS
- Standalone Releases
- Docker
This document demonstrates how to install code-server
on
various distros and operating systems.
We have a script to install code-server for Linux, macOS and FreeBSD.
It tries to use the system package manager if possible.
First run to print out the install process:
curl -fsSL https://code-server.dev/install.sh | sh -s -- --dry-run
Now to actually install:
curl -fsSL https://code-server.dev/install.sh | sh
The script will print out how to run and start using code-server.
If you believe an install script used with curl | sh
is insecure, please give
this wonderful blogpost by
sandstorm.io a read.
If you'd still prefer manual installation despite the below detection reference and --dry-run
then continue on for docs on manual installation. The install.sh
script runs the exact same
commands presented in the rest of this document.
--dry-run
to echo the commands for the install process without running them.--method
to choose the installation method.--method=detect
to detect the package manager but fallback to--method=standalone
.--method=standalone
to install a standalone release archive into~/.local
.
--prefix=/usr/local
to install a standalone release archive system wide.--version=X.X.X
to install versionX.X.X
instead of latest.--help
to see full usage docs.
-
For Debian, Ubuntu and Raspbian it will install the latest deb package.
-
For Fedora, CentOS, RHEL and openSUSE it will install the latest rpm package.
-
For Arch Linux it will install the AUR package.
-
For any unrecognized Linux operating system it will install the latest standalone release into
~/.local
.- Add
~/.local/bin
to your$PATH
to run code-server.
- Add
-
For macOS it will install the Homebrew package.
- If Homebrew is not installed it will install the latest standalone release into
~/.local
. - Add
~/.local/bin
to your$PATH
to run code-server.
- If Homebrew is not installed it will install the latest standalone release into
-
For FreeBSD, it will install the npm package with
yarn
ornpm
. -
If ran on an architecture with no releases, it will install the npm package with
yarn
ornpm
.- We only have releases for amd64 and arm64 presently.
- The npm package builds the native modules on postinstall.
curl -fOL https://github.com/cdr/code-server/releases/download/v3.5.0/code-server_3.5.0_amd64.deb
sudo dpkg -i code-server_3.5.0_amd64.deb
sudo systemctl enable --now code-server@$USER
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
curl -fOL https://github.com/cdr/code-server/releases/download/v3.5.0/code-server-3.5.0-amd64.rpm
sudo rpm -i code-server-3.5.0-amd64.rpm
sudo systemctl enable --now code-server@$USER
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
# Installs code-server from the AUR using yay.
yay -S code-server
sudo systemctl enable --now code-server@$USER
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
# Installs code-server from the AUR with plain makepkg.
git clone https://aur.archlinux.org/code-server.git
cd code-server
makepkg -si
sudo systemctl enable --now code-server@$USER
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
We recommend installing with yarn
or npm
when:
- You aren't on
amd64
orarm64
. - If you're on Linux with glibc < v2.17 or glibcxx < v3.4.18
note: Installing via yarn
or npm
builds native modules on install and so requires C dependencies.
See ./npm.md for installing these dependencies.
You will need at least node v12 installed. See #1633.
yarn global add code-server
# Or: npm install -g code-server
code-server
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
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
We publish self contained .tar.gz
archives for every release on github.
They bundle the node binary and node_modules
.
These are created from the npm package and the rest of the releases are created from these. Only requirement is glibc >= 2.17 && glibcxx >= v3.4.18 on Linux and for macOS there is no minimum system requirement.
- Download the latest release archive for your system from github.
- Unpack the release.
- You can run code-server by executing
./bin/code-server
.
You can add the code-server bin
directory to your $PATH
to easily execute code-server
without the full path every time.
Here is an example script for installing and using a standalone code-server
release on Linux:
mkdir -p ~/.local/lib ~/.local/bin
curl -fL https://github.com/cdr/code-server/releases/download/v3.5.0/code-server-3.5.0-linux-amd64.tar.gz \
| tar -C ~/.local/lib -xz
mv ~/.local/lib/code-server-3.5.0-linux-amd64 ~/.local/lib/code-server-3.5.0
ln -s ~/.local/lib/code-server-3.5.0/bin/code-server ~/.local/bin/code-server
PATH="~/.local/bin:$PATH"
code-server
# Now visit http://127.0.0.1:8080. Your password is in ~/.config/code-server/config.yaml
# 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 $HOME/.config/code-server/config.json
# outside the container.
mkdir -p ~/.config
docker run -it -p 127.0.0.1:8080:8080 \
-v "$HOME/.config:/home/coder/.config" \
-v "$PWD:/home/coder/project" \
-u "$(id -u):$(id -g)" \
codercom/code-server:latest
Our official image supports amd64
and arm64
.
For arm32
support there is a popular community maintained alternative: