The WireGuard Portal Docker image is available on both [Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/r/wgportal/wg-portal) and [GitHub Container Registry](https://github.com/h44z/wg-portal/pkgs/container/wg-portal).
It is built on the official Alpine Linux base image and comes pre-packaged with all necessary WireGuard dependencies.
This container allows you to establish WireGuard VPN connections without relying on a host system that supports WireGuard or using the `linuxserver/wireguard` Docker image.
The recommended method for deploying WireGuard Portal is via Docker Compose for ease of configuration and management.
WireGuard Portal supports managing WireGuard interfaces through three distinct deployment methods, providing flexibility based on your system architecture and operational preferences:
- **Directly on the host system**:
WireGuard Portal can control WireGuard interfaces natively on the host, without using containers.
This setup is ideal for environments where direct access to system networking is preferred.
To use this method, you need to set the network mode to `host` in your docker-compose.yml file.
```yaml
services:
wg-portal:
...
network_mode: "host"
...
```
- **Within the WireGuard Portal Docker container**:
WireGuard interfaces can be managed directly from within the WireGuard Portal container itself.
This is the recommended approach when running WireGuard Portal via Docker, as it encapsulates all functionality in a single, portable container without requiring a separate WireGuard host or image.
WireGuard Portal can interface with and control WireGuard running in another Docker container, such as the [linuxserver/wireguard](https://docs.linuxserver.io/images/docker-wireguard/) image.
This method is useful in setups that already use `linuxserver/wireguard` or where you want to isolate the VPN backend from the portal frontend.
For this, you need to set the network mode to `service:wireguard` in your docker-compose.yml file, `wireguard` is the service name of your WireGuard container.
- "51820:51820/udp" # WireGuard port, needs to match the port in wg-portal interface config
- "8888:8888/tcp" # Noticed that the port of the web UI is exposed in the wireguard container.
volumes:
- ./wg/etc:/config/wg_confs # We share the configuration (wgx.conf) between wg-portal and wireguard
sysctls:
- net.ipv4.conf.all.src_valid_mark=1
```
As the `linuxserver/wireguard` image uses _wg-quick_ to manage the interfaces, you need to have at least the following configuration set for WireGuard Portal:
```yaml
core:
# The WireGuard container uses wg-quick to manage the WireGuard interfaces - this conflicts with WireGuard Portal during startup.
# To avoid this, we need to set the restore_state option to false so that wg-quick can create the interfaces.
restore_state: false
# Usually, there are no existing interfaces in the WireGuard container, so we can set this to false.
import_existing: false
advanced:
# WireGuard Portal needs to export the WireGuard configuration as wg-quick config files so that the WireGuard container can use them.
All images are hosted on Docker Hub at [https://hub.docker.com/r/wgportal/wg-portal](https://hub.docker.com/r/wgportal/wg-portal) or in the [GitHub Container Registry](https://github.com/h44z/wg-portal/pkgs/container/wg-portal).
These are official releases of WireGuard Portal. They correspond to the GitHub tags that we make, and you can see the release notes for them here: [https://github.com/h44z/wg-portal/releases](https://github.com/h44z/wg-portal/releases).
Once these tags show up in this repository, they will never change.
For production deployments of WireGuard Portal, we strongly recommend using one of these tags, e.g. `wgportal/wg-portal:2.0.0`, instead of the latest or canary tags.
If you want to access configuration files in wg-quick format, you can mount the `/etc/wireguard` directory inside the container to a location of your choice.