captainVersion: 4 services: $$cap_appname: image: lscr.io/linuxserver/openssh-server:version-8.6_p1-r3 environment: PUID: 1001 PGID: 1001 TZ: Europe/London PUBLIC_KEY: $$cap_sshd_public_key DOCKER_MODS: linuxserver/mods:openssh-server-ssh-tunnel # USER_PASSWORD: $$cap_sshd_public_key # - PUBLIC_KEY_FILE=/path/to/file #optional # - PUBLIC_KEY_DIR=/path/to/directory/containing/_only_/pubkeys #optional # - PUBLIC_KEY_URL=https://github.com/username.keys #optional # - SUDO_ACCESS=false #optional # - PASSWORD_ACCESS=false #optional # - USER_PASSWORD=password #optional # - USER_PASSWORD_FILE=/path/to/file #optional USER_NAME: $$cap_sshd_username volumes: - $$cap_appname-config:/config ports: - $$cap_sshd_port:2222 caproverExtra: notExposeAsWebApp: 'true' caproverOneClickApp: variables: - id: $$cap_sshd_public_key label: Your SSH public key description: Enter your public key - id: $$cap_sshd_username label: Your SSH Username defaultValue: 'caprover' - id: $$cap_sshd_port label: Your SSH exposed port (your host mapped port) description: Enter a port number defaultValue: '4646' validRegex: /^\d+$/ instructions: start: >- The following app sets up an SSHd service in a container that you can use to connect to and inspect other container's volumes, or to get quick access to a test container. IMPORTANT: This setup uses **public key** login. end: >- The container is built and deployed. You can now connect to this container from your local machine by running the following command: ssh -i /path/to/private.key $$cap_sshd_username@$$cap_appname.$$cap_root_domain -p $$cap_sshd_port displayName: SSH Container isOfficial: true description: Just a simple container that has sshd installed so you can SSH directly into this container. documentation: 'Taken from https://github.com/linuxserver/docker-openssh-server'