Introduction

The following is a quick guide to get started with GeoNode in most common operating systems.

Note

For a full setup and deployment, please refer to the complete installation guides

This is meant to be run on a fresh machine with no previously installed packages or GeoNode versions.

Warning

The methods presented here are meant to be used for a limited internal demo only. Before exposing your GeoNode instance to a public server, please read carefully the hardening guide

Install via Docker

Docker is a free software platform used for packaging software into standardized units for development, shipment and deployment.

../../_images/docker.png

Note

credits to Docker

A container image is a lightweight, stand-alone, executable package of a piece of software that includes everything needed to run it: code, runtime, system tools, system libraries, settings.

Docker containers running on a single machine share that machine’s operating system kernel; they start instantly and use less compute and RAM.

Containers can share a single kernel, and the only information that needs to be in a container image is the executable and its package dependencies, which never need to be installed on the host system.

Multiple containers can run on the same machine and share the OS kernel with other containers, each running as isolated processes in user space.

This documentation will refer to the usage of Docker on a Ubuntu host, but you can of course run Docker also on other Linux distributions, Windows and Mac.

For the steps to setup Docker on Ubuntu you can jump ahead to Ubuntu 22.04