DiscordChatExporter/.docs/Docker.md
Your Name 07151924cf fix(review): apply autofix feedback
Co-authored-by: Copilot <223556219+Copilot@users.noreply.github.com>
2026-05-24 20:30:37 -05:00

6.2 KiB

Docker usage instructions

Docker distribution of DiscordChatExporter provides a way to run the app in a virtualized and isolated environment. Due to the nature of Docker, you also don't need to install any prerequisites otherwise required by DCE.

Note

: Only the CLI flavor of DiscordChatExporter is available for use with Docker.

Pulling

This will download the Docker image from the registry to your computer. You can run this command again to update when a new version is released.

$ docker pull tyrrrz/discordchatexporter:stable

Note the :stable tag. DiscordChatExporter images are tagged according to the following patterns:

  • stable — latest stable version release. This tag is updated with each release of a new project version. Recommended for personal use.
  • x.y.z (e.g. 2.30.1) — specific stable version release. This tag is pushed when the corresponding version is released and never updated thereafter. Recommended for use in automation scenarios.
  • latest — latest (potentially unstable) build. This tag is updated with each new commit to the prime branch. Not recommended, unless you want to test a new feature that has not been released in a stable version yet.

You can see all available tags here.

Usage

To run the CLI in Docker and render help text:

$ docker run --rm tyrrrz/discordchatexporter:stable

To export a channel:

$ docker run --rm -v /path/on/machine:/out tyrrrz/discordchatexporter:stable export -t TOKEN -c CHANNELID

If you want colored output and real-time progress reporting, pass the -it (interactive + pseudo-terminal) option:

$ docker run --rm -it -v /path/on/machine:/out tyrrrz/discordchatexporter:stable export -t TOKEN -c CHANNELID

The -v /path/on/machine:/out option instructs Docker to bind the /out directory inside the container to a path on your host machine. Replace /path/on/machine with the directory you want the files to be saved at.

Note

: If you are running SELinux, you will need to add the :z option after /out, e.g.:

$ docker run --rm -v /path/on/machine:/out:z tyrrrz/discordchatexporter:stable export -t TOKEN -c CHANNELID

For more information, refer to the Docker docs SELinux labels for bind mounts page.

You can also use the current working directory as the output directory by specifying:

  • -v $PWD:/out in Bash
  • -v $pwd.Path:/out in PowerShell

For more information, please refer to the Dockerfile and Docker documentation.

To get your Token and Channel IDs, please refer to this page.

Unix permissions issues

This image was designed with a user running as uid:gid of 1000:1000.

If your current user has different IDs, and you want to generate files directly editable for your user, you might want to run the container like this:

$ mkdir data # or chown -R $(id -u):$(id -g) data
$ docker run -it --rm -v $PWD/data:/out --user $(id -u):$(id -g) tyrrrz/discordchatexporter:stable export -t TOKEN -g CHANNELID

Environment variables

DiscordChatExpoter CLI accepts the DISCORD_TOKEN environment variable as a fallback for the --token option. You can set this variable either with the --env Docker option or with a combination of the --env-file Docker option and a .env file.

Please refer to the Docker documentation for more information.

Source-built recurring scraper

This repo also ships a local recurring wrapper around the CLI for source-built automation:

  • Dockerfile builds DiscordChatExporter.Cli from source.
  • docker-compose.yml runs the wrapper container.
  • scripts/run-discord-scrape.sh preflight validates token/config/target resolution without writing archives.
  • scripts/run-discord-scrape.sh scrape performs append-oriented JSON updates by exporting newer messages and merging them into the existing local archive instead of blindly replacing the destination file.

For the recurring flow, keep secrets in scrape.env (copied from scrape.env.example) and keep target/output mapping in config/scrape-targets.json.

For recurring runs, targets with enabled: false are skipped by default. This is the recommended way to keep unresolved archive roots in the config without blocking the rest of the schedule.

If you authenticate with a bot token, do not rely on guild-name or DM discovery. Discord does not expose "list my accessible guilds" or DM enumeration for bot-only REST auth, so recurring targets should be configured with explicit guild_ids / channel_ids or backed by existing archive files whose names already embed channel IDs (for example, general [123456789012345678].json). The discord_dms target should stay disabled unless you switch to a user token.

preflight now probes one resolved channel per selected target with the source-built CLI before cron is installed. If the token cannot read that channel, setup fails closed and leaves the existing crontab untouched.

If you run the recurring flow through podman on an SELinux-enabled host, keep the bind mounts relabeled (:z). The checked-in docker-compose.yml already applies this to the recurring wrapper mounts.

For rootless podman, set DCE_USERNS_MODE=keep-id in scrape.env so the mounted archive roots stay writable as your host user instead of appearing as root:root inside the container. Keep DCE_UID and DCE_GID matched to your host user as well.

When the recurring wrapper sees an existing archive file whose name already embeds the channel ID (for example, Deadly Stream - kotor-general [770102657795751976].json), future runs keep updating that same path. When a channel is new and has no stored mapping yet, the wrapper now defaults to a human-readable filename based on the export metadata (Guild - Category - Channel [id].json) inside the configured target root instead of writing to channels/<id>.json.