Looking for a place to start? Check out the Unreal Containers community hub for implementation-agnostic information on using the Unreal Engine inside Docker containers, and then head to the comprehensive ue4-docker documentation to view details specific to using the ue4-docker project.
The ue4-docker Python package contains a set of Dockerfiles and accompanying build infrastructure that allows you to build Docker images for Epic Games' Unreal Engine. The images also incorporate the infrastructure from ue4cli, conan-ue4cli, and ue4-ci-helpers to facilitate a wide variety of use cases.
Key features include:
- The six most recent versions of the Unreal Engine are supported (currently Unreal Engine 4.26 and newer).
- Both Windows containers and Linux containers are supported.
- Building and packaging Unreal Engine projects is supported.
- Running automation tests is supported.
- Running built Unreal Engine projects with offscreen rendering is supported via the NVIDIA Container Toolkit under Linux.
Resources:
- Documentation: https://adamrehn.github.io/ue4-docker
- GitHub repository: https://github.com/adamrehn/ue4-docker
- Package on PyPI: https://pypi.org/project/ue4-docker
- Related articles: https://adamrehn.com/articles/tag/Unreal%20Engine/
- Unreal Containers community hub: https://unrealcontainers.com/
- Development channel on the Unreal Containers Community Discord server: https://discord.gg/46CJg9fyJ9
See the file CONTRIBUTING.adoc for guidelines on how to contribute to the development of ue4-docker.
Copyright © 2018 - 2024, Adam Rehn. Licensed under the MIT License, see the file LICENSE for details.
Unreal and its logo are Epic Games' trademarks or registered trademarks in the US and elsewhere.
Docker and the Docker logo are trademarks or registered trademarks of Docker in the United States and other countries.