4.4 KiB
Auto-Start Hummingbot Instance
This installs a single Hummingbot instance as a Docker container and automatically starts running a pre-configured script or strategy.
Prerequisites
This configuration requires Docker Compose, a tool for defining and running multi-container Docker applications. The recommended way to get Docker Compose is to install Docker Desktop, which includes Docker Compose along with Docker Engine and Docker CLI which are Compose prerequisites.
See Docker for more information about how to install and use Docker Compose, as well as helpful commands.
Getting Started
Auto-starting a script/strategy lets you start a bot from the command line, skipping the Hummingbot UI.
To enable this, you will do need a few things first:
- Install and configure the Hummingbot instance
- Set the password used to encrypt your keys (
CONFIG_PASSWORD) - Define your script or strategy config file that you want to auto-start (
CONFIG_FILE_NAME)
Verify that Docker Compose is installed correctly by checking the version:
docker compose version
The output should be: Docker Compose version v2.17.2 or similar. Ensure that you are using Docker Compose V2, as V1 is deprecated.
1. Launch network
Clone this repo to your machine and go to the folder:
git clone https://github.com/hummingbot/deploy-examples.git
cd deploy-examples/autostart_hummingbot_compose
Alternatively, copy the docker-compose.yml file to a directory on your machine where you want to store your Hummingbot files.
This is the "root folder" where your encrypted keys, scripts, trades, configs, logs, and other files related to your bots will be saved.
From the root folder, run the following command to pull the image and start the instance:
docker compose up -d
After the images have been downloaded, you should see the following output:
[+] Running 1/1
⠿ Container hummingbot Started
3. Set permissions
Run this command from your root folder to grant read/write permission to the hummingbot_files sub-folder:
sudo chmod -R a+rw ./hummingbot_files
4. Launch Hummingbot and set password
Now, attach to the hummingbot instance:
docker attach hummingbot
You should see the Hummingbot welcome screen:
Set your Hummingbot password and write it down. This is the CONFIG_PASSWORD environment variable in your docker-compose.yml file.
Afterwards, run exit to exit Hummingbot.
4. Define script/strategy file
You can auto-start either a Script or a Strategy:
- Scripts are Python files that contain all strategy logic. If you define a
.pyfile asCONFIG_FILE_NAME, Hummingbot assumes it's a script file and looks for the.pyfile in thehummingbot_files/scriptsdirectory. Seesimple_pmm_example.pyfor an example. - Strategies are configurable strategy templates. If you define a
.ymlfile asCONFIG_FILE_NAME, Hummingbot assumes it's a strategy config file and looks for the.ymlfile in thehummingbot_files/conf/strategiesdirectory. Seeconf_pure_mm_1.ymlfor an example.
5. Modify YAML file
Now, use an IDE like VSCode to edit the docker-compose.yml file.
Edit the section that defines the CONFIG_PASSWORD and CONFIG_FILE_NAME environment variables:
# environment:
# - CONFIG_PASSWORD=[password]
# - CONFIG_FILE_NAME=simple_pmm_example.py
# - CONFIG_FILE_NAME=conf_pure_mm_1.yml
Uncomment out:
- The
environment:line - The
CONFIG_PASSWORDline: add the password you set earlier, - One of
CONFIG_FILE_NAMElines: add your script OR strategy config file
The final environment section of the YAML file should look like this:
environment:
- CONFIG_PASSWORD=[password]
- CONFIG_FILE_NAME=simple_pmm_example.py
Afterwards, save the file.
6. Relaunch Hummingbot
Restart the container using your new YAML file:
docker stop hummingbot
docker start hummingbot
When you attach to it, the strategy or script should already be running:
docker attach hummingbot
