Do Gallium and Cxx now come along with "docker run -it julia"?

On Tuesday, October 13, 2015 at 9:15:29 PM UTC-4, Jonathan Malmaud wrote:
>
> There's an official Julia docker repository now: 
> https://hub.docker.com/_/julia/
>
> There is a PR to uptdate it to 0.4: 
> https://github.com/docker-library/official-images/pull/1121/files
>
> I'm working on creating Dockerfiles for versions of Julia that support 
> Gallium (the debugger) and Cxx (the C++ foreign function interface).
>
> I'm excited that anyone on any platform with docker installed could just 
> run "docker run -it julia" and be at a Julia prompt. 
>
> On Wednesday, September 2, 2015 at 9:21:32 AM UTC-4, André Lage wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> Any news on official Julia Docker images? Any chance of being one of 
>> these listed at Docker Hub?
>>
>>
>> https://hub.docker.com/search/?q=juliabox&page=1&isAutomated=0&isOfficial=0&starCount=0&pullCount=0
>>
>> We are using Julia, Docker and we plan to use JuliaBox as Web interface 
>> to test our research prototype. I think it would be easier and 
>> straightforward for us to use an official JuliaBox image instead of 
>> customizing other Docker image.
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>>
>> André Lage.
>>
>> On Monday, June 1, 2015 at 12:55:08 PM UTC-3, André Lage wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi Viral,
>>>
>>> That's a great idea! It would be interesting to include some packages 
>>> for big data applications, i.e., to enable data analysis and visualization. 
>>> For instance, DataFrame, Gadfly, HDFS, JSON, Mongo.
>>>
>>> Moreover, I agree with James: Julia docker images would be very useful 
>>> and handy for reproducible research purposes.
>>>
>>> Best regards,
>>>
>>> André Lage.
>>>
>>> On Thursday, May 21, 2015 at 10:37:50 AM UTC-3, James Fairbanks wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Yes we should encourage people to use docker by pointing to the images. 
>>>> I am using the images after finding them on the Julia box github page. 
>>>> Putting a research project in a docker will aid in reproducible research. 
>>>
>>>

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