| tz | Europe/Amsterdam or any confirming timezone notation. | `Europe/Amsterdam` | `America/New_York` | Sets the timezone of the Docker container. This is to timesync the container to any other processes which would need it. |
| global_dns | Any IPv4 address, such as my personal recommendation: 9.9.9.9 (QUAD9). | `1.1.1.1` | `8.8.8.8` or any IP-Address that resolves DNS-names, and of course is reachable | Set the default DNS given to clients once they connect to the WireGuard tunnel, and for new peers, set to Cloudflare DNS for reliability.
| enable | Anything, preferably an existing WireGuard interface name. | `none` | `wg0,wg2,wg13` | Enables or disables the starting of the WireGuard interface on container 'boot-up'.
| isolate | Anything, preferably an existing WireGuard interface name. | `wg0` | `wg1,wg0` | For security premade `wg0` interface comes with this feature enabled by default. Declaring `isolate=none` in the Docker Compose file will remove this. The WireGuard interface itself IS able to reach the peers (Done through the `iptables` package).
| public_ip | Any IPv4 (public recommended) address, such as the one returned by default | Default uses the return of `curl ifconfig.me` | `89.20.83.118` | To reach your VPN from outside your own network, you need WG-Dashboard to know what your public IP-address is, otherwise it will generate faulty config files for clients. This happends because it is inside a Docker/Kubernetes container. In or outside of NAT is not relevant as long as the given IP-address is reachable from the internet or the target network.
When you are going to work with multiple WireGuard interfaces, you need to also open them up to the Docker host. This done by either adding the port mappings like: `51821:51821/udp` in the Docker Compose file, or to open a range like: `51820-51830:51820-51830/udp`<br>
The latter opens up UDP ports from 51820 to 51830, so all ports in between as well! Be careful, it is good security practise to open only needed ports!
## Building the image yourself:
To build the image yourself, you need to do a couple things:<br>
1. Clone the Github repository containing the source code of WGDashboard including the docker directory. For example do: `git clone https://github.com/donaldzou/WGDashboard.git`
1. (Make sure you have Docker correctly installed, if not: [Click here](https://docs.docker.com/engine/install/)) and run: `docker build . -t <Image name>:<Image tag>` as an example: `docker build . -t dselen/wgdashboard:latest`.<br>
This will make Docker compile the image from the resources in the directory you mention, in this case the source/root one. Let it compile, it takes only a couple seconds with a minute at most.