I have watchtower to keep my 50 production docker containers up to date. So far I have never had to resort to an old image since the new one was bugged but I know of the risks and dont have the --cleanup flag activated so I could easily spin up the old image if necessary. I also keep daily (mirrored) backups so I should be ok in the case of failure.

But I keep running into space issues due to multiple GBs of old images that I have to manually remove to not fill up the rather small ssd.

Does anyone have an idea how to automatically remove all but the newest unused docker image so I can quickly revert to it in case of failure but once there is another unused one of this container it goes away?

It’s probably no big deal but searching for it together with watchtower didnt yield anything so far.

Thanks in advance and have a good one.

  • hauiOP
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    310 months ago

    Yeah, I found the docker system prune filter option in the docs as well. Very unprecise sadly but thanks for mentioning it. :) I’m thinking of something like “when updating, first copy the version number of the old image and exclude it from prune”. Probably going to have to write something myself again. Feel free to spitball with me.

    • @Nouveau_Burnswick
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      110 months ago

      So my thought with the time based pruning is that you can keep a backup that’s X days old.

      Let’s say you keep 2 weeks. If there have been no problems with an image after 2 weeks of an update, you’re probably good to go. If you have an issue during those 2 weeks, you can return to and image within those 2 weeks. If you’ve had no problems after 2 weeks, it’s probably stable.

      Adjust 2 weeks to whatever you’re comfortable with.

      • hauiOP
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        110 months ago

        This would absolutely make sense, were it not for the fact that the old image can be 3 weeks old when the new one comes out. Feel free to correct me but I think a time based option on age is not sufficient.

          • hauiOP
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            110 months ago

            But thanks for suggesting and spitballing with me.