Next evolution, just a one line bash script.

  • @[email protected]
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    10 months ago

    Eh even as a Linux admin, I prefer hand installs I understand over mysterious docker black boxes that ship god knows what.

    Sure, if I’m trialing something to see if it’s worth my time, I’ll spin up a container. But once it’s time to actually deploy it, I do it by hand.

    • @[email protected]
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      610 months ago

      yes very much agreed on this. docker is awesome but imo the reliance on it will absolutely cause issues down the line

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Sorry but IMO that’s FUD.

        The reliance on it legitimately prevents the issues that it’s likely to cause. It’s made to be both idempotent and ephemeral.

        Give an example of a Python project. You make a venv and do all your work in there. You then generate a requirements with all the versions pinned. You start build a container on a pinned version of alpine, or Ubuntu, or w/e. Wherever possible, you are pinning versions.

        With best practices applied, result is that the image will be functionally the same regardless of what system builds it, though normally it gets built and stored on a registry like Docker Hub.

        The only chance a user has to screw things up is in setting environment variables. That’s no different than ever before. At least now, they don’t have to worry about system or language-level dependencies introducing a breaking change.

    • @[email protected]
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      310 months ago

      If it’s an open-source project, usually the dockerfiles are available for reading.

      Do you audit every line of code that you run in production? If you are trying some new python/django/sql app, are you reviewing all that?

      I’d assume with a python based project, you’d be able to at least look at requirements and tell there’s something that sets off red flags. And you are either familiar/trust the maintainer, or you are reviewing the actual python itself?

      Beyond that, the dockerfile is essentially just installation instructions for getting it running on a virgin system of X distribution. I wouldn’t call that a black box.

      If the container isn’t part of an open source project, then this is a moot point then. The project itself is a black box.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        You do you. Speaking for myself, I prefer to understand and be able to trivially inspect and modify the moving parts in the things I deploy so I have a snowball’s chance in hell of debugging and fixing things when something inevitably goes wrong.