I never understood how to use Docker, what makes it so special? I would really like to use it on my Rapsberry Pi 3 Model B+ to ease the setup process of selfhosting different things.

I’m currently running these things without Docker:

  • Mumble server with a Discord bridge and a music bot
  • Maubot, a plugin-based Matrix bot
  • FTP server
  • Two Discord Music bots

All of these things are running as systemd services in the background. Should I change this? A lot of the things I’m hosting offer Docker images.

It would also be great if someone could give me a quick-start guide for Docker. Thanks in advance!

  • kevincox@lemmy.ml
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    10 months ago

    I feel that a lot of people here are missing the point. Docker is popular for selfhosted services for a few main reasons:

    1. It is one package that can be used on any distribution (or even OS with a Linux VM).
    2. The package contains all dependencies required to run the software so it is pretty reliable.
    3. It provides some basic sandboxing against non-malicious services. Basically the service can’t scribble all over your filesystem. It can only write to specific directories that you have given it access to (via volumes) other than by exploiting security vulnerabilities.
    4. The volume system also makes it very obvious what data is important and needs to be backed up or similar, you have a short list.

    Docker also has lots of downsides. I would generally say that if your distribution packages software I would prefer the distribution’s package over the docker image. A good distribution package will also solve all of these problems. The main issue you will see with distribution packages is a longer delay before new versions are made available.

    What Docker completely dominates was previous cross-distribution packaging options which typically took one of the previous strategies.

    1. Self-contained compiled tarball. Run the program inside as your user. It probably puts its data in the extracted directory, maybe. How do you upgrade? Extract and copy a data directory? Self-update? Code is mutable and mixed with data, gross.
    2. Install script. Probably runs as root. Makes who-knows what changes to your system. Where is the data, is the service running? Will it auto-start on boot. Hope that install script supports your distro.
    3. Source tarball. Figure out the dependencies. Hope they don’t conflict with the versions your distro has. Set up users and setup scripts yourself. Hope the build doesn’t take too long.
    • CyberSeeker@discuss.tchncs.de
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      10 months ago

      Sorry if I’m about 10 years behind Linux development, but how does Docker compare with the latest FlatPak trend in application distribution? How you have described it sounds somewhat similar, outside of also getting segmented access to data and networks.

      • towerful@programming.dev
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        10 months ago

        Docker is to servers, as flatpak is to desktop apps.
        I would probably run away if i saw flatpak on a headless server

        • matcha_addict@lemy.lol
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          10 months ago

          Flatpak has better security features than docker. While its true it’s not designed with server apps in mind, it is possible to use its underlying “bubblewrap” to create isolated environments. Maybe in the future, tooling will improve its features and bridge the gap.

      • kevincox@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        For desktop apps Flatpak is almost certainly a better option than Docker. Flatpak uses the same core concepts as Docker but Flatpak is more suited for distributing graphical apps.

        1. Built in support for sharing graphics drivers, display server connections, fonts and themes.
        2. Most Flatpaks use common base images. Not only will this save disk space if you have lots of, for example GNOME, applications as they will share the same base but it also means that you can ship security updates for common libraries separately from application updates. (Although locked insecure libraries is still a problem in general, it is just improved over the docker case.)
        3. Better desktop integration via the use of “portals” that allow requesting specific things (screenshot, open file, save file, …) without full access to the user’s system.
        4. Configuration UIs that are optimized for the desktop usecase. Graphically tools for install, uninstall, manage permissions, …

        Generally I would still default to my distro’s packages where possible, but if they are unsuitable for whatever reason (not available, too old, …) then a Flatpak is a great option.