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I've done something similar, but I'm using compose files orchestrated by Ansible instead.
I'm actually doing both right now since I had quite a huge compose file that I haven't converted to ansible yet. The biggest frustration I have is that there doesn't seem to be an ansible module that works with compose v2 (the official plugin) which means I'm either stuck on the old version of compose or I have to use shell commands to run stuff like 'docker compose up -d'.
One nice thing I've gained though is for services like Plex. I have an 'update' playbook that I use and it will check to see if Plex is actively streaming before updating the container which isn't something I could do easily with compose.
I'm still using the old docker-compose executable - my Docker role is still installing it until the Ansible module catches up.
Well the v2 plugin is basically a binary, while v1 is written with Python, which makes it super easy to write an Ansible module