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Should I bother learning Podman? (lemmy.goblackcat.com)

I am already fairly comfortable using docker and its tool set. Is the tide shifting towards Podman? Should I start learning how to use Podman? Thanks in advance.

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[-] aksdb@feddit.de 19 points 1 year ago

I use podman for almost everything. Especially since it's working rootless. BUT I am also clearly swimming against the tide there. Everyone else in the company uses docker and I typically can't just take their docker-compose setups 1:1 over to podman. First, because they often rely on having root and second, because they use docker specific hacks (like some internal hostname you can use to access the host from within docker). Since I am not a fan of docker-compose anyway, I don't care that much ... I would have built my own setup with docker as well.

On my server I have a lot less trouble with podman than I had with docker. I run quite a lot of services there, and the docker proxy (and sometime the daemon) always started to act up after a while, causing individual containers to no longer properly receive traffic and me no long being able to control them. With podman all of that just works. And I have systemd managing the container lifetimes instead of some blackbox.

[-] RandoCalrandian@kbin.social 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

This is why our org enforces Kubernetes and Helm

Compose is simpler, and has a much easier base use case, but we've found it more functional as a dev tool to get the service running before making a full deployment config, rather than as an effective production solution.

[-] andruid@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 year ago

Yeah, compose for simple testing, then use podman convert it to k8s manifests and clean up from there for production, seems like a reasonable devx.

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this post was submitted on 15 Jul 2023
65 points (94.5% liked)

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