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I don't disagree with you, but that also shows that most modern software is poorly written. Usually a bunch of solutions that hardly work and nobody is able to reproduce their setup in a quick, sane and secure way.
Yes, that's exactly point point. There are many options, yet people stick with Docker and DockerHub (that is everything but open).
Yes... maybe we just need some automation/orchestration tool for that. This is like saying that it's way too hard to download the rootfs of some distro, unpack it and then use
unshare
to launch a shell on a isolated namespace... Docker as you said provides a convenient API but it doesn't mean we can't do the same for systemd.Completely proprietary... like QEMU/libvirt? :P
Does it? I mean, this is especially annoying with old software, maybe dynamically linked or PHP, or stuff like that. Modern tools (go, rust) don't actually even have this problem. Dependencies are annoying in general, I don't think it's a property of modern software.
Who are these people? There are tons of registries that people use, github has its own, quay.io, etc. You also can simply publish Dockerfiles and people can build themselves. Ofc Docker has the edge because it was the first mainstream tool, and it's still a great choice for single machine deployments, but it's far from the only used. Kubernetes abandoned Docker as default runtime for years, for example... who are you referring to?
But Systemd also uses unshare, chroot, etc. They are at the same level of abstraction. Docker (and container runtimes) are simply specialized tools, while systemd is not. Why wouldn't I use a tool that is meant for this when it's available. I suppose bubblewrap does something similar too (used by Flatpak), and I am sure there are more.
Right, because organizations generally run QEMU, not VMware, Nutanix and another handful of proprietary platforms... :)
I use ghcr, i have no issues pulling images from amazon ECR or wherever.
Docker got there first with the adoption and marketing.
Automation tools like ansible and terraform have existed for ages, and are great for running things without containers.
OCI just makes it a hell of a lot easier and portable
I’ve been using ansible as well and it’s great.