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I have a small server where I need to run some "non standard" services (e.g. Unifi ...so commercial) in order to keep my Debian install "clean"I plan to do so in a Container.
In the past (for a commercial company) I used Docker. I see now that is involved in all sorts of "political/financial" stuff and in any case was never FOSS.
Now I could do this "from scratch" using LXC (LXD?) but I'm not trying to make my life hard and build from scratch (there are, for example, Docker images for Unifi) and I can see there are all sorts of "Better Docker than Docker" solutions around but as far as I can see none actually ship with Debian .
So (and this is definitely "stirring up a hornet's nest") which is "best", defining best as:
: Easy to use with Docker images
: Either in Debian repos, or so close that it might be one day soon
Just overhead and lots of duplication, e.g. I really don't need another kernel and another set of kernel updates etc.
I use VMs on my dev box, but there I really care about the OS including differing kernel versions. Here is just a single app, so cgroup type protection is good enough.
When I did a paid job for a commercial firm I used Docker , who pays the piper and all that.
On MY Debian box I try NOT to run "Restricted/Commercial" software.
For Unifi , in order to use their hardware I need to use their software (not my call) but if I have to, then I'd like to keep it in a container, since it's not open and I really have no idea what it's trying to do.
Now I can just make my own containers using LXC/LXD but that's a lot of work , especially as there are already pre-built containers (using the Docker format) that many Container technologies can use (e.g .. portainer on podman ) but if I use something 'closed' I'm back at square 1, so best would be something already in Debian Repos that can use Docker images , failing that something which might soon be in Repos ..i.e. they FOSS but not yet meeting all the Debian rules.
graemev2 wrote: ↑2022-08-17 16:38
On MY Debian box I try NOT to run "Restricted/Commercial" software.
For Unifi , in order to use their hardware I need to use their software (not my call) but if I have to, then I'd like to keep it in a container, since it's not open and I really have no idea what it's trying to do.