▲ | c-hendricks 4 days ago | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
So for my set of DVR services, quadlets would have me replace a single compose.yml with 6 .container files, and manually create the network, and have to stop and start all of the services individually. Not sure I'm sold. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
▲ | bogwog 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Not sure what your compose file looks like, but my container files are tiny, flat, and trivial to maintain. > manually create the network There's no way for me to know what your requirements are, but often times if you just need your containers to talk to each other, all you need is an empty file with a unique name. So `touch MyDVRNetwork.network` to create it, and add `Network=MyDVRNetwork` to your containerfiles. > and have to stop and start all of the services individually. Nope, container files are essentially already systemd service files. If you add them to the correct folder and set up the dependencies, systemd will automatically start them in the correct order at boot time, restart them if they fail, etc. That's the best part of quadlet IMO. Literally set it and forget it, and the process works the same for rootless containers (you just need to add them to your user folder instead of the system-wide folder) It gets even more awesome when you combine them with something like Fedora CoreOS and Butane. With a few small text files, you can declaratively generate an OS image with all of your desired services ready to go. It is pure bliss. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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▲ | papercrane 4 days ago | parent | prev [-] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Quadlets also support a .kube file. I have a similar use case where I have 6 containers I want to all run on the same network. So have a k8s YAML file that has a pod with the containers, their configuration and path mapping and then a have a `service.kube` file with a '[Kube]' section and a 'Yaml=/path/to/config.yaml' directive. That creates a single service to stop/start with systemd and has all the containers running on the same network in a single pod. |