I used to simply use the ‘latest’ version tag, but that occasionally caused problems with breaking changes in major updates.

I’m currently using podman-compose and I manually update the release tags periodically, but the number of containers keeps increasing, so I’m not very happy with this solution. I do have a simple script which queries the Docker Hub API for tags, which makes it slightly easier to find out whether there are updates.

I imagine a solution with a nice UI for seeing if updates are available and possibly applying them to the relevant compose files. Does anything like this exist or is there a better solution?

  • bookworm@feddit.nl
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    1 year ago

    Since my “homelab” is just that, a homelab, I’m comfortable with using :latest-tag on all my containers and just running docker-compose pull and docker-compose up -d once per week.

    • easeKItMAn@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Just put all commands into a bash file. Starting with ‘’docker tag’’ changing tag to something else in case I need to revert and than pull, compose up. All run by crontab weekly. In case something breaks the latest working container is still there.