Tooting my own horn here and I know it’s not a 1-1 replacement, but as others mentioned some great alternatives (diun, cup, wud) I’d like to suggest dockcheck.
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Thank you for the update!
FYI: The first URL of the new page hits a 404 due to a faulty trailing space, the URL being hit is:
https://news.elenarossini.com/%20
The correct url without trailing space:
https://news.elenarossini.com/
mag37@lemmy.mlOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[OC] mag37/dockcheck - CLI tool to automate docker image updates.English2·3 months agoVery nice! Now posted here: https://github.com/mag37/dockcheck/discussions/146
mag37@lemmy.mlOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[OC] mag37/dockcheck - CLI tool to automate docker image updates.English1·4 months agoThats really nice! Thank you so much for the writeup.
Would you mind if I added this as a discussion (crediting you and this post!) in the github project? Or if you’d like to copypaste it yourself to get the credit and be a part of the discussion.
mag37@lemmy.mlOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[OC] mag37/dockcheck - CLI tool to automate docker image updates.English1·4 months agodeleted by creator
mag37@lemmy.mlOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[OC] mag37/dockcheck - CLI tool to automate docker image updates.English2·4 months agoIt’s a different approach. This project started as a proof of concept - just to show that it’s possible to check for updates without pulling the whole image first (which is how Watchtower does it).
Then it evolved to orchestrate granular automatic updates with a bunch of extra functionality - while still adhering to the core goal of keeping it simple and lightweight.
mag37@lemmy.mlOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[OC] mag37/dockcheck - CLI tool to automate docker image updates.English2·4 months agoThank you! Oh! That’s pretty cool, do you mind sharing bits of how this is done? Would be nice to incorporate into a notify-template in the future.
mag37@lemmy.mlOPto Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[OC] mag37/dockcheck - CLI tool to automate docker image updates.English2·4 months agoThank you!
I sadly don’t have too much insights in the other alternatives, I try to not compare too much - maybe I should study them a bit more to understand the wider picture. There’s a few more I forgot to mention; renovate and dependabot.
While I think all those tools are great and have functionality that my project cant fulfill - I strive to keep dockcheck simple and lightweight. Options and functionality have been bolted on bit by bit while still trying to have it as simple as possible in its core functions - so a user could just download the main script
dockcheck.sh
and run it to list updates and optionally update. Everything else is optional, extras.I guess it depends on what you’re looking for. If you’d like a GUI or more in depth setup or reporting - I’d look elsewhere, but if you’d like simplicity and maybe schedule it to notify you when there’s updates available - my project may be the thing.
So my answer would be yes: if you’re running
docker compose
this project is very newbie friendly and easy to get going!
Thank you! Yeah I’m the same - if the first thing I see on a project page is some picture or video or output of what it’s about I’m much more intrigued to read on.