this post was submitted on 11 Sep 2023
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Still the same issue of a still pretty big overhead that is unnecessary in the vast majority of situations.
At my current workpalce, ~20% of hardware goes to docker. Is it still worth it? For the company it is I assume, since we can let developers with fuck all operations experience deploy stuff without bricking our servers. But we could also be hiring operations people who know how to run applications on servers without fucking them up, but of course in a money game docker wins out for ease and speed.
Importantly, comparing stuff like Electron though, we can scale up the hardware and that's included in the cost of running docker. Desktop users stuck with shit like VSCode, Beekeeper or Mongo Compass can't realistically do that though, PC upgrades aren't something you do in 10 minutes and even then your options are limited.
So for companies and servers, docker makes a lot of sense. Especially on the business side. For a private end user, these virtualization tools remove the potential performance all that fancy hardware nowadays could provide. And in the case of Electron shit, they also make for a worse inconsistent UI and laggy interactions.
Hey, what do you mean 20% of your hardware goes to docker? If you're not running linux then docker isn't the issue, it's the VM. If you are running linux, it should be just as lightweight as say, systemd
Yea, docker only eats up storage. And not even much, if you share the same base image.
Not really any CPU or RAM overhead
Excellent point!
As a freelance fronted dev, I really love Docker. I don't need to mess up my system installing ancient Java versions or whatever Python wants to easy_install, pip or whatever, I can just run the backend Docker image and go on with my life. Especially when project A's backend has incompatible Java/Ruby/Python dependencies with project B.
You can shit on npm all you want (yes, I was there for left_pad), but at least they got the dependency issues between projects solved.