> Am 10.12.2021 um 13:01 schrieb Achilleas Mantzios > <ach...@matrix.gatewaynet.com>: > > On 10/12/21 1:24 μ.μ., o1bigtenor wrote: >> >> >> On Fri, Dec 10, 2021 at 3:24 AM Achilleas Mantzios >> <ach...@matrix.gatewaynet.com <mailto:ach...@matrix.gatewaynet.com>> wrote: >> Hi >> we are running some 140 remote servers (in the 7 seas via satellite >> connections), and in each one of them we run: >> - jboss >> - postgresql >> - uucp (not as a daemon) >> - gpsd >> - samba >> - and possibly some other services >> >> Hardware and software upgrades are very hard since there is no physical >> access to those servers by trained personnel, and also there is a diversity >> of software versions. >> >> The idea for future upgrades is to containerize certain aspects of the >> software. The questions are (I am not skilled in docker, only minimal >> contact with lxd) : >> - is this a valid use case for containerization? >> - are there any gotchas around postgersql, the reliability of the system ? >> - since we are talking about 4+ basic services (pgsqk, jboss, uucp, samba), >> is docker a good fit or should we be looking into lxd as well? >> - are there any success stories of other after following a similar path? >> >> > Thanks >> My experience with LXD is that upon install you are now on a regular update >> plan that is impossible to change. > Ehhmmm we are running some old versions there already (jboss, pgsql), LXD > would not differ in this regard. > What do you mean? that the updates for LXD are huge? short spaced/very > regular? > Can you pls elaborate some more on that?
IIRC, you can’t really control, which updates are installed for LXD (and snap). You can’t create a local mirror. IIRC, you can delay snap updates, but you can’t really reject them. Maybe you can these days, with landscape server? (insert the usual rant about Enterprise != Ubuntu here) I don’t know about LXD, but as it’s only running on Ubuntu and is apparently developed by a single guy (who might or might not work for Canonical - sorry, too lazy to check), I wouldn’t hold my breath as to its long-term viability. Ubuntu will probably morph into a container-only, cloud-only OS sooner than later - the writing is on the wall (IMHO). >> This means that your very expensive data connection will be preempted for >> updates at the whim of the >> canonical crew. Suggest not using such (most using such on wireless >> connections seem to have found >> the resultant issues less than wonderful - - cost (on the data connection) >> being #1 and the inability to achieve >> solid reliability crowding it for #2). > Crew has their own paid service. Business connection is for business not crew. The word „crew“ was meant to say „employees of Canonical“ - I’m sure the allegory was not meant to mess with you... > What I am interested is, could docker be of any use in the above scenario? > Containerization in general? > The guys (admins/mgmt) here seem to be dead set on docker, but I have to > guarantee some basic data safety requirements. > I know very little about docker, but IMO, for ultimate stability, you could switch to RHEL and use their certified images: https://catalog.redhat.com/software/containers/search?q=PostgreSQL%2012&p=1 My coworker says, he re-packages all his docker-images himself (with RPMs from his own mirror), so that he understands what’s really in them. The big problem that I see with your use-case and docker is that docker implies frequent, small updates to the whole stack - including docker itself (unless you pay for the LTS version). This is not what you do right now, I reckon? The question is: do you want to get there? But maybe your developers want to get here, because they don’t want to learn about software-packaging (anymore) - but is that what the business wants? https://www.docker.com/blog/how-carnival-creates-customized-guest-experiences-with-docker/ (That was pre-pandemic…) I would make an educated guess that you’d need to have the whole docker-infrastructure on each ship (build-server, repository etc.pp.) to minimize sat-com traffic. I mean, it looks like it could be done. But this is where the „dev“ part in the „devops" world has to take a step back and the „ops“ guys need to come forward. Rainer