TL;DR: I want to keep my containers up to date, currently Portainer based compose files updated by renovate. How do you do it?
Status Quo
I’m hosting a few containers on my Unraid Homeserver for personal use, but I don’t use the Unraid Webinterface to control them. I’m running Portainer CE in a Container on the host. Within Portainer I use the “Stacks” feature to define my containers. The Stack-files (basically docker-compose files) reside in a private Git(-hub) repository. I configured renovate to create pull requests to the Git repository in case there are new updates for the container images (aka new tagged images).
Issues
Currently I’m not really satisfied with that workflow. These are the issues I have:
- It’s not really automatic. I still have to manually approve the Pull Requests on GitHub, even though I don’t test them before applying
- I once updated a specific container but the database structure of the application changed. I had to manually restore the application data from a backup
- Some containers I use don’t have proper versioning (e.g. only a “latest” image)
- For some containers renovate doesn’t open Pull Requests for updates. I think it’s because the images are not in Docker Hub, but on GitHub or other registries.
- Adding new stacks to Portainer is cumbersome, I have to specify the Git repository, the path of the docker-compose file and credentials everytime.
Wishlist
What I would like to have:
- Automatic Updates to my containers (bug fixes, new features, security fixes)
- Updates should apply automatically except if I pin the image tag/version
- Before updating a container the container should get shutdown and a copy of the application data should be created
- If the container exits unexpectedly after an update, an automatic rollback should get applied. Notification to me and no further updates for this container until I continue it.
- Container definitions should be defined in a version controlled code/text, e.g. docker-compose files in a Git repo
- Solution should be self hosted
Questions
I’m aware of watchtower, but as far as I see it only updates the live-configuration of the system. So no version control or roll-backs. What do you folks think? Are my requirements stupid overkill for a homeserver? How do you keep your container based applications up to date?
I‘m using watchtower. Unless you tell it to delete old containers directly, you always have the „old version“ usable. Depending on what your container runs (e.g. a database that is unusable in case of rollback), you could add a manual db dump (probably can add that script to watchtower) which you can then reimplement in case of failure.
But honestly, a solid backup of my configs/files combined with watchtower is pretty neat. No need to intervene at all.
Good luck. :)
This is what I do. I find keeping 20-odd docker-compose files (almost always static content) backed up to be straightforward.
Each is configured to bring up/down the whole stack in the right order, so any Watchtower-triggered update is seamless. My Gotify container sends me an update every time one changes. I use Portainer to manage them across two devices, but that’s just about convenience.
I disable Watchtower for twitchy containers, and handle them manually. For the rest, the only issue I’ve seen is if there’s a major change in how the container/stack is built (a change in database, etc), but that’s happened twice and I’ve been able to recover.
Nice! For me its like 10+ stacks and maybe 15 containers. Also all managed my changing compose files which I‘m constantly improving. Adding .env files, changing database and heavy workload paths to ssds instead of hdds and so on. It‘s insane what you can do.
Backing it us is less easy for me since I have to dump 3 databases and copy lots of config files. But tar.gz is my friend. :)
Yeah, it make for a nice workflow, doesn’t it. It doesn’t give you the “fully automated” achievement, but it’s not much of a chore. :)
Have you considered something like borgbackup? It does good deduplication, so you won’t have umpteen copies of unchanged files.
I use it mostly for my daily driver laptop to backup to my NAS, and the Gitlab CE container running on the NAS acts as the equivalent for its local Git repos, which are then straightforward to copy elsewhere. Though haven’t got it scripting anything like bouncing containers or DB dumps.