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I use this, as well as lazygit and lazynpm (from the same developer) throughout every single day. They each live in their own tmux window. These are indispensable programs for me and I’m so glad they exist!
I just realize a Ruby library lazy_migrate I have been using is created by the same guy
https://github.com/jesseduffield/lazy_migrate
Wow moment
lazygit yesterday:
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=29394162
(130+ comments)
The Visual Studio Code Docker Extension exposes a similar Interface. I can also really recommend it for vs code users.
I could get the logs for just that one service with docker compose logs --follow myservice but that dies everytime the service dies so I'd need to run that command every time I restart the service
Why is that? Any chance of a bugfix?
What I did was:
while true; do docker-compose logs --tail=100 -f myservice; sleep 1; done
You can also achieve this with watch
You would have to ask the folks behind docker-compose.
At a glance this reminds me of the k9s tui for kubernetes, which is really quite nice.
Glancing at the demo I must say that it looks really neat.
Really like terminal apps because of the easy access over network. This one might come off really handy because I often find myself ssh`ing in to my server to read logs and manage docker containers.
Amazing! Just what I need to get on with my docker life.. Thanks for making this!
So does this mean I can finally get rid of docker desktop?
I want this for podman.
I cannot test as I had to go back to using Docker since I have issues with podman and docker-compose, but you might want to give it a try. It might work out of the box if you start the podman daemon that exposes docker APIs.
If you already do but run the service as a user, you might need to set the env var to
DOCKER_HOST to unix://$XDG_RUNTIME_DIR/podman/podman.sock first
We used docker as part of our capstone project in university back in 2012. We basically created tor based web hosting services where each website would be hosted in its own docker container.
It’s good to see docker coming such a long way since then.
Docker wasn’t released publicly until 2013
You are probably right. It might have been 2013 then. It's been a while.