Apologies for the very off-topic reply, but I can't help but find it a little funny that on a thread exalting a particular tool, the top comment at the time of this writing is a link to another, newer tool. Not that there's anything wrong with sharing the link, but it does seem like here at HN we have a bit of a grass-is-greener thing going on. I would understand it more if the discussion was around how bad a tool is and someone chimed in with an alternative. And it's not like I don't want people to share these other projects but personally on a thread about a particular topic, the comments I find the most useful are those from people with experience in that topic sharing their opinions, tips, etc. In this case, the comment our community found the most valuable on the topic of Dokku seems to be a link to Dokploy, a project that judging by the commit history is new as of this past April.
rsyring|1 year ago
I'm still waiting for something built on a rootless container solution and with everything defined in git (i.e. no or limited cli commands) so that exactly what is being deployed is, at all times, tracked in git.
miroljub|1 year ago
I'm pretty sure you can run both Dokku and Dokkplay using podman. It's a drop-in replacement for docker that runs just fine rootless.
panarky|1 year ago
> Apologies for the very off-topic reply ... it does seem like here at HN ...
There's nothing more HN than filling the first page of comments with discussion of everything except the linked article.
franciscop|1 year ago
Since it's Hacker News, not Old-But-Stable-Project-News, that seems expected? The other way it also happens, and has been happening forever, I published a new OSS project of mine ~10 years ago, went to the front-page, and 8 of 10 comments were recommending other pre-existing tools.
benbristow|1 year ago
enumjorge|1 year ago
gosub100|1 year ago
Here's an analogy from the physical realm: "presenting shovel, a customizable tool for removing dirt".
- doesn't work well for rocky terrain, but I'm working on DigBar, which can outperform Shovel in many high performance workloads.
- it's a lot slower than Hoe, if you're only going down 4" of topsoil
- I wrote a custom frontend for Shovel call Flatend, it carries more volume for loose loads
- theres a paid product called posthole that is worth buying if you build fences, uses shovel under GPLv3
e-clinton|1 year ago