Hi, I’m just getting started with Docker, so apologies in advance if this seems silly.

I used to self-host multiple services (RSS reader, invoicing software, personal wiki) directly on a VPS using nginx and mariadb. I messed it up recently and am starting again, but this time I took the docker route.

So I’ve set up the invoicing software (InvoiceNinja), and everything is working as I want.

Now that I want to add the other services (ttrss and dokuwiki), should I set up new containers? It feels wasteful.

Instead, if I add additional configs to the existing servers that the InvoiceNinja docker-compose generated (nginx and mysql), I’m worried that an update to Invoiceninja would have a chance of messing up the other setups as well.

It shouldn’t, from my understanding of how docker containers work, but I’m not 100% sure. What would be the best way to proceed?

  • @moonpiedumplings@programming.dev
    link
    fedilink
    English
    4
    edit-2
    10 months ago

    If I run two mysql containers, it won’t necessarily take twice the resources of a single mysql containers

    It’s complicated, but essentially, no.

    Docker images, are built in layers. Each layer is a step in the build process. Layers that are identical, are shared between containers to the point of it taking up the ram of only running the layer once.

    Although, it should be noted that docker doesn’t load the whole container into memory, like a normal linux os. Unused stuff will just sit on your disk, just like normal. So rather, binaries or libraries loaded twice via two docker containers will only use up the ram of one instance. This is similar to how shared libraries reduce ram usage.

    Docker only has these features, deduplication, if you are using overlayfs or aufs, but I think overlayfs is the default.

    Should you run more than one database container? Well I dunno how mysql scales. If there is performance benefit from having only one mysqld instance, then it’s probably worth it. Like, if mysql uses up that much ram regardless of what databases you have loaded in a way that can’t be deduplicated, then you’d definitely see a benefit from a single container.

    What if your services need different database versions, or even software? Then different database containers is probably better.

    • @mudeth@lemmy.caOP
      link
      fedilink
      English
      110 months ago

      Thank you for an excellent explanation and blogpost. I’m getting conflicting answers, even on this question, but most authoritative sources do backup what you’re saying re:FS. I’m trying to wrap my head around how that works, specifically with heavy processes. I’m running on a VPS with 2 GiB of RAM and mysql is using 15% of that.

      At this point I have my primary container running. I guess I’ll just have to try spinning up new ones and see how things scale.

      What if your services need different database versions, or even software? Then different database containers is probably better.

      This version-independence was what attracted me to docker in the first place, so if it doesn’t work well this way then I may just replace the setup with a conventional setup and deal with dependency hell like I used to - pantsseat.gif.