Also, my apologies for mispronouncing Dockge. I've been corrected in another comment that said it should be a bit more like "Dockjay" instead of "Dockage"
Great job! Have any plans for extremely basic cluster management? Literally dockge with more than one host on the left with choice of host to deploy to or delete from.
I really like how you demonstrated the product before installing it. So we can decide if it is something we want to try, before sitting through the installation.
I love that they are showing what is going on. This has always been my biggest problem with portainer, that there is no feedback. I get it, if you run portainer in enterprise, where you are not watching the start of every container, this might be what you want. But while experimenting to find the right compose settings, this is worth so much.
I've tried Portainer a while ago and I hated the fact that it can not manage stack deployed with "notepad". So I did not used Portainer or another tool, but this Dockge ... this is already to another level. Thank you for sharing.
This is the simple Docker manager that I've been longing for. I've used Portainer and Yacht previously and have a love-hate relationship with both of them. Dockge looks like a "just enough" project that will check all my boxes for Docker projects. Thanks for the video!
This is a game changer! Love the UI, portainer has too much going on… this feels comfortable without giving up functionality. Looking forward to deploying this in my homelab!
ปีที่แล้ว +5
I fell like i want to move all of my containers to Dockge right now. Dockge is going straight to the simplicity of deplying containners. Cant wait to deploy Dockge, simplicity is what i was looking for. Tks
Quite like it, had some problems with Portainer and not showing anything realtime really. This seems to fit more my wishes and seems to be modern in a way. Very nice video, thanks!
Thank you for this! I just wrecked a portainer setup after an upgrade... had to actually roll back the entire docker VM... This tool looks much better...
It’s not often something comes along that makes it into my standard compose stack. That usually has watchtower, Autoheal, uptime kuma and an edge agent. This has made the starting lineup. Louis always releases great stuff and this will be no different. Awesome stuff Dave.
I've just set this up on a fresh install of ubuntu running on a VM. And WoW this is so cool and really easy to use. Thanks so much for you great guide on setting this up! keep up the good work, i love you channel.
I agree, better than Portainer, especially the lack of information from Portainer when installing containers. To see a timer on Dockge is great. I have been following you for a couple of years now, just after I bought my first Raspberry Pi, which is the device I installed Dockge. I hope that you will have follow-up videos for installing apps such as WordPress, NextCloud etc.
Thank you for walking through this and exposing this nifty tool! I've been using ssh and VSCode for a while to manage my compose files and docker, which I like, more so than Portainer. I never got the hang of using Portainer, maybe being a Docker noob, still, it is quite intimidating. It to me comes across as another job application. I do like that while I use VSCode I can at least drag and drop things, for example, adding a Dockge icon to my Dashy dashboard. I suppose using VSCode helps me try and keep my compose files consistent and also consistently formatted, which I like however, Dockge blew my socks off! Dockge streamlines the entire process. I'm actually going through my 10 or so containers and removing them and redeploying them through Dockge because of this video!
The best thing about Uptime Kuma is there is always something new on each update release. With that mindset, I could see it happening with Dockge as well. I would also like to see a direct correlation with Uptime Kuma and Dockge for uptime data and resource metrics. One thing I would want is the ability to store yaml files in one folder and be able to push them to the management area to deploy it later or just have a "Library" to access when needed. It looks great and I plan to deploy and test for a while to see what I think and to see what gets added over time. Awesome video as always!
This looks like a pretty cool little app. I really like how it converts a standard docker deployment string into a compose yaml file and saves it. I started out in docker deploying Docker containers through an app called Rancher back before it was so complicated. Which is kinda similar to how Portainer deploys containers. But after I discovered Docker-Compose that was paradigm altering for me. I love Portainer but a glaring problem i discovered recently was that if, for some reason, I had screwed up and lost my compose.yaml files that there was no decent way to get the information from Portainer. So I had to piece together stuff from backups. I had planned on rebuilding that host VM anyway since it was basically an old test vm that kindof ended up being a production vm so it was pretty sloppy. If i'd had Dockge running it could have spit out compose formatted yaml that I could have copy and pasted to backup files and made my life a little easier on the new VM deployment. Another thing, and this is small potatoes but I loved it, is the way Dockge visualizes the image deployment at 7:09. I may have to spin this up just as a failsafe against my own stupidity, lol.
There are/were (have tested this in a while) ways to export your current containers into a docker compose (th-cam.com/video/-ttZjGBkLL8/w-d-xo.html) but it's not a great experience
Actually you can find all the compose.yaml files in the following docker folder: “./docker/volumes/portainer_data/_data/compose” There you will find numbered folders which correspond to each stack in portainer and inside you will finde the compose.yaml files. Hope this helps.
i can't tell you how many times i thought portainer froze. i love this so far. i'm gonna see if it's in unraid. if it is i'll wait a bit and then install it. thanks for showing us this.
Have given you a like and Louis a star 😉 Really interesting bit of development. I love Uptime Kuma, Louis is excellent. I really liked the bit at the end where it could pick up compose.yaml files created outside Dockge itself, very nice!
Thanks to introduce what I was looking for after using portainer and yacht : very clean solution. This project will be popular ! Good surprise : french translation is already available.
Love the approach taken on this. I use a git sync’d repo that is then orchestrated on the server by Ansible, and this seems to match that workflow much better than Portainer for maintaining and monitoring (very lightly) the compose stacks that are currently running on the server!
This is like too cool when compared to Portainer. Which in my (humble) opinion can be tiring at times. Watching a spinning ball vs seeing what's going on here is far better. The fact that you don't have to configure networking ...BOOM ! Time saver. I know that this is not in production ...Yet. But I will still be showing this to management at work on Monday. At least for future consideration. To all have a happy and safe Thanksgiving day !
To remove the ghost entries just click creat new then name it the same as the ghost entry. Then you can delete it. Also, the latest version of dockge handles the line feed \ characters! Thanks for the video!!!
I love that you introduce new and exciting projects, and this love is a gem. I hope it gets the traction it needs to succeed! You help me learn and I appreciate you! ❤
Oh man, I'm so glad this video showed up in my feed! I've been using Portainer and I *HATE* the way it implements the stack, I literally can not use it to do a simple image pull and update of any container, and I've been looking for a replacement for it for months. I resorted to creating an update Bash script for every container that would do the pull and down/up commands, and copying them from VS Code to the machine on each update (I just now remembered that VS Code has a remote plugin, as I'm typing this. *SIGH*) Dockge actually solves the biggest issue that I have with Portainer and makes my life soooo much better. I still use Portainer because its web interface makes it easier to navigate around and look at in-depth detail of each container, but Dockge is now used about 90% of the time for me. Keep up the great work, and thanks again!
Very cool! I'm using portainer currently, and will definitely watch dockge. Once they have a solution that works with swarm I'll give it a real go! Thank you!
brilliant video, again ! DBTech is top quality and this is really neat project, thanks for covering it. I notice they have done this project in Vue and Typescript, if github is telling me it right, so this is a nice time to start looking at this project and before it becomes greater in complexity. The features you brought out, particularly how this allows for cli configuration from existing compose files is a reason I've not bothered with portainer, so this is really nice to see thanks again
Thanks for the great video, i have a question. can I install dockge if I have portainer already installed or will there be a conflict? I have a raspberry pi 4.
there won't be a conflict, but anything you deploy in dockge won't be able to be managed in portainer. And anything you deploy in portainer won't be able to be managed in dockge.
Many thanks for this! I was looking for a good docker manage GUI, used Portainer but I had same problem with it like you mentioned. I will have to try this, looks simple yet effective exactly what I am looking for.
I did today deploy Dockge, and I must say I am positively surprised. This is exactly what I was looking for - Simple way to see & manage containers using compose. Fantastic. The only feature I am missing is to be able to stop or restart individual containers in a stack, currently its only possible for a whole stack not individual containers. Still I am going to use Dockge. Louis many thanks to create such awesome projects!
There's quite a few of these projects out there, as a dev, I've been using Caprover and Coolify to deploy my projects. There's just so much, thanks for introducing this one!
Tried it out, really like it making me actually replace Portainer CE with Dockge to manage my stuff at home. Just a few things running on a small 1L PC and a HP T520 thin client as secondary. There's a beauty in simplicity and for me Dockge delivers. It does exactly what I need, nothing more and nothing less. @LouisLamLam: Thanks for the good work and thanks @DBTechYT for making this video creating awareness...
This is a great alternative to Portainer and I'll be sure to try it out. Perhaps in a future version, they can add a delete/remove container as well to get rid of the orphans.
Looks great! You hit the problem with Portainer on the head, so cumbersome needing to many clicks to do specific things. Plus the weird separation between compose.yaml files and their in built stacks. Genius to combine the two. Any reason you can’t run dockge beside Portainer (especially on a production server)? To give it a try before committing?
Love the layout of the UI, and love how it handles the compose files. Maybe I missed but I don't see a way to manage multiple environments from a single instance. That's one thing I can't live without. So unfortunately I won't be making the switch yet. Looking forward to see where this project goes!
this is absolutely great, been having to maintain my yml files seperatly and been using portainer, but this is just exactly what I wanted/needed. will submit a request but it would be awesome if they incorporate the ability to manage other instances would be great and hope they do it.
Great video! I wasn't interested until you said it can convert big long docker run to docker compose.yaml and it saves compose.yaml into an actual file and not in database. Because I had issues with portainer where after an update or something stupid I did, and it wouldn't come up. I was scratching my feet to bring my dockers up and stressed out I don't have a backup of the docker compose.yaml. This actually is really nice features. The only thing I need Dockge now is... it would be nice if it can manage organize multiple hosts/VM/LXC env like portainer and portainer agents.
It would very much be a manual migration process. Also, I think, if I make a video like that, I will wait a while until Dockge has a bit more age to it. Just in case :)
Nice video! I'm Wondering if you could do a proper guide on how to create a vpn container in dockge and how to connect other containers to it. I've tried but I ended up with errors or no connection. Great videos and thanks for all the help throughout the years.
Thanks for the idea! I've started messing with it and have it working, but I've run into a snag that I'm reaching out to the Dockge developer to see if he can help me with.
That's a good question. I just ran into this recently myself. I'm not sure there's a way to get an existing container to show up in Dockge, but it might be worth checking out their Github just to be sure (or open a ticket/feature request)
Simple is always better. Love that this product is no BS, straight to the point. Love it!! Any idea when can we expect this to be ready for production?
If you use volume commands in the yml does it create the folders you need? I agree that this looks better than portainer. More of what I wanted out of a docker frontend.
Immediately this is replacing Portainer for me. For some reason I always install Portainer on any Docker host I spin up and then I literally never use it for anything other than occasionally stopping and starting containers because it's just easier to poke at the yaml files manually. This looks like something I'd actually use.
would love if they could read the .sh script that I use to launch my Jupyter lab because whenever I try and copy paste the commands into the docker run box it throws an error I can't find
Quick question about having my older containers managed by another app before I started using Dockge. How can I start managing those containers with Dockge? I couldn't find any clear remedy for this issue.
I will check out this dockge further as it is developed. I will also say that chatgpt does a fantastic job at reformatting a docker run command into a docker compose format. At present, it is much better than what dockge does.
With Portainer you can do gitops and load your docker compose files from a git repository; that way you don't lose your stacks! And of course, just do a backup of your containers data/volumes to prepare for disaster recovery ;)
I think it's an excellent application. I have installed it and it works well, it recognizes previous docker-compose installations, but it does not allow you to act on them, I don't know if this will be solved in new updates. Or maybe I have made a mistake? If you have tried it, please confirm that it is so.
This question has been asked multiple times. As I've told the others, if you want this functionality, you're going to have to put it in as a feature request on their github.
Nice tool thanks for the review. I would like to know if multi-host docker environments are already possible with dockge. It definetly has some nice usability on its hand and i could imagine switching to it. Sadly i have a raspi-rack with multiple docker services running (so basicly a multi-host situation) in which portainer handles the environments. If dockge can handle that as well i see no reason to not switch.
This question has been asked multiple times. I will encourage you, like I did the others, to put this as a feature request on the github for the project.
Thank you so much for introducing Dockge to everyone. Great Video!
Thank you so much for making a great product that so many people are enjoying!
Also, my apologies for mispronouncing Dockge. I've been corrected in another comment that said it should be a bit more like "Dockjay" instead of "Dockage"
Great job! Have any plans for extremely basic cluster management? Literally dockge with more than one host on the left with choice of host to deploy to or delete from.
@@DBTechYT Never mind. "Dodge" or "Dockage" both are ok.
Thank you for Up-time Kuma!!!!! Its bloody awesome!
I really like how you demonstrated the product before installing it. So we can decide if it is something we want to try, before sitting through the installation.
I love that they are showing what is going on. This has always been my biggest problem with portainer, that there is no feedback.
I get it, if you run portainer in enterprise, where you are not watching the start of every container, this might be what you want.
But while experimenting to find the right compose settings, this is worth so much.
I've tried Portainer a while ago and I hated the fact that it can not manage stack deployed with "notepad". So I did not used Portainer or another tool, but this Dockge ... this is already to another level. Thank you for sharing.
7:10 the main reason I never try to deploy containers via portainer. thanks for sharing this awesome tool!
This is the simple Docker manager that I've been longing for. I've used Portainer and Yacht previously and have a love-hate relationship with both of them. Dockge looks like a "just enough" project that will check all my boxes for Docker projects.
Thanks for the video!
Well said!
This is a game changer! Love the UI, portainer has too much going on… this feels comfortable without giving up functionality. Looking forward to deploying this in my homelab!
I fell like i want to move all of my containers to Dockge right now.
Dockge is going straight to the simplicity of deplying containners.
Cant wait to deploy Dockge, simplicity is what i was looking for. Tks
Absolute love minimalist style of Louis project. Using bootstrap too, and love this kind of strict style.
Thank you so much!
Quite like it, had some problems with Portainer and not showing anything realtime really. This seems to fit more my wishes and seems to be modern in a way. Very nice video, thanks!
Thank you for this! I just wrecked a portainer setup after an upgrade... had to actually roll back the entire docker VM... This tool looks much better...
Another great video! Dockge seems to solve all the issues I've had with Portainer.
It’s not often something comes along that makes it into my standard compose stack. That usually has watchtower, Autoheal, uptime kuma and an edge agent. This has made the starting lineup. Louis always releases great stuff and this will be no different.
Awesome stuff Dave.
Thanks so much!! Glad you liked it
you ever run an edge agent through a vpn connection?
@@50_Pence yes. I run it through my tailnet to my cloud server
Thank you very much! I've been using portainer but honestly I don't need all the bells and whistles. I'm definitely going to try this.
You got this!
I've just set this up on a fresh install of ubuntu running on a VM. And WoW this is so cool and really easy to use. Thanks so much for you great guide on setting this up! keep up the good work, i love you channel.
Thank you so much!! I'm glad you like Dockge :)
I agree, better than Portainer, especially the lack of information from Portainer when installing containers. To see a timer on Dockge is great. I have been following you for a couple of years now, just after I bought my first Raspberry Pi, which is the device I installed Dockge. I hope that you will have follow-up videos for installing apps such as WordPress, NextCloud etc.
Thank you for walking through this and exposing this nifty tool! I've been using ssh and VSCode for a while to manage my compose files and docker, which I like, more so than Portainer. I never got the hang of using Portainer, maybe being a Docker noob, still, it is quite intimidating. It to me comes across as another job application. I do like that while I use VSCode I can at least drag and drop things, for example, adding a Dockge icon to my Dashy dashboard. I suppose using VSCode helps me try and keep my compose files consistent and also consistently formatted, which I like however, Dockge blew my socks off! Dockge streamlines the entire process. I'm actually going through my 10 or so containers and removing them and redeploying them through Dockge because of this video!
Your channel is such a valuable resource...
This video is exactly what I hoped portainer could do...
Glad it was helpful!
The best thing about Uptime Kuma is there is always something new on each update release. With that mindset, I could see it happening with Dockge as well. I would also like to see a direct correlation with Uptime Kuma and Dockge for uptime data and resource metrics. One thing I would want is the ability to store yaml files in one folder and be able to push them to the management area to deploy it later or just have a "Library" to access when needed. It looks great and I plan to deploy and test for a while to see what I think and to see what gets added over time. Awesome video as always!
This looks like a pretty cool little app. I really like how it converts a standard docker deployment string into a compose yaml file and saves it. I started out in docker deploying Docker containers through an app called Rancher back before it was so complicated. Which is kinda similar to how Portainer deploys containers. But after I discovered Docker-Compose that was paradigm altering for me. I love Portainer but a glaring problem i discovered recently was that if, for some reason, I had screwed up and lost my compose.yaml files that there was no decent way to get the information from Portainer. So I had to piece together stuff from backups. I had planned on rebuilding that host VM anyway since it was basically an old test vm that kindof ended up being a production vm so it was pretty sloppy. If i'd had Dockge running it could have spit out compose formatted yaml that I could have copy and pasted to backup files and made my life a little easier on the new VM deployment.
Another thing, and this is small potatoes but I loved it, is the way Dockge visualizes the image deployment at 7:09. I may have to spin this up just as a failsafe against my own stupidity, lol.
There are/were (have tested this in a while) ways to export your current containers into a docker compose (th-cam.com/video/-ttZjGBkLL8/w-d-xo.html) but it's not a great experience
Actually you can find all the compose.yaml files in the following docker folder:
“./docker/volumes/portainer_data/_data/compose”
There you will find numbered folders which correspond to each stack in portainer and inside you will finde the compose.yaml files.
Hope this helps.
i can't tell you how many times i thought portainer froze. i love this so far. i'm gonna see if it's in unraid. if it is i'll wait a bit and then install it. thanks for showing us this.
Thanks! This is going to be my new home. Also the word you're looking for is forethought
Have given you a like and Louis a star 😉 Really interesting bit of development. I love Uptime Kuma, Louis is excellent. I really liked the bit at the end where it could pick up compose.yaml files created outside Dockge itself, very nice!
Thanks!
Star given. This seems absolutely awesome, can't wait to try it out.
Gave it a star. So grateful that we have you to bring these amazing projects to our attention.
I know it has been said several times but THANK YOU for this video!!! I absolutely love Dockge, it has helped streamline so much 10x faster!
Great to hear!
Thanks to introduce what I was looking for after using portainer and yacht : very clean solution. This project will be popular ! Good surprise : french translation is already available.
Love the approach taken on this. I use a git sync’d repo that is then orchestrated on the server by Ansible, and this seems to match that workflow much better than Portainer for maintaining and monitoring (very lightly) the compose stacks that are currently running on the server!
Currently use Portainer. This is looking great. Can't wait to try it out and probably switch based on what I'm seeing.
This is like too cool when compared to Portainer. Which in my (humble) opinion can be tiring at times. Watching a spinning ball vs seeing what's going on here is far better. The fact that you don't have to configure networking ...BOOM ! Time saver.
I know that this is not in production ...Yet. But I will still be showing this to management at work on Monday. At least for future consideration.
To all have a happy and safe Thanksgiving day !
To remove the ghost entries just click creat new then name it the same as the ghost entry. Then you can delete it. Also, the latest version of dockge handles the line feed \ characters! Thanks for the video!!!
Thank you I have been looking for something simple like Dockge!!!
I love that you introduce new and exciting projects, and this love is a gem. I hope it gets the traction it needs to succeed! You help me learn and I appreciate you! ❤
Thank you so much!
Oh man, I'm so glad this video showed up in my feed! I've been using Portainer and I *HATE* the way it implements the stack, I literally can not use it to do a simple image pull and update of any container, and I've been looking for a replacement for it for months. I resorted to creating an update Bash script for every container that would do the pull and down/up commands, and copying them from VS Code to the machine on each update (I just now remembered that VS Code has a remote plugin, as I'm typing this. *SIGH*)
Dockge actually solves the biggest issue that I have with Portainer and makes my life soooo much better. I still use Portainer because its web interface makes it easier to navigate around and look at in-depth detail of each container, but Dockge is now used about 90% of the time for me.
Keep up the great work, and thanks again!
Great to hear!
Sorry noob question, how do you open a terminal in the dockge container like at 4:31 ?
Very cool! I'm using portainer currently, and will definitely watch dockge. Once they have a solution that works with swarm I'll give it a real go! Thank you!
thanks for watching!!
brilliant video, again ! DBTech is top quality and this is really neat project, thanks for covering it. I notice they have done this project in Vue and Typescript, if github is telling me it right, so this is a nice time to start looking at this project and before it becomes greater in complexity. The features you brought out, particularly how this allows for cli configuration from existing compose files is a reason I've not bothered with portainer, so this is really nice to see
thanks again
Thanks for the great video, i have a question. can I install dockge if I have portainer already installed or will there be a conflict? I have a raspberry pi 4.
there won't be a conflict, but anything you deploy in dockge won't be able to be managed in portainer. And anything you deploy in portainer won't be able to be managed in dockge.
@@DBTechYT I see, thank you!
Many thanks for this! I was looking for a good docker manage GUI, used Portainer but I had same problem with it like you mentioned. I will have to try this, looks simple yet effective exactly what I am looking for.
I did today deploy Dockge, and I must say I am positively surprised. This is exactly what I was looking for - Simple way to see & manage containers using compose. Fantastic. The only feature I am missing is to be able to stop or restart individual containers in a stack, currently its only possible for a whole stack not individual containers. Still I am going to use Dockge. Louis many thanks to create such awesome projects!
There's quite a few of these projects out there, as a dev, I've been using Caprover and Coolify to deploy my projects. There's just so much, thanks for introducing this one!
Thanks for sharing!
Tried it out, really like it making me actually replace Portainer CE with Dockge to manage my stuff at home. Just a few things running on a small 1L PC and a HP T520 thin client as secondary. There's a beauty in simplicity and for me Dockge delivers. It does exactly what I need, nothing more and nothing less.
@LouisLamLam: Thanks for the good work and thanks @DBTechYT for making this video creating awareness...
Thank you!
This is a great alternative to Portainer and I'll be sure to try it out. Perhaps in a future version, they can add a delete/remove container as well to get rid of the orphans.
They've started implementing that already based on the version I originally tested vs the version I showed in the video :)
@@DBTechYT all the more reason to give it a go. Thanks!
The folder and compose.yaml creations are great. Would fit my workflow perfectly!
Perfect!
Neat! Good video and I will check this out as I think it looks better than Portainer.
Thanks so much!!
Great Dockge, I'll give it a try, I also use Docker in that way
Thank you for the great video! Love your knowledge and how you present it.
Nice find. I'm on their github repository now.
Wow! Love it. So how do I migrate current containers over form Portainer to dockge?
Dockge. It's beauty is in it's simplicity.
Portainer's "infinite" loading is such a pain point. Will definitely try this out
Looks good, thanks for sharing. Will have to play !
Looks great! You hit the problem with Portainer on the head, so cumbersome needing to many clicks to do specific things. Plus the weird separation between compose.yaml files and their in built stacks. Genius to combine the two. Any reason you can’t run dockge beside Portainer (especially on a production server)? To give it a try before committing?
you absolutely could run them side by side. that said, if you deploy a container in one of them, you won't be able to manage it fully in the other.
Man, for homelabbing, dockge is way better and easier than portainer! Thank you :D
Really glad you like the solution!! Thanks for watching and commenting!
Looks light on features atm, but I am interested in seeing how a multi-container compose file works and how volumes are configured.
because you deploy with a docker-compose in Dockge, you can deploy multi-container setups super easily
@@DBTechYT Sorry, I guess I must gave missed how you do that.
Just put the multi-container docker-compose in and deploy. Simple stuff, but I didn't show it in the video
Interesting.....if you create a stack folder with the same name as the stack in portainer, you can manage on both dockage and not affect owernship 🤔
For a dev machine, definitely worth giving a try.
great presentation
Glad you liked it!
Love the layout of the UI, and love how it handles the compose files. Maybe I missed but I don't see a way to manage multiple environments from a single instance. That's one thing I can't live without. So unfortunately I won't be making the switch yet. Looking forward to see where this project goes!
Thanks for the demo and info, have a great day
Love it! Thanks for sharing!
Thanks for watching!
this is absolutely great, been having to maintain my yml files seperatly and been using portainer, but this is just exactly what I wanted/needed. will submit a request but it would be awesome if they incorporate the ability to manage other instances would be great and hope they do it.
They actually do now support managing multiple instances from a single dashboard. Might be a good video... :)
@@DBTechYT for sure, that would be great
@@lazaruspr23 Actually just finished recording and editing the video so it should be up in the next day or 2
@@lazaruspr23 th-cam.com/video/WjIXtvlip4g/w-d-xo.html
@@DBTechYT awesome, you rock
So light and simpel love it, portainer is so big.👍
Great video! I wasn't interested until you said it can convert big long docker run to docker compose.yaml and it saves compose.yaml into an actual file and not in database. Because I had issues with portainer where after an update or something stupid I did, and it wouldn't come up. I was scratching my feet to bring my dockers up and stressed out I don't have a backup of the docker compose.yaml. This actually is really nice features. The only thing I need Dockge now is... it would be nice if it can manage organize multiple hosts/VM/LXC env like portainer and portainer agents.
Thanks for your comment! :) I would definitely put those ideas into feature requests over on their github!
Very cool, another great finding. Thank you!
In Dockage do you have the option of placing a container in a different ip network from the local host?
At this time, Dockge is meant for a single node, not managing multiple nodes
can this be used with docker swarm or K8s ?
Awesome tool, I'll start using it right away!
Nice project, I do love it! Thank you for sharing it with us.
Another great video; many thanks. Dockge looks very interesting.
Glad you enjoyed it
Thank you for sharing this awesome tool 💯🔥
Thank you so much for the great tip!!!! May I ask a video to show the migration from portainer to Dockage?
It would very much be a manual migration process. Also, I think, if I make a video like that, I will wait a while until Dockge has a bit more age to it. Just in case :)
Nice video! I'm Wondering if you could do a proper guide on how to create a vpn container in dockge and how to connect other containers to it. I've tried but I ended up with errors or no connection.
Great videos and thanks for all the help throughout the years.
Thanks for the idea! I've started messing with it and have it working, but I've run into a snag that I'm reaching out to the Dockge developer to see if he can help me with.
It's definitely worth a try 😃👍. Thanks for sharing 🙏.
Is there a way to see already running docker containers on my system or is this only valuable to new installs?
That's a good question. I just ran into this recently myself. I'm not sure there's a way to get an existing container to show up in Dockge, but it might be worth checking out their Github just to be sure (or open a ticket/feature request)
Ok I will do that@@DBTechYT
Thanks for another great video. Going to check this out right now.
Hope you enjoy it!
Simple is always better. Love that this product is no BS, straight to the point. Love it!! Any idea when can we expect this to be ready for production?
That would definitely be a question to pose to them on their github
If you use volume commands in the yml does it create the folders you need? I agree that this looks better than portainer. More of what I wanted out of a docker frontend.
As long as your permissions are set up correctly, it will create the folders you need. Shouldn't be an issue
why does it keep telling me that this field is required for tag when i put latest and i also put 1.
Docker to compose feature 🤩
Immediately this is replacing Portainer for me. For some reason I always install Portainer on any Docker host I spin up and then I literally never use it for anything other than occasionally stopping and starting containers because it's just easier to poke at the yaml files manually. This looks like something I'd actually use.
Can we use this as an alternative to docker desktop? (i don't have much information about docker just curious)
Wow. This looks very good and simple. I hate when debloying stack in portainer that you have no idea what is happening.
Found one big downside. Takes alot of memory and cpu compared to portainer
would love if they could read the .sh script that I use to launch my Jupyter lab because whenever I try and copy paste the commands into the docker run box it throws an error I can't find
Dockge is amazing! Thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching!
For sure i'am going to give this a try. Looks very good !
Grabbed dockge and love it. I wish there was an easy way to pull in my existing containers to be managed by it. And maybe there is?
I'm not sure that it can pull existing stuff in. I think it is dependent on the folder and file structure I showed in the video.
Quick question about having my older containers managed by another app before I started using Dockge. How can I start managing those containers with Dockge? I couldn't find any clear remedy for this issue.
This doesn't, at least at this time, support managing containers that were deployed outside of Dockge.
Dude this is cool. I'm actually considering switching from Portainer to Dockage now.
I'm a big fan of Dockge and hope they keep developing more features into it
@DBTechYT Finally got around to setting up Dockge. Not gunna lie using Portainer to Deploy Dockge felt a little like using IE to download Chrome haha
😂🤣😂🤣😂🤣
@DBTechYT BTW I would love to see a video on a UT2004 and a Quake 3 arena server in docker!!
I will check out this dockge further as it is developed. I will also say that chatgpt does a fantastic job at reformatting a docker run command into a docker compose format. At present, it is much better than what dockge does.
ChatGPT is great, but that's an extra step that would be involved when Dockge will just do it right in the app
Ok. I'll sick with it. It didn't work right for me when I tried it. I'll let it develop. It looks promising. Thanks.
With Portainer you can do gitops and load your docker compose files from a git repository; that way you don't lose your stacks! And of course, just do a backup of your containers data/volumes to prepare for disaster recovery ;)
That's true, but not everyone wants to maintain a github repository
Love your videos! Thank you a lot!
Thanks for watching!
I think it's an excellent application.
I have installed it and it works well, it recognizes previous docker-compose installations, but it does not allow you to act on them, I don't know if this will be solved in new updates.
Or maybe I have made a mistake?
If you have tried it, please confirm that it is so.
nice tool. didn't know about it. thanks.
You bet!
Really slick, definitely going to try it. Can it do remote docker environments like portainer?
This question has been asked multiple times. As I've told the others, if you want this functionality, you're going to have to put it in as a feature request on their github.
@@DBTechYTThanks, I think I will use this & portainer as they both have great features.
Nice tool thanks for the review. I would like to know if multi-host docker environments are already possible with dockge. It definetly has some nice usability on its hand and i could imagine switching to it. Sadly i have a raspi-rack with multiple docker services running (so basicly a multi-host situation) in which portainer handles the environments. If dockge can handle that as well i see no reason to not switch.
This question has been asked multiple times. I will encourage you, like I did the others, to put this as a feature request on the github for the project.
Love it. Good video as usual. ☺️
Where are the links in the video description?
right below the chapters
why is never a link to the project down below
Increíble, voy a probarlo ahora mismo.
Looks good. Thanks for sharing.