Podman being donated to the CNCF is an awesome move on Red Hat's part. It's an important step in order for Podman to start becoming an industry standard tool so we can all finally be free of Docker's terrible design choices
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Devin Murray :verifiedpurple: (solarinas@posthat.ca)'s status on Friday, 15-Nov-2024 04:14:28 JST Devin Murray :verifiedpurple: -
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Sick Sun (sun@shitposter.world)'s status on Monday, 18-Nov-2024 02:50:04 JST Sick Sun @Solarinas can you guide me toward where I can learn more about their bad design choices? I'm just a little confused because don't the two things work the same? my impression is also that docker is clumsy and I want to learn more what other people are saying -
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Devin Murray :verifiedpurple: (solarinas@posthat.ca)'s status on Monday, 18-Nov-2024 03:27:49 JST Devin Murray :verifiedpurple: @sun It's a good question! Podman is designed in a way that's mostly compatible with Docker so on the surface it may seem like they are the same
However, Podman does a lot of things different. Namely its that Podman uses a daemonless design
There's a book written by the creator of Podman called "Podman in Action" and in Chapter 1 section 3 they go more into the differences between Docker and Podman
https://edu.anarcho-copy.org/GNU%20Linux%20-%20Unix-Like/Podman/podman-action.pdf
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Sick Sun (sun@shitposter.world)'s status on Monday, 18-Nov-2024 03:28:24 JST Sick Sun @Solarinas thank you, I appreciate it. Have a great Sunday.
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