Hello! 😀
I want to share my thoughts on docker and maybe discuss about it!
Since some months I started my homelab and as any good “homelabing guy” I absolutely loved using docker. Simple to deploy and everything. Sadly these days my mind is changing… I recently switch to lxc containers to make easier backup and the xperience is pretty great, the only downside is that not every software is available natively outside of docker 🙃
But I switch to have more control too as docker can be difficult to set up some stuff that the devs don’t really planned to.
So here’s my thoughts and slowly I’m going to leave docker for more old-school way of hosting services. Don’t get me wrong docker is awesome in some use cases, the main are that is really portable and simple to deploy no hundreds dependencies, etc. And by this I think I really found how docker could be useful, not for every single homelabing setup, and it’s not my case.

Maybe I’m doing something wrong but I let you talk about it in the comments, thx.

  • agile_squirrel@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    2
    ·
    3 days ago

    This sounds great! I’d love to see your config. I’m not using home manager, but have 1 non root user for all podman containers. 1 user per service seems like a great setup.

    • InnerScientist@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      edit-2
      3 days ago

      Yeah it works great and is very secure but every time I create a new service it’s a lot of copy paste boilerplate, maybe I’ll put most of that into a nix function at some point but until then here’s an example n8n config, as loaded from the main nixos file.

      I wrote this last night for testing purposes and just added comments, the config works but n8n uses sqlite and probably needs some other stuff that I hadn’t had a chance to use yet so keep that in mind.
      Podman support in home-manager is also really new and doesn’t support pods (multiple containers, one loopback) and some other stuff yet, most of it can be compensated with the extraarguments but before this existed I used pure file definitions to write quadlet/systemd configs which was even more boilerplate but also mostly copypasta.

      Gaze into the boilerplate
      { config, pkgs, lib, ... }:
      
      {
          users.users.n8n = {
              # calculate sub{u,g}id using uid
              subUidRanges = [{
                  startUid = 100000+65536*( config.users.users.n8n.uid - 999);
                  count = 65536;
              }];
              subGidRanges = [{
                  startGid = 100000+65536*( config.users.users.n8n.uid - 999);
                  count = 65536;
              }];
              isNormalUser = true;
              linger = true; # start user services on system start, fist time start after `nixos-switch` still has to be done manually for some reason though
              openssh.authorizedKeys.keys = config.users.users.root.openssh.authorizedKeys.keys; # allows the ssh keys that can login as root to login as this user too
          };
          home-manager.users.n8n = { pkgs, ... }:
          let
              dir = config.users.users.n8n.home;
              data-dir = "${dir}/${config.users.users.n8n.name}-data"; # defines the path "/home/n8n/n8n-data" using evaluated home paths, could probably remove a lot of redundant n8n definitions....
          in
          {
              home.stateVersion = "24.11";
              systemd.user.tmpfiles.rules =
              let
                  folders = [
                      "${data-dir}"
                      #"${data-dir}/data-volume-name-one" 
                  ];
                  formated_folders = map (folder: "d ${folder} - - - -") folders; # a function that takes a path string and formats it for systemd tmpfiles such that they get created as folders
              in formated_folders;
      
              services.podman = {
                  enable = true;
                  containers = {
                      n8n-app = { # define a container, service name is "podman-n8n-app.service" in case you need to make multiple containers depend and run after each other
                          image = "docker.n8n.io/n8nio/n8n";
                          ports = [
                              "${config.local.users.users.n8n.listenIp}:${toString config.local.users.users.n8n.listenPort}:5678" # I'm using a self defined option to keep track of all ports and uids in a seperate file, these values just map to "127.0.0.1:30023:5678", a caddy does a reverse proxy there with the same option as the port.
                          ];
                          volumes = [
                              "${data-dir}:/home/node/.n8n" # the folder we created above
                          ];
                          userNS = "keep-id:uid=1000,gid=1000"; # n8n stores files as non-root inside the container so they end up as some high uid outside and the user which runs these containers can't read it because of that. This maps the user 1000 inside the container to the uid of the user that's running podman. Takes a lot of time to generate the podman image for a first run though so make sure systemd doesn't time out
                          environment = {
                              # MYHORSE = "amazing";
                          };
                          # there's also an environmentfile option for secret management, which works with sops if you set the owner of the secret/secret template
                          extraPodmanArgs = [
                              "--pull=newer" # always pull newer images when starting, I could make this declaritive but I haven't found a good way to automagically update the container hashes in my nix config at the push of a button.
                          ];
                       # few more options exist that I didn't need here
                      };
                  };
              };
          };
      }