this post was submitted on 24 Mar 2024
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This can be done with containers and you don't get the overhead of virtualizing a whole operating system for every service/app you might be hosting.
This can also be done with containers in a more elegant way as there's no need to back up any VM/OS data.
E.g. I have a docker compose file that can nearly immediately stand up a container with the right settings/image, point it to my restored data and be up and running in no time. The best part is i don't need to back up the container/OS because that data is irrelevant.
With the alternative you just restore your data and run
docker-compose up -d
. Docker will handle the process of building, starting and managing the service.Simple example: Your minecraft server died but you have backups. You just restore the data to
/docker/minecraft
. Then (to keep things really simple) you just run:docker run -d -p 25565:25565 --name minecraft -e EULA=TRUE -v /docker/minecraft:/data itzg/minecraft-server
and in a few minutes your server is ready to go.
If that's the way you'd prefer to do it, I highly recommend taking that approach.