Compose doesn’t have a versioned standard, it did for a bit iirc, which also means you can’t always just grab a compose file and know it will always just work.
Most self hosted works fine with giant all in one containers, even for complex apps, it’s when you need to scale you usually hit problems with an all in one container approach and have to change.
lambda@programming.dev 1 week ago
Huh? They officially support it and there is no need for a version any more. It’s standardised. As a matter of fact, if you try to start a compose stack that starts with a version number it gives you a warning that it’s not needed.
JollyGreen_sasquatch@sh.itjust.works 1 week ago
The lack of version is the problem. Syntax has changed over time, so when someone finds or has an older compose file, there is no hint it won’t work with the current version of docker-compose until you get errors and no graceful way to handle it.
lambda@programming.dev 1 week ago
I have tried probably over a hundred and never had that happen once. I hear you. But, there is only one version now and if your compose file doesn’t work it’s just incorrect.