dockcheck is simple CLI tool to simplify keeping track of and updating your containers. Selective semi/fully auto updates, notifications on new versions and much more.

Another 6 months have passed and a bunch of updates have been made. The most recent ones are multi-threaded/asynchronous checks to greatly increase speed, notifications on new dockcheck release for those who run scheduled unattended checks, osx and bsd compatibility changes, prometheus exporter to push stats to eg. Grafana and more.

I’m happy to see the project still being used and improved by its users as I thought other great tools (dockge, wud, watchtower and others) would replace it.

As it’s been a while I’ll try to list the features:

  • Checks all your containers for new updates, without pulling.
  • Manually select which containers or choose all.
  • Either run it to auto update all, or not update any and just list results.
  • Tie it to notify you on new updates.
    • Templates: Synology DSM, mSMTP, Apprise, ntfy.sh , Gotify , Pushbullet , Telegram , Matrix, Pushover , Discord.
    • Enrich with urls to container release notes.
  • Optionally export metrics to Prometheus to show how many images got updates available in a graph.
  • Other misc options as:
    • Use labels to only update containers with label set.
    • Use a N days old option to only update images that have been stable release N days.
    • Auto prune dangling images.
    • Include stopped containers.
    • Exclude specific containers.

I’ve got to thank this community for contributing with donations, ideas, surfacing issues, testing and PRs. It’s a joy!

  • trueheresy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    7 hours ago

    This looks great. Thanks so much for your work on this and sharing with us.

    What in your opinion sets your software apart from the other options you mention?

    I have recently setup dockers for plex, immich, nextcloud and paperlessngx but have yet to look at longterm maintenence inc. things like auto updates (I know to avoid on immich).

    As someone who prob knows the options inside and out - would you recommend your option to this relative newbie or do you think one of the other options might be a better place to start?

    • mag37@lemmy.mlOP
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      5 hours ago

      Thank you!

      I sadly don’t have too much insights in the other alternatives, I try to not compare too much - maybe I should study them a bit more to understand the wider picture. There’s a few more I forgot to mention; renovate and dependabot.

      While I think all those tools are great and have functionality that my project cant fulfill - I strive to keep dockcheck simple and lightweight. Options and functionality have been bolted on bit by bit while still trying to have it as simple as possible in its core functions - so a user could just download the main script dockcheck.sh and run it to list updates and optionally update. Everything else is optional, extras.

      I guess it depends on what you’re looking for. If you’d like a GUI or more in depth setup or reporting - I’d look elsewhere, but if you’d like simplicity and maybe schedule it to notify you when there’s updates available - my project my be the thing.

      So my answer would be yes: if you’re running docker compose this project is very newbie friendly and easy to get going!