I don't want to use automatic updates on self hosted projects but I subscribe on github / gitlab releases in my rss reader (FreshRSS) and update when I want to!
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Thank you for this idea. I wasn’t aware, that you can subscribe to an rss feed for releases on gitlab/github.
I think that I will follow your approach.
Those damn pre-release notifications though!!!! (Githubs fault for not implementing filtering)
If you also use FreshRSS, you can configure filters to automatically mark new articles as read (e.g. !intitle:'beta'). Since I only view unread articles, that effectively deletes them and I never have to see them!
I use email rules to filter those ones out. Linux server containers are especially egregious.
I don't pay any mind to example compose files. My are all quite custom anyway. Only thing that matters is paying attention to changelogs and watching for breaking changes.
Same here.
Read deployment documentation, configure compose to my standards, deploy, update where necessary to align with the update (e.g. remove an environment variable.
The editing is done on my PC, then I open WinSCP or ssh into it (depending on my mood and amount of changes) and then apply the changes
This is new:
https://github.com/dkorecko/PatchPanda
Self-hostable Docker Compose stack update manager.
And
when you choose to update, PatchPanda edits compose/.env files and runs
docker compose pullanddocker compose up -dfor the target stack. You can also view live log.
Discovered in the latest Self Host Weekly:
https://selfh.st/weekly/2025-11-28/
I have not tried it myself tho.
PatchPanda
I too saw PatchPanda on selfh.st and it is on my watch list. The only thing holding me back is that it isn't out of beta yet. So, I'm waiting on other selfhosters to plow that field before I deploy. It does look like it would solve a lot of problems tho.
Hmmm I've heard of it but haven't tried it. I'll dip my toe, thanks!
I have automatic updates through a watchtower fork, so I just leave it alone until it breaks, then I go to the project site to see what changed. This has happened maybe twice in the last couple years.
Hope you have backups.
Broke my neck a few times (I currently am waiting out the jellyfin patches and stay on 10.10.7 (i think))
Easy, reliable backups are key. I've used komodo with automatic updates for over a year and watchtower before that for a couple more. I've only had one issue when Nginx Proxy Manager had a release that deleted all of its own data. Didn't take long to realize that the services were still up and what the problem was. Restored the missing data from Proxmox backups, pinned the Nginx version for a while, then turned auto update on again. I'll stick to this until checking updates is less work than fixing the occasional problem
Just a few days ago, my docker host upgraded the docker engine from 28 to 29.
Woke up to 10 notifications from my uptime monitoring that they are offline.
Funny thing is: The external monitor showed they are down. The internal monitor showed no issues.
But after I went through with the long procrastinated upgrade from debian 11 to debian 13, migrating the data and doing nothing to the compose files, all services worked without any issue.
I don't know what my old host did or did not but now it works, I guess? Not complaining but the whole routing thing is a bit beyond me
I use a watchtower fork as well to keep some containers updated but I'm curious how others keep on top of docker-compose.yml files that the project updates over time. As an example, I've been using a container for years and noticed today that on the github page they've added a section in the compose file for a health check. I never would've known that was added if I didn't stumble upon it due to another issue.
I run changedetection and monitor the samples .yml files projects usually host directly at their git repos
Ah ok cool I'll check that out. Thanks!!
Other than keeping an eye on their changelog or waiting until it breaks, I don't think you can do anything about that. I do have automatic update, but the config rarely changes from my experience.
That's kind of what I've found but wasn't sure if I was just missing something. Thanks!
I deploy and update my service similiar to this fantastic guide: https://nickcunningh.am/blog/how-to-automate-version-updates-for-your-self-hosted-docker-containers-with-gitea-renovate-and-komodo
Basically I run Komodo, which pulls a git repo. Renovate opens a PR (and most of the time the changelog is included, so I can quickly check what happened) for new versions. Once merged a webhook fires to tell Komodo to pull the new version.
I really recommend this approach now. Once setup it is very automatic, but not to the point of YOLO-automation like Watchtower and :latest 😅
Genuine question, is there any benefit to docker over podman?
Not that I am aware of. Komodo should be compatible with podman as well.
This seems really interesting. I'll have to read up on it more and try to wrap my head around it but I'm definitely checking this out. Thank you!!
Good projects will have docs associated with the docker/docker compose files.
The way we do it is, any update to the .yaml files will have a corresponding .yaml.Dev associated with it. That way it won't be overwritten when an update occurs as well as give a recommended setup.