• @[email protected]
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        6 days ago

        Rancher is owned by Suse, which is mainly a solid steward in the community.

        They also have k8 frontend called Harvestor. It can run VMs directly, which is nice.

        • Scribbd
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          56 days ago

          Well, there is this one thing: they asked OpenSuse to drop the Suse branding…

          • bizarroland
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            176 days ago

            Which is fair. Fedora never called itself red hat. CentOS never called itself red hat.

            Suse is a pretty good company and deserves the right to their intellectual property and trademarks. OpenSuse shouldn’t make a big deal out of simply changing their name.

            They could rename themselves to OpenSusame and keep rolling without any issues whatsoever.

            • @[email protected]
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              56 days ago

              Of course, but I still think it is not very smart from SUSE, since I bet many companies got into SUSE because coworkers had very good experiences with OpenSUSE.

              I, at least, if my company would need corporate Linux, would recommend SUSE to my company because of that reason.

      • Sir Aramis
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        186 days ago

        I second Podman. I’ve been using it recently and find it to be pretty good!

    • @[email protected]
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      56 days ago

      How does the image scanning compare to docker scout? (Or whatever the docket desktop one is called).

    • @[email protected]
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      15 days ago

      I am exposing docker via tcp in wsl and set the env var on the host to point to it. A bit more manual but if you don’t need anything special, it works too.

    • @[email protected]
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      26 days ago

      So does this setup like a one-node kubernetes cluster on your local machine or something? I didn’t know that was possible.

      • chameleon
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        36 days ago

        Basically yes. Rancher Desktop sets up K3s in a VM and gives you a kubectl, docker and a few other binaries preconfigured to talk to that VM. K3s is just a lightweight all-in-one Kubernetes distro that’s relatively easy to set up (of course, you still have to learn Kubernetes so it’s not really easy, just skips the cluster setup).