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16 points

I just setup Jellyfin on docker the other day for the first time.

It just occurred to me that I don’t know how to update docker.

Any advice?

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4 points
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25 points
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Checkout watchtower! Auto update your containers. Don’t forget to set WATCHTOWER_CLEANUP to true, or your disk will be filled with old images.

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2 points

Thanks! I’ll check that out, I’m really loving how quick and easy docker has been so far.

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2 points

Oh this looks great! Thanks for the suggestion

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4 points

I couldn’t figure out watchtower. I just made a script to pull and restart and scheduled it to run daily at midnight.

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3 points

Also depends on how you specified image in the docker. If it has no version or latest as version it will update otherwise it may be fixed

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4 points

If you set up using compose and don’t have the version pinned:

dockee compose down && docker compose pull jellyfin && docker compose up -d

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5 points

What about if I am using Podman and have the container as a systemd unit file?

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3 points

Podman supports auto updating natively by setting a label.
I use systemd service files for running containers, but you can add the same label on the command line or in quadlet files.

https://wiki.exu.li/linux/podman#auto-update-container

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13 points
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Did you use docker compose file or just run a command to start the container?

Edit: I always use compose files. For that you can do the following:

docker compose pull
docker compose down
docker compose up -d

You don’t technically need the stop, but I’ve found once or twice in the past where it was good to stop because of image dependencies that I forgot to put in my compose.

For running a command directly I found this website that seems to summarize it pretty well I think:

https://www.cherryservers.com/blog/how-to-update-docker-image

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3 points

Yes, I used docker compose. Do I need to do anything to clean up with this method?

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3 points
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Now that you mention it, I always do a

docker system prune -f

This will clean up old images that are no longer used. I setup an alias command in Linux to do all of those commands.

I just named it docker_update and saved it in my ~/.bashrc

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8 points

You could use a systemd unit file:

[Unit]
Description=docker_compose_systemd-sonarr
After=docker.service 
Requires=docker.service

[Service]
TimeoutStartSec=0

WorkingDirectory=/var/lib/sonarr

ExecStartPre=-/usr/bin/docker compose kill --remove-orphans
ExecStartPre=-/usr/bin/docker compose down --remove-orphans
ExecStartPre=-/usr/bin/docker compose rm -f -s -v
ExecStartPre=-/usr/bin/docker compose pull
ExecStart=/usr/bin/docker compose up

Restart=always
RestartSec=30

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

You’d place your compose file in the working dir /var/lib/sonarr. Depending on what tag you’ve set for the image in the compose file, it would be autoupdated, or stay fixed. E.g. lscr.io/linuxserver/sonarr:latest would get autoupdated whereas lscr.io/linuxserver/sonarr:4.0.10 would keep the container at version 4.0.10. If you want to update from 4.0.10, you’d have to change it in the compose file.

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