Show HN: Pooshit – Sync local code to remote Docker containers

53 points by marktolson a day ago

Pronounced Push-It....

I'm a lazy developer for the most part, so this is for people like me. Sometimes I just want my local code running in live remote containers quickly, without building images and syncing to cloud docker repos or setting up git workflows or any of the other draining ways to get your code running remotely.

With pooshit (and a simple config file), you can simply push your local dev files to a remote folder on a VM then automatically remove relevant running containers, then build and run an updated container with one command line call.

It works well with reverse proxies like nginx or caddy as you can specify the docker run arguments in the pooshit_config files.

https://github.com/marktolson/pooshit

sippeangelo a day ago

Neat project, but what does this do differently than docker compose with the --host flag? https://docs.docker.com/reference/cli/docker/#host

It uploads your whole local docker context, source code and all, builds the image on the remote server and up's the container(s) all with a single command. I use this all the time when deploying simple services to avoid all of the complexity of registries etc.

    docker -H ssh://remote compose up -d
  • DarmokJalad1701 6 hours ago

    This random comment just saved me several hours of work. I had no idea I could pass in ssh URLs to -H. It turns out that this also works with the docker python library!

  • parhamn a day ago

    What!?!? This is a thing? How did I not know about this. Thanks for the share!

  • zsimjee a day ago

    To me, it looks like this new project is aimed more at being able to develop remotely and share your localhost:3000 env instead of getting a real production box up. Bidi sync etc... hints at that, it's like having a 2-interface dev env.

  • aitchnyu 20 hours ago

    Is there a single line Podman alternative?

  • marktolson a day ago

    Probably pretty similar except you get to just write "pooshit" instead.

scottydelta a day ago

I understand what you are trying to do but you should checkout dokploy or coolify.

You push to github, github action builds it and hits dokploy webhook and it pulls your github code and build and deploy on that server.

This is more reliable and industry way. What you are doing requires same amount of time to deploy and requires manual intervention every time.

For once i thought you were moving code to server and then you just restarted container and it worked without having to build. I have done it in the past due to some unique requirements where dependencies are in docker image and code is copied from local to server and docker image took code from server on start.

  • marktolson a day ago

    Not sure if you read the description but I clearly stated that I wanted no middleman, so I'm not sure how this solves my use case. Also not sure how it requires the same amount of time, and 'manual intervention every time'? You provision a remote server, install docker then update the local config file and it's done. One line deployments everytime. And why would I update the code inside the container when you need a build process to install dependencies? If you want to update code while the app is running then restart, then docker is not the right solution.

    Additionally there are a million different and better ways to deploy services, this suits the use case I described.

  • coded_monkey a day ago

    There is nothing “industry way” about letting CI automatically deploy your production environment.

    • scottydelta 14 hours ago

      CI/CD are used for deploying to all kind of environments. For production, the triggers are different. Instead of deploy on PR merge, you would define the trigger as tag creation. Now when you make a release mauanlly on github, it will create a tag which in turn would trigger deployment.

bilekas a day ago

Can't wait to try and get this greenlit at work.

  • marktolson a day ago

    Better off trying to get it brownlit.

  • infogulch a day ago

    My grandma laughed at this one.

ElCapitanMarkla a day ago

I had a similar script a few years ago when I refused to give up my aging Macbook Air and built a server to host my dev env. I had an rsync command that would sync the differences from my local machine up to the remote box. It was surprisingly quick considering the size of the projects.

jackpste 10 hours ago

I have to say, the name is a great touch.

_def a day ago

I don't really understand the use case and wonder if containers are the right tool here at all.

  • marktolson a day ago

    Here is my main use case. I have lightweight services that I need to update and deploy regularly (until I movee to K8s or a proper production env). Using pooshit, I can push my entire local dev folder to a remote server then destroy the old image, rebuild the new image and spin up a new container with one call. Your config file contains your remote config. You need nothing in between you and your remote server and it only relies on SSH and docker, nothing else, no middleman, repos, and no deployment containers running on your VM.

gregjw a day ago

what a name! fun conversations ahead for people that want to utilise it at work!

wolttam a day ago

`docker context`?

WastedCucumber a day ago

Dumb question, out of real curiosity - is the double fecal pun deliberate?

  • robertlagrant a day ago

    I can't wait for version number 2 to drop

    • upghost a day ago

      I am actually surprised how well it runs, given how solid it is

      • robertlagrant 17 hours ago

        I heard there's a related app called FeeCal - help calculate all your fees.

  • CBLT a day ago

    Line 1 of the readme has a poop emoji

  • 65 a day ago

    It's actually a triple fecal pun! Push it... poo... shit.

mhuffman a day ago

Useful project. Name that no reasonable company would allow IT department to use. 10 out of 10! It worked for CockroachDB. I hope it turns into a unicorn and I'm not joking about that.

  • another-dave a day ago

    I can't remember what the package was, but when I was working for "large bank", one of the npm dependencies we wanted to use had a licence file that just said 'Do whatever the fuck you want'.

    Legal came back saying that it was "highly unorthodox, but approved for use"

  • spacebanana7 a day ago

    I believe people chose to pay Adobe subscriptions simply to avoid explaining the acronym for the GNU Image Manipulation Program in meetings.

    • thot_experiment a day ago

      I'm going to have to challenge you on this one. I'm not great lover of Photoshop, and GIMP does have an unfortunate name, but it is an alternative to Photoshop in the same way Gentoo is an alternative to Mac OS, you're not wrong but...

  • chillfox a day ago

    I have never worked at or heard of a company caring about the names of software, at most it's been a bit of a chuckle. Best guess is being concerned about software names is a super conservative culture thing.

    • manquer a day ago

      Perhaps not directly in a review.

      Names can be troublesome though, badly named products get caught in spam filters, or blocked in some firewall blacklist.

    • mhuffman 21 hours ago

      I do believe you, but be honest, both of us could come up with an easy half-dozen names for software that if spoken out loud at work or triggered a filter on the network at the office would have someone explaining to HR what the hell is going on.

  • catlifeonmars a day ago

    The cockroachDB thing, was that intentional or just incidental?