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Comment by whinvik

3 hours ago

Sorry off topic question but has Docker come up with a easy to use dev solution. I always end up with using Devcontainer: it solves the sandboxed, ready to use dev env.

But the actual experience with developing on VSCode with Dev Containers is not great. It's laggy and slow.

Devcontainers are great for me on windows and macos. What stack are you using?

Really? I work across multiple vscode projects (locally), some use dev-containers and others don't. I have never noticed any difference in experience across the two.

I have also used them remotely (ssh and using tailscale) and noticed a little lag, but nothing really distracting.

  • Most likely a Windows or MacOS user, where docker runs in a linux VM. Optimized as much as possible and lightweight, but still a VM.

    • Windows is a bit "yes but" kind of situation.

      First of all it supports containers natively, Windows own ones, and Linux on WSL.

      Secondly, because Microsoft did not want to invent their own thing, the OS APIs are exposed the same way as Docker daemon would expect them.

      Finally, with the goal to improving Kubernetes support and the ongoing changes for container runtimes in the industry, nowadays it exposes several touch points.

      https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/virtualization/windowscont...

    • No, on Windows it is very quick too. On WSL2 compiling Rust programs are almost as fast as Linux on bare metal. However the files need to live inside the Linux filesystem. Sharing with Windows drives actually compiles slower than native Windows.

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