No. I see no business reason to do this. If you want to do it for fun and profit - go on!
Hi Thomas, the principal reason for migrate to containers: update and upgrade.
I have servers for financial companies, now I have new services with e-financial with android apps, java, and microservices.
The server need best modular practices, migrate to new languages and more easy maintenance
It is hard to say anything useful without knowing your infrastructure.
Being asked, whether it makes sense to dockerize a "website"
Its a great idea dockerizer the Website of my business?
I see no reason.
principal reason for migrate to containers: update and upgrade
This rings my "automation-answer" bell.
But as I said - without knowing your infrastructure and software it is hard ;)
Not that docker is not a good solution for some problems. But I would not see it as a first solution for every problem.
Are you sure you want to hide this comment? It will become hidden in your post, but will still be visible via the comment's permalink.
Hide child comments as well
Confirm
For further actions, you may consider blocking this person and/or reporting abuse
We're a place where coders share, stay up-to-date and grow their careers.
No. I see no business reason to do this.
If you want to do it for fun and profit - go on!
Hi Thomas, the principal reason for migrate to containers: update and upgrade.
I have servers for financial companies, now I have new services with e-financial with android apps, java, and microservices.
The server need best modular practices, migrate to new languages and more easy maintenance
It is hard to say anything useful without knowing your infrastructure.
Being asked, whether it makes sense to dockerize a "website"
I see no reason.
This rings my "automation-answer" bell.
But as I said - without knowing your infrastructure and software it is hard ;)
Not that docker is not a good solution for some problems.
But I would not see it as a first solution for every problem.