this post was submitted on 13 Dec 2023
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It just making things easier and cleaner. When you remove a container, you know there is no leftover except mounted volumes. I like it.
It's also way easier if you need to migrate to another machine for any reason.
I use LXC for all the reasons most people use Docker, it's easy to spin up a new service, there are no leftovers when I remove a service, and everything stays separate. What I really like about LXC though is that you can treat containers like VMs, you start it up, attach and install all your software as if it were a real machine. No extra tech to learn.
Not completely true you probably have to prune some images, or volumes.