On Thu, 2017-01-05 at 17:02 +0000, Jonathan Wakely wrote: > Which definitely changes how software is built. Containers also change the way software must be written in some cases, since they expect there to be one main process and don't expect that main process to interact with other "main" processes on the system. There are some program architectures that aren't well suited to be run in containers since containers expect programs to work in specific ways. I don't think they are general enough to cover all use cases. I also expect that users will not appreciate being forced to use containers if they want to keep being able to do things they can do today. Offering it to them as an option rather than the only solution is probably a friendlier approach.
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