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I'll try to answer the specific question here about importing data and sandboxing. You wouldn't have to sandbox, but it's a good idea. If we think of a Docker container as an "encapsulated version of the host", then let's say you have:
Service A
running on your cloudapt-get install -y this that and the other
to run/data/my-stuff
Service B
running on your cloudapt-get install -y other stuff
to run/data/my-other-stuff
In the cloud, the
Service A
data can be accessed byService B
, increasing the attack vector of a leak. In Docker, you could move all your data from the cloud to your server:You're
Dockerfile
forService A
would be something like:You're
Dockerfile
forService B
would be something like:This makes two unique "systems". Now, in your
docker-compose.yml
, you could have:This would make everything look just like the cloud since
/local/server/data
would be bind mounted to/data
in both containers (services). The proper way would be to isolate:This way each service only has access to the data it needs.
I hand typed this, so forgive any errors, but hope it helps.