Show HN: Devbox – Containers for better dev environments

devbox.ar0.eu

114 points by TheRealBadDev 3 days ago

I've been frustrated with dependency hell and clutter on my VPS from dev, so I built Devbox: a lightweight, open-source CLI tool that spins up isolated development environments using Docker. Each project runs in its own container, but your code stays in simple flat folders on the host machine—no messing with volumes or sync issues. Environments are disposable, so you can nuke and recreate them without losing your work. Key features: - Instant setup: `devbox init my-project` and you're in a fresh env with `devbox shell`.

- Configurable via JSON: Define packages, services, and more in a `devbox.json` file. Share it in your repo for reproducible setups—teammates just run `devbox up`.

- Docker-in-Docker by default: Build and run containers inside your env without extra config.

- Host-friendly: Edit code directly on your machine; the container handles the runtime.

- Templates for quick starts: Built-ins for Python, Node.js, Go, web dev, etc.

- Advanced options: Port mapping, env vars, resource limits, and even mounting your dotfiles.

It's FOSS (MIT license), Linux-focused (Debian/Ubuntu, or WSL2 on Windows), and super easy to install: `curl -fsSL https://devbox.ar0.eu/install.sh | bash`.

Check out the launch page and docs at https://devbox.ar0.eu, or the repo at https://github.com/itzCozi/devbox. I'd love some feedback, stars, or contributions to help grow this into a solid community tool!

l___d__s 3 days ago

FYI there's a well-starred, corporate-backed, similar functionality, Nix-based product with the same name:

https://github.com/jetify-com/devbox https://www.jetify.com/devbox

  • gf000 3 days ago

    I usually don't take name clashes as seriously as some people here do, but when it's even in the same general niche, then that's not really a good look. It means the author failed to check the prior art - which is still fine for a (n+1)th hobby project, but not really for something more serious.

  • techn00 3 days ago

    I thought that OP linked this devbox since so many subcommands from the cli are almost identical

    • TheRealBadDev 2 days ago

      Again another oversight i also didnt relise i was mirroring docker commands and npm.

dbunskoek 3 days ago

Looks like a really fun project. You might want to reconsider the name though, since there is this other devbox from Jetify https://www.jetify.com/devbox that also received quite some attention on HN a while ago https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=32600821

  • kasajian 3 days ago
    • mcny 3 days ago

      I am not affiliated with Microsoft and I anal but I think dev box is fine. What we want to avoid is the term dev containers.

      https://containers.dev/

      • swiftcoder 3 days ago

        > I anal

        There has to be a better way to phrase this

        • dp-hackernews a day ago

          Yes, one would think it should have been presented as ANAL - which I think is the preferred way to present an acronym.

        • HatchedLake721 2 days ago

          I think it’s reasonable. What’s another way, “I’m into backdoor stuff”?

          • swiftcoder 2 days ago

            hey, I mean, buttplug.io could always use the contributors

      • bryanlarsen 3 days ago

        The overlap with Jetpack's devbox name is not fine. Not morally, given the massive overlap in functionality between the two implementations. At the very least, their existence will prevent you from getting a trademark.

        Both projects even use devbox.json for their definitions, for crying out loud. If your usage is not compatible with Jetpack's devbox.json, please switch to a different filename ASAP.

        • TheRealBadDev 2 days ago

          I didn't realize our similarities until after i designed like all of it, i didnt do any research before hand sadly causing a lot of issues like this

  • FireInsight 2 days ago

    Good point. I remember testing out Jetify's version a while back and switching away from it due to some issue I was having. I 100% thought this project was the same, just with a new website, as I did not remember much of the implementation details. Both of them even use `devbox.json` as the configuration file...

    • TheRealBadDev 2 days ago

      Well its not the same programming wise so your problem might be fixed on ours but as i said in another reply i wasnt aware of the existing project and our overlaps i did no research before hand sadly

NitpickLawyer 3 days ago

We've been using devcontainers for this, as it's already got good support in vscode. Could you perhaps "elevator pitch" the main differences between devbox and devcontainers?

  • whinvik 3 days ago

    Yes, it feels very similar to Devcontainers.

    But having tried Devcontainers a lot, it feels like its probably a complex specification since outside of VSCode every implementation has issues.

    The CLI on Mac has weird user permission issues. Cursor's implementation is very flaky. Zed doesn't implement it yet.

    So maybe there's space for more solutions in the same space but Devcontainers are very feature rich. And not to mention they have a huge user base via VSCode.

    • NitpickLawyer 3 days ago

      The killer combo for us is remote+devcontainers. We use this for GPU access, so you can run a project on one or more GPUs that are on a remote server. You can spin up LLM stuff from a mac air and get the best of both worlds.

      • runelk 2 days ago

        Nice! Do you have any tips or recommendations for a decent setup?

    • phrotoma 2 days ago

      This has been my experience. I don't use VSCode and every time I've attempted to play with devcontainers I've just given up and gone back to a docker compose file. I love that they tried to extract the feature out into a stand alone thing, but the juice doesn't seem to be worth the squeeze yet.

  • zeroq 2 days ago

    Very good question, and even if your product is better it seems like an uphill battle. devcontainers are backed by MS/VS and they have good incentive to make them work.

    Why you think your solution will succeed in long run and win over devcontainers?

globular-toast 3 days ago

I don't get how containers address "dependency hell". Is there some language that only supports installing libraries system wide? I've used a lot of different languages and yet to come across one.

I've worked on projects where the original dev has used containers for everything. It's super clunky and annoying. I don't want to use a different bash config just for working on that project. I've set my own up for a reason. All it makes me wonder is what are you afraid of? Why do you feel the need to isolate dev projects to this extent?

  • wiether 2 days ago

    Isolation works both ways. By isolating your dev project, you don't expose your host to the mess the project can create... and you don't expose your project to the mess that can exist on your host.

    With dev containers, you can define your ENV VAR, your aliases... independently from what exists on your host. And it will exists straight out the box: you checkout the project, launch the dev container and you're ready to go. As soon as you're done with this project, you delete the container and not a single trace of the project exists on your host. No matter how many custom things the project required to run.

    • neves 2 days ago

      And since you have everything in a configuration file, it is breeze to transform your dev container in a production one.

  • Gabrys1 3 days ago

    C libraries are easiest to install system wide. The situation with multiple versions of libc is tricky to work with.

    Not impossible, just not easy to comprehend by an average dev.

    • globular-toast 2 days ago

      I'm kinda horrified to think there might be people writing C who don't know how to handle library versions. Somehow I don't think that is the target audience here, by I might be wrong.

      • Gabrys1 2 days ago

        You might need to install libxml2 in order to use XML parsing library for your high level programming language.

        You don't need to be writing C code to be affected by the dependency hell.

darkvertex 2 days ago

So this reinvents devcontainers? https://containers.dev

Why should we use yours? What does it do better or differently?

  • hk1337 2 days ago

    While this is true, this project seems to wrap it up in a CLI package for starting and stopping projects. Whereas starting devcontainers, at least as far as I have seen, is always done via VSCode or IDE, so while it technically could be called CLI too, would be a lot more complicated than this project.

    • nickzelei 2 days ago

      The devcontainers cli has existed for a while. Definitely not as smooth as using with vscode but it has all the main points.

      https://github.com/devcontainers/cli

      • hk1337 2 days ago

        TIL.

        I'm not proponent of installing nodejs apps globally, npm install -g or yarn install -g

    • bartalama 2 days ago

      There is also a CLI for dev containers. I use it for unattended builds.

bootsmann 2 days ago

How does this compare to toolbx? (https://containertoolbx.org/)

  • Vinnl 2 days ago

    And Distrobox: https://distrobox.it

    One obvious one is that Toolbx and Distrobox are based on Podman, for one.

    • bogwog 2 days ago

      > One obvious one is that Toolbx and Distrobox are based on Podman, for one.

      And as a result, the containers are rootless.

kekqqq 2 days ago

I had a very strong personal opinion that, unless you expect frequent migrations or horizontal scaling, Docker is overkill and could be considered as bloat in many instances. After I joined my new company, I found out about devbox, and I love it. Now I use it for almost every personal project. It helps you to make the environment reproducible without sacrificing performance.

However, I use https://www.jetify.com/devbox.

  • TheRealBadDev 2 days ago

    Yeah... i didn't realize this was a project before hand, do they use their own container framework? seems like too much for my small project but i can apricate your input.

evertheylen 3 days ago

I always like to see new projects using containers. Two questions:

- how is your devbox.json file different from a Dockerfile/Containerfile?

- does your project attempt to provide any isolation security-wise?

  • dns_snek 3 days ago

    > does your project attempt to provide any isolation security-wise?

    Considering that they provide Docker-in-Docker by default, this would have to be a "no" right now. Having the ability to launch Docker containers is equivalent to having root access on the Docker host by default.

TheRealBadDev 2 days ago

Hello!! All of your concerns have been addressed in a new commit of mine which is available to all of you now.

Added GPU pass‑through, engine‑agnostic containers (DEVBOX_ENGINE for Podman/rootless), and alternate config filenames to avoid Jetify collisions—while keeping a tiny, CLI‑first flow that works outside VS Code.

https://github.com/itzCozi/devbox/commit/d05c8980db7fb907f31...

jbverschoor 2 days ago

Plugging my own tool. I use it for development and running semi-trusted or temporary tools, mounts the current/project dir for isolation, and shuts down automatically when it can.

Container Shell - https://github.com/jrz/container-shell

dirkc 2 days ago

I've been using Docker containers for quite some time to do web dev work. The one thing I haven't yet set up is doing mobile dev in a docker environment.

Does devbox support mobile development - Flutter or ReactNative?

  • TheRealBadDev 2 days ago

    Yes hypothetically i haven't tested it but i am not sure why it wouldnt aside from machine constraints

jonotime 2 days ago

Would love to use something like this for NixOS as an escape hatch, but its debian only. DistroBox always gives me trouble.

tomas789 2 days ago

OP should consider changing their alias.

  • TheRealBadDev 2 days ago

    Too deep in and i also make projects for a week then abandon them for a while so its not very much worth it i dont think

yakshaving_jgt 3 days ago

Anything to do with "dependency hell", I can't see a better solution than Nix.

parham 2 days ago

I’ve been doing a version of this using bash scripts for a long time! Thanks for making it

v3ss0n 3 days ago

There are already dev containers

tiku 2 days ago

It's good that we get more options. I like ddev, will try this as well.

clueless 2 days ago

Amazing amazing project, thank you for sharing this

  • TheRealBadDev 2 days ago

    Oh! thank you for your appreciation means a lot.

exasperaited 2 days ago

I am afraid that despite all these options for containers, I still use my Vagrant scripts that build whole VMs based on my own schemes, use an apt package cache on the host and manage .ssh/config for me to make VSC remotes more seamless.

Almost all my stuff still runs on simple VMs because I cannot rely on my clients to take on more complex cloud infrastructure and I don't want to be stuck managing all of the things forever, so my life involves building customer VMs from build scripts that are adequately similar to my Vagrant boxes.

I use the VMs a lot for simple tests (e.g. of wordpress plugins and themes) so I have gone to the trouble of setting up Avahi with alias support, adding options for mailhog, different databases, different webserver setups I use for WP or Laravel or node.js, setting up an automated WP install etc.; so there are two or three starting configurations. I even had one for Magento before I realised I could be a lot happier without Magento in my life.

I guess it looks a fair bit like devcontainers now, and I should consider migrating over to that. But it's solid and under my control and that counts for a lot.