Edit Docker Compose Without YAML: A Safe, Tested Guide
Stashboard V7.1 lets you edit Docker Compose without YAML from the browser — image, ports, volumes, env, labels and more — with atomic validated saves and comments preserved.
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Stashboard V7.1 lets you edit Docker Compose without YAML from the browser — image, ports, volumes, env, labels and more — with atomic validated saves and comments preserved.
Stashboard’s visual docker compose editor self-hosted (V7.0–V7.7) lets you view, edit, diff, and apply docker-compose.yml from your browser — no YAML, no SSH, comments preserved.
Docker compose aware update self-hosted in Stashboard v7.8 no longer needs a path field: Compose projects are auto-discovered from container labels (com.docker.compose.project / .working_dir). Here is what “Update now” actually runs, how to confirm the mode activated, and the risks worth knowing.
The one-click Docker container update self-hosted workflow in Stashboard is one of its most powerful features — and the one most likely to surprise you if something goes…
If you run Stashboard as your homelab service dashboard, getting Stashboard SMTP email notifications configured correctly is one of the first things worth doing after initial install. Unlike…
If you rely on a Docker tag pattern filter homelab tool to track container updates, you have probably seen the badge flip to Update available when nothing you…
Docker update monitoring self-hosted is one of the first gaps you hit once your homelab grows past five containers. A new image can sit in the registry for…
Stashboard is a self-hosted homelab service dashboard that packs your entire home lab into a single Docker container — no separate database, no migrator sidecar, no manual secret…