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ContainerForge Has Its Own Home — and Compose Examples Everywhere

ContainerForge now has its own dedicated website at containerforge.org. And it is not just a cosmetic move — it comes with a real expansion of what ContainerForge offers.

ContainerForge used to live as a section of the broader TrueForge site. It has grown enough — in scope, in image count, and in users — that it deserves its own space.

The new site is focused entirely on:

  • The ContainerForge image library
  • Deployment guides for different platforms (TrueNAS, Docker, Kubernetes, etc.)
  • Container fundamentals — how the underlying tech actually works
  • Tools that complement the containers
  • A growing per-container reference

We have significantly expanded the guides section. Expect more:

  • Platform-specific deployment guides
  • Best-practice walkthroughs
  • Fundamentals content for users who want to understand what is actually happening behind the scenes
  • Tool documentation around the ecosystem we use and recommend

These guides are aimed at meeting users where they are — whether you run TrueNAS Custom Apps, Docker on a single VPS, or full Kubernetes clusters.

A Docker Compose Example for Every Container

Section titled “A Docker Compose Example for Every Container”

This is the change we are most excited about: every container now gets its own dedicated section on the new website, including a Docker Compose example for that specific image.

That means going from “this image looks useful” to “running stack on my server” is just a copy/paste away — no need to translate Helm values into Compose by hand.

Each container’s page will cover:

  • What the image is and what it is for
  • The opinionated defaults we ship
  • A working docker-compose.yml example you can adapt
  • Notes on running it on TrueNAS, plain Docker, or Kubernetes

ContainerForge remains the foundation for TrueCharts images. The new site does not change that — if anything, it strengthens it.

Charts and containers continue to evolve together, with shared tooling and shared standards. But ContainerForge is also a first-class option on its own, especially for users who prefer Docker Compose over Helm.

  • Expanding container coverage across more common self-hosted apps
  • More example Compose stacks for popular combinations
  • Continued alignment with TrueCharts and the rest of the TrueForge ecosystem

Have a container you would love to see — or a Compose example to contribute? Open an issue or PR on GitHub, or come chat with us on Discord.

— The ContainerForge Team