Podman rootless, using quadlets for systemd services. :D
Podman rootless, using quadlets for systemd services. :D
Check out the following link - I am pretty sure its what I used to get it all working.
https://3os.org/infrastructure/proxmox/gpu-passthrough/igpu-passthrough-to-vm/
Hey, sorry for the late reply. I am running rootless using a dedicated user, so I use systemctl --user
to control the container.
From what I understand, when running rootless the root user inside the container correlates to the outside user (which is running the container), in terms of permissions. The external directories I bind mount into the container as externally owned by my dedicated user, so that the root user inside the container owns them (inside the container).
Are you doing rootless or rootfull podman? I am doing rootless and I have the following in my radarr container - PUID=0 PGID=0
I am using Calibre-Web mostly - but I have run into issues with thumbnail generation after my collection hit around 500000 books. I am just over 600000 now, but a large swathe don’t have thumbnails unless I do a manual metadata search. I should probably look for an alternative, but at this point I CBF.
Personally I would lean towards finding out why its borking with SELinux and fixing that. It really shouldn’t be too hard. As others have mentioned it may be as simple as how you are mounting volumes into your containers - or it could be changing the SELinux context type for some files.
I like how K-9 hooks directly into OpenKeychain for encryption. Does Fairemail do that?
It says it is “a” standard file system - not “the” standard. Very different things.
So for Linux that would be ext4.
It’s worth noting that the default file system varies by distro - there is no ‘Linux’ default. For example, RHEL et al use XFS as the default.
No madness. I know it works natively. I also know it works perfectly well with a rootfull container.
All of my other applications are running in containers and having Plex also run in a container would simplify my overall architecture and recovery, should I need to replace the host.
Not very helpful.
It’s not distributed architecture as you normally think it - it’s a decentralised federation. It’s an important distinction from your typical distributed architecture app.
For that post specifically - You copy the post URL and search for it on your instance (using the magnifying glass icon).
Another way would be to search for that community (in your example, !lemmy_support@lemmy.ml) the same way and that will allow you to enter that community from your own instance and reply to threads there.
Amazon was in the infrastructure business well before containers were the “big thing”.