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/
Yeah it looks pretty slick but not so much slicker than Frigate that I will pay to be in the beta. :)
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.
Yeah this was it. Disabled rocket and it now works fine.
Yes I bet this is it. I’ll disable and test. Thanks for the heads up!
Thanks for these. It’s good to see someone else building them!
I have the same problem using your 0.18.3 lemmy-ui image as I do when I build it - it just doesn’t seem to work on my instance. None of the feed loads up and the selector buttons don’t either.
Is it working for you?
You can’t change it yourself? When I taught my kids to drive, I also made sure they knew how to change a tyre.
Sorry… I am not understanding fully, I think. So you want to see if posts on your self-hosted instance will propagate to other instances? In this case, only if someone on the other instance has searched for your community.
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.
Thumbnails are stored locally, I believe.
A bunch (47 containers at present)… Won’t list them here as its kind of redundant with what a lot of other people are running. My latest is Lemmy (lemmy.nine-hells.net).
Amazon was in the infrastructure business well before containers were the “big thing”.