Can you provide the required arguments for chroot? I’ve just opened the bash shell of a running container (docker exec -it mycontainer bash) and tried to “break out” using “chroot /”. I can’t access any files of the host.
Can you provide the required arguments for chroot? I’ve just opened the bash shell of a running container (docker exec -it mycontainer bash) and tried to “break out” using “chroot /”. I can’t access any files of the host.
I’ve notices the same (also 7800 XT with the latest stable kernel) and have used CoreCtrl to manually set the powersave profile. Before I thought this was somehow only happening on my machine, but now I think this is a bug…
How would a rogue container be able to access the root directory of the host? Wouldn’t it just be able to access the data on the docker volumes? Thank you.
I can recommend purelymail.com. Cheap, works great with my custom domain, allows unlimited mail boxes ans users for the whole family.
Until August 2024 only .arpa was reserved for residential network services. Glad to hear there is something new less akward!
Is the controller listed in the output of “lsusb”? What does the output of “journalctl -b” say when you plug in the controller?
What Xbox controller? 360? One? Wireless? Wired?
I’m using syncthing-fork on Android for years on multiple devices without problems.
I’m sorry but it’s not great for beginners. It’s a rolling bleeding edge distro that does not break often but when it does you need to know how stuff works to fix it.
It’s still better than no sandbox at all, isn’t it? And who installs their OS on an HDD in 2024?
6 years ago Proton was a thing. It worked out of the box with Steam games like it does today. Yes not everything was gold rated on protondb but it worked fine. I’ve been gaming on Linux since 2018.
postgresql db (e.g. in Docker) + Dbeaver as GUI client
ZFS encryption works fine but AFAIK it’s complicated to do full disk encryption (for the OS drive) - this is easy to do with with luks. ZFS is not complicated and just works - at least that was my experience. There is also a lot of help available online.
Yes, exactly. I push photos into the “import folder” of Photoprism. I don’t manually trigger the re-index but I restart photoprism at night using a cronjob. I am not using settings like “PHOTOPRISM_AUTO_IMPORT”. Contact me if you need me to investigate more.
I’m uploading to a directory using syncthing. It’s working perfectly fine without any scripts. I’m running Photoprism in a docker container.
You don’t need to compile and run with the same jdk version. Dunno why you think this.
You can do that with ZFS. It’s built-in integrierty check will automatically heal errors and tell you what drive has gone bad.
I can also recommend zfs on debian. Even if you only using two disks you will be still protected from bit rot.
I can recommend dockprom. It comes with grafana preconfigured.
Thank you, but this only applies to priviledged containers (which are normally not used and should not be used)