

Ok thanks, I’ll have to be extra careful deploying any changes.
Ok thanks, I’ll have to be extra careful deploying any changes.
Thanks! I did see there’s a docker format and a podman format which I assume is what this difference is about. I’m not against discord but I’ve never really used it. I’ll check it out if I get desperate 🙂
Thanks, I had already played a bit with distrobox and hadn’t worked that out either. It seems adding a Z flag to my bind mount to keep SELinux happy is all that was needed.
I seem to have got it working using podman, adding a Z flag to the bind mount to make SELinux happy.
Oh shit I think that’s it! I’ve added that Z flag to each bind mount declaration in compose.yaml, and it seems to be running properly now. Thanks!
Any idea what the implications are of this transferring to an ubuntu based distro?
As far as I can tell, you just run the command with sudo to run as root? But this doesn’t help, I have been using sudo.
Edit: I think this is solved, someone else mentioned using the Z flag on the bind mount declaration and it seems to be working!
I’m already using bind mounts under the /home directory. I learnt pretty early on day 1 not to fight the distro, so I’m trying to understand the way Bazzite wants this to be done. From another reply, it sounds like it’s a difference in rootless/rootful containers so I’m going to try to work out how to run a podman container as root and see if this helps.
Thanks, I will have a go at trying to get it running as a rootful container!
I was running Nobara before, which is also based on Fedora, so not sure why it would be different in regards to SELinux?
I mentioned this in my original post.
Searching online shows everyone saying just use podman, it comes pre-installed and is a drop in replacement. The problem is that it doesn’t work.
But someone else has mentioned the issue is the containers are rootless by default, so I’ll explore that line of troubleshooting.
I didn’t realise there were so many voice options if set to US English!
I’ve updated to use Davis (whispering), will see if anyone notices.
Both are open source. Brave takes Chromium and disables most tracking. TOR takes Firefox and disables all tracking.
The Chromium vs Gecko debate is not about data collection, but about control of web standards.
This says it’s the US pronunciation of Thames: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=xKDzKYcKTO4
Do you pronounce names and brains that way, or do you pronounce Thames differently in Connecticut than the rest of the US?
Do you pronounce Thames like names and brains, or names and brains like Thames?
Personally if someone was described as “good”, I’d take it to mean they could do it at an expected level (not going to hold the team back). If someone was above average at the task then I’d expect a different adjective, e.g. great or excellent.
I guess my position is that I am not worried about someone confirming content exists on my server. But I don’t live in the US, if I did I might be more worried. I also geofence to my country to limit exposure.
I was emailing with a company who had a chatcident the other day, someone who I’ve been emailing/meeting back and forth for the last few years. They responded with “Here’s draft for your response: …”
Then followed by stuff about how much they had enjoyed collaborating and other stuff that would have come across as heartfelt if not for the chatcident giving away the origin of the messagge.
So after I save and close a group… where do I find it?
Wasn’t there recently an article on Lemmy about all the bullshit AI pull requests that FOSS maintainers have to put up with?