Love Proxmox but still have to learn a lot… I use a Bind Mount Point for my dockge-LXC on proxmox.
I used the Mount Point in my docker compose:
version: “2”
services: urbackup:
image: uroni/urbackup-server:latest container_name: urbackup restart: unless-stopped environment: - PUID=1000 # Enter the UID of the user who should own the files here - PGID=1000 # Enter the GID of the user who should own the files here - TZ=Europe/Berlin # Enter your timezone volumes: - /media/urbackups/data:/var/urbackup - /media/urbackups/storage:/backups # Uncomment the next line if you want to bind-mount the www-folder #- /path/to/wwwfolder:/usr/share/urbackup network_mode: host # Activate the following two lines for BTRFS support cap_add: - SYS_ADMIN
networks: {}
Now i geht this permission-error:
urbackup | usermod: no changes
urbackup | chown: changing ownership of ‘/backups’: Operation not permitted
I guess it has to do with the PUID, but i do not know the PUID.
I read that it has to be the user “urbackup” but also in the docker?
The mounted folders are both 777.
Can you help me?
Hey, I want to say its a bit off topic, but check out Jim’s garage on YouTube regarding lxc nas folders, unprividged lxc setup. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DMPetY4mX-c
You may be trying to setup the folder in unprivileged lxc, which means you need to bind in your <containerid>.conf file under /etc/pve/lxc folder on the host(proxmox}
I hope this helps you.
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://www.piped.video/watch?v=DMPetY4mX-c
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I’m open-source; check me out at GitHub.
Yes, it is unprivileged. But the mp0 is defined in the 107.conf (107 is the containerID).
arch: amd64
cores: 2
features: keyctl=1, nesting=1
hostname: dockge
memory: 2048
mpO: /media/8TB HDD
net0: name=eth0, bridge=vmbr0, hwaddr=06: FB: 9B: 82: 17 : 58 , ip=dhcp, type=veth
onboot: 1
ostype: debian
rootfs: m2 ssd 4TB:vm—107—disk—0, size=18G
swap: 512
tags: proxmox—helper—scripts
unprivileged: 1
unused0: local—1vm:vm—107—disk—0
Is this not enough?
I will watch the video, maybe this will help. Thanks