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    Fedora 31 Server, podman and SELinux

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    • W
      Woti
      last edited by Woti

      As for now the server is rebooting once or twice in a month due updates. There's no big problem to start the service manually. Maybe one day we figure out why it isn't starting automatically.

      Anyway. Thanx for your effort to get rid of the SElinux problem. πŸ™‚

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
      • stacksofplatesS
        stacksofplates
        last edited by

        So I got a container to start with the system. I don't like what podman generate systemd gives you because it defeats the purpose of a container. Here's what I have:

        [Unit]
        Description=Plex
        After=network.target
        
        [Service]
        TimeoutStartSec=5m
        Restart=always
        ExecStartPre=-/usr/bin/podman rm -f plex
        ExecStart=podman run --name plex -v /mnt/media/movies:/movies -v /mnt/media/tv:/tv -v /mnt/media/music:/music -v /home/jhooks/plex/config:/config -p 32400:32400 -p 32400:32400/udp -p 32469:32469 -p 32469:32469/udp -p 5353:5353/udp -p 1900:1900/udp linuxserver/plex
        ExecStop=-/usr/bin/podman kill plex
        Type=simple
        User=jhooks
        RestartSec=30
        
        [Install]
        WantedBy=multi-user.target
        

        I was running ExecStart=podman run -d --rm --name plex blah blah but even when I used forking it was failing to track the process.

        This will kill the container and spin up a new one for me each time which is what I wanted. That way I'm not dependent on container IDs existing.

        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • W
          Woti
          last edited by

          Heiho πŸ™‚
          I haven't seen your message yet. Now 1 month has passed πŸ˜„
          Your script starts Podman automatically at boot?

          Are you using Plex? I am using Kodi πŸ˜›

          stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • stacksofplatesS
            stacksofplates @Woti
            last edited by

            @Woti said in Fedora 31 Server, podman and SELinux:

            Heiho πŸ™‚
            I haven't seen your message yet. Now 1 month has passed πŸ˜„
            Your script starts Podman automatically at boot?

            Are you using Plex? I am using Kodi πŸ˜›

            Yeah I got it to work! Oh nice πŸ˜„

            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • W
              Woti
              last edited by

              Sounds good πŸ™‚ I'll try your solution and report.

              1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • W
                Woti
                last edited by Woti

                Hei, I wanted to try your solution. FΓΈrst, I wanted to run meg container setup but I get this error:

                systemctl --user status container-easyepg.service
                Failed to connect to bus: No such file or directory
                

                I haven't changed anything since the last time and the container file exists...
                I can start it in Cockpit but not in the console. Strange...

                I figured out: I need to issue the above command as user not as root.
                Is it wrong to issuer this command as user? I setted up podman to use easyepg as user not as root.
                Maybe that's why the container not starts during boot?

                Which podman owner are you using @stacksofplates : user or root?

                stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • stacksofplatesS
                  stacksofplates @Woti
                  last edited by

                  @Woti said in Fedora 31 Server, podman and SELinux:

                  Hei, I wanted to try your solution. FΓΈrst, I wanted to run meg container setup but I get this error:

                  systemctl --user status container-easyepg.service
                  Failed to connect to bus: No such file or directory
                  

                  I haven't changed anything since the last time and the container file exists...
                  I can start it in Cockpit but not in the console. Strange...

                  I figured out: I need to issue the above command as user not as root.
                  Is it wrong to issuer this command as user? I setted up podman to use easyepg as user not as root.
                  Maybe that's why the container not starts during boot?

                  Which podman owner are you using @stacksofplates : user or root?

                  I'm using user but not that way. I put the service in /etc/systemd/system and set a user in the unit file. So I still start it with sudo systemctl restart plex but systemd uses the user defined in the unit file to run the service.

                  W 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • W
                    Woti @stacksofplates
                    last edited by

                    @stacksofplates said in Fedora 31 Server, podman and SELinux:

                    @Woti said in Fedora 31 Server, podman and SELinux:

                    Hei, I wanted to try your solution. FΓΈrst, I wanted to run meg container setup but I get this error:

                    systemctl --user status container-easyepg.service
                    Failed to connect to bus: No such file or directory
                    

                    I haven't changed anything since the last time and the container file exists...
                    I can start it in Cockpit but not in the console. Strange...

                    I figured out: I need to issue the above command as user not as root.
                    Is it wrong to issuer this command as user? I setted up podman to use easyepg as user not as root.
                    Maybe that's why the container not starts during boot?

                    Which podman owner are you using @stacksofplates : user or root?

                    I'm using user but not that way. I put the service in /etc/systemd/system and set a user in the unit file. So I still start it with sudo systemctl restart plex but systemd uses the user defined in the unit file to run the service.

                    Okay. I have mine in /home/user/.config... one or another hidden directory created by podman generate commando.
                    Stupid question maybe: but what is the unit file?

                    stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • stacksofplatesS
                      stacksofplates @Woti
                      last edited by

                      @Woti said in Fedora 31 Server, podman and SELinux:

                      @stacksofplates said in Fedora 31 Server, podman and SELinux:

                      @Woti said in Fedora 31 Server, podman and SELinux:

                      Hei, I wanted to try your solution. FΓΈrst, I wanted to run meg container setup but I get this error:

                      systemctl --user status container-easyepg.service
                      Failed to connect to bus: No such file or directory
                      

                      I haven't changed anything since the last time and the container file exists...
                      I can start it in Cockpit but not in the console. Strange...

                      I figured out: I need to issue the above command as user not as root.
                      Is it wrong to issuer this command as user? I setted up podman to use easyepg as user not as root.
                      Maybe that's why the container not starts during boot?

                      Which podman owner are you using @stacksofplates : user or root?

                      I'm using user but not that way. I put the service in /etc/systemd/system and set a user in the unit file. So I still start it with sudo systemctl restart plex but systemd uses the user defined in the unit file to run the service.

                      Okay. I have mine in /home/user/.config... one or another hidden directory created by podman generate commando.
                      Stupid question maybe: but what is the unit file?

                      It's the .service file. They're called units because there's a handful of different types (service, timer, path, target, etc)

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                      • W
                        Woti
                        last edited by

                        Finally I found the solution here on github: https://github.com/containers/libpod/issues/5494

                        I used podman v1.8.0 this time I generated the easyepg.service file with podman generate. There was a bug in this version which not generated default.target. In later version it is fixed. Now it is working πŸ™‚

                        [Install]
                        WantedBy=multi-user.target default.target
                        
                        stacksofplatesS 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 1
                        • stacksofplatesS
                          stacksofplates @Woti
                          last edited by

                          @Woti said in Fedora 31 Server, podman and SELinux:

                          Finally I found the solution here on github: https://github.com/containers/libpod/issues/5494

                          I used podman v1.8.0 this time I generated the easyepg.service file with podman generate. There was a bug in this version which not generated default.target. In later version it is fixed. Now it is working πŸ™‚

                          [Install]
                          WantedBy=multi-user.target default.target
                          

                          Ah ok. I don't use the generate hardly ever because it kind of defeats the purpose of a container. It hard codes the hash for the container instead of a name for some reason.

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • W
                            Woti
                            last edited by

                            I see πŸ™‚ I haven't tried your solution yet. But I did read about your kind of solution on Redhat Access sites.
                            The case with default.target is that, if podman containers runs as user they have no access on multi-user.target through systemd. If I did understand right πŸ˜„ That's why you have to use default.target instead.

                            I'll try your solution in a VM soonly.

                            1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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