Its for isolated containers typically used for web servers and development. ![]() If you're running Fedora, you don't have it. Pacman is a package manager for Arch Linux. thats a PODMAN command, which are two very very different things. Im sure some of these battles are because I am new to Linux but Im willing to work through them. Any idea why through the GNOME file manager I can see a folder but NOT in the terminal? So for example /opt/SonarrTest exists as a folder but it says it does not when running the command. Podman run -name=sonarr_container -p 8989:8989 -expose 8989 -d -e PUID=1000 -e PGID=1000 -e TZ='America/Chicago' -e UMASK_SET=022 -v /path/to/local/folder/for/config:/config -v /path/to/local/folder/for/data:/data linuxserver/sonarr:preview ![]() I also decided to try the pacman image that I found referenced elsewhere and ran into an issue there as well. I did not compile from source and downloaded it from the Sonarr site. When running "systemctl list-unit-files" the state is listed as "bad". I have no idea what "failed to enable unit" means. Adjusting the capitalization didn't work unfortunately. To fix that, you would just sudo chown $USER /opt/nzbget and that will make you the owner and therfore able to execute without root. That means root would have copied those files to /opt and leaving its mark as owner of the files. You'd compile with make, which doesn't need sudo, but you typically install with sudo make install since most of those directories are owned by the root user. Just one additional shot in the dark, since its a git I'll assume you are compiling from source. service doesn't exist yet, because you haven't hit it with said command yet to generate said symlink.ĮDIT: Whoops I didn't see the other half of your question. I think the real issue on that though is that. Its not a lack of sudo here, becuase systemd is generating those symlinks for your individual profile, plus SystemD is debatably smart enough to know you need elevation and it will ask for a password it it needs one. ![]() Guess I'm lazy? Plus, again wild shot in the dark is that its just a matter of capitalization since most (all?) Linux file systems are case sensitive. I didn't look in the Git yet but for shits and giggles, does it work with 'sudo systemctl enable Sonarr' or 'sudo systemctl enable sonarr' ? I never add the. Mailing list: Fedora Testers (for Fedora Beta releases).Discord: discord.gg/fedora (Voice & Text chat).Post content regarding Fedora Project or Linux in general.This subreddit is not affiliated with or endorsed by the Fedora Project. A community for users, developers and people interested in the Fedora Project and news and information about it.
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