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16 days agoI use podman too and I set up hardware acceleration for Jellyfin. I’ll update this with how I did it once I’m home.
Edit: Here’s my compose.yml (I use podman-compose
):
services:
jellyfin:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/jellyfin:latest
container_name: jellyfin
dns:
- 9.9.9.9
environment:
- PUID=1000
- PGID=1000
- TZ=Europe/Berlin
volumes:
- ./config:/config:Z
- ~/drive/media:/media:z
devices:
- /dev/dri:/dev/dri
ports:
- 8096:8096
- 7359:7359/udp
- 1900:1900/udp
restart: unless-stopped
Thank you for telling me about Podlet. I’ve been using
podman-compose
for all my containers but I’ve thought about converting them to systemd units. The only thing I’m unsure about is whether it’ll still be easy to access the container files. Currently I have acontainers
folder with a folder for each service inside it. Inside that, there’s thecompose.yml
and the folders with the container data. I map all container folders, with data that needs to be kept, to a folder that sits right next to the compose file. If it’s just temporary data (like caches), I oftentimes map it to a volume because it doesn’t matter if I lose it. Do you know if I can still do it like this (or in a similar way) if I use systemd units?