Public bug reported:
A docker image built with "debootstrap jammy" fails when running "apt-
get update".
1) lsb_release -rd
Description:Ubuntu 20.04 LTS
Release:20.04
2)
# apt-cache policy docker.io
docker.io:
Installed: 19.03.8-0ubuntu1.20.04.1
Candidate: 20.10.7-0ubuntu5~20.04.
Public bug reported:
1)
Description:Ubuntu Bionic Beaver (development branch)
Release:18.04
2)
apt:
Installed: 1.6.10
Candidate: 1.6.10
Version table:
*** 1.6.10 100
100 /var/lib/dpkg/status
3)
I would expect a helpful error message, saying there's not enough disk spac
Public bug reported:
I rebooted my laptop after a crash.
Fsck couldn't repair the /var partition, so I was greeted with "Welcome
to Emergency!" and the request to look at `journalctl -xb`.
After logging in, and journalctl telling me about the broken /var
partition, I tried
fsck /dev/mapper/
This bug is still valid in Xenial 16.04.
My system is connected via LAN and doesn't have a wireless card
installed.
Because of the dependency, wpa_cli is run on each suspend/resume cycle
and fails of course. There is no technical reason for this dependency,
and a recommendation is strong enough t
It seems, you're right with the final path component in --overlay. This
is the absolute path *inside* the container. I looked into nspawn's
source code and the options is interpreted as follows
--overlay=lo1:lo2:up:dest
lo1 and lo2 are lower directories, up is the upper directory in
overlayfs
Tank you for pointing to the feature request and the discussion.
---
>From the man page (https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man
/systemd-nspawn.html#--overlay=):
>For details about overlay file systems, see overlayfs.txt.
Which links to
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/filesys
Public bug reported:
I have a directory with a minimal Xenial installation, which I want to
share among several containers. I also have a directory with just Apache
and its dependencies installed.
systemd-nspawn has an option --overlay to "Combine multiple directory
trees into one overlay file sy
Public bug reported:
AFAIU, Ubuntu switched to systemd as its service management system.
Therefore I expect it to start services even in a chroot environment.
Using "service apache2 start" instead works without any problems.
1)
Description:Ubuntu 16.04 LTS
Release:16.04
2)
systemd:
** Description changed:
- After resume my laptop loses WLAN connectivity. I can restore WLAN
- connectivity by restarting network-manager with
+ After resume my laptop loses sometimes WLAN connectivity. I can restore
+ WLAN connectivity by restarting network-manager with
# systemctl restart n
Public bug reported:
After resume my laptop loses WLAN connectivity. I can restore WLAN
connectivity by restarting network-manager with
# systemctl restart network-manager
1)
Description:Ubuntu 16.04 LTS
Release:16.04
2)
network-manager:
Installed: 1.1.93-0ubuntu4
Candidate: 1.2
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