Discarding is differing from trimming. I don't think discards=0 is related, and in fact discarding is very rarely recommended, but trimming nearly always recommended.
On PVE 8.1, I have a thin pool on NVME with a few containers.
I deleted one of the containers (via GUI) and now I am not sure if the space used by the LV was discarded/trimmed. I can't issue an `fstrim`, unless it is against a directory, nor I can issue a `pct fstrim` against the CT because...
UPDATE: turns out it isn't getting stuck on flushing the journal. it was only not moving from the console log to the login prompt. a CTRL-ALT-F2 solved it.
If anyone can tell me how to avoid having to press CTRL-ALT-F2 I'd appreciate it.
I have PBS as a VM in an LXD environment.
When backing up it's host, containers and VMs, it also backs up itself.
Is this bc of the LXD virtualization OR is it bc the backup contents are stored in a separate physical disk (available as a 2nd block device to PBS) from the one where PBS itself...
I also second this. following symlinks would enable PBS to backup /var/snap/<snapname>/current. Currently it is impossible to backup snaps, which makes backing up an LXD/LXC host nearly irrelevant.
I have a PBS instance as a backup destination in Proxmox VE.
When I use Proxmox own backup targeting local storage, a 12GB VM uses 2GB.
When I target the remote PBS instance, the same 12GB VM uses 12GB.
The VM is .raw backed
oh ok! you got it to run in unpriviledged containers w/o setting these?
lxc.security.syscalls.intercept.mknod: "true"
lxc.security.syscalls.intercept.setxattr: "true"
Probably not. `If using unprivileged, ensure the “keyctl” option is also enabled`.
looking at the same config change to run docker inside containers, as opposed to VMs.
is it possible to selective allow these extra permissions per container, not for all containers?
Wasn't the case in the past, but is it possible these days to install Proxmox directly (not on top of Debian) without committing the entire physical disk to that filesystem (as I recall, had to be ZFS)?
TIA
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