GathererStuff

joined 5 days ago
[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 10 hours ago

Because the executable is proprietary (and a bit legacy I would say) and full of telemetry, undocumented and the cloud service has no CLI, WebDAV or rclone support. I do not want to run something like that on my personal computer and I do not know how to use bwrap properly and don't want to risk it. I have since switched over to a podman container but I encounter the same problem, the folder is empty on the host (See my post here: https://lemmy.ml/post/22215540).

[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago (1 children)
[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago (3 children)

I am using the binary. Just running it inside a container instead of a VM.

overlay fs?

Yes.

[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago (5 children)

Since originally writing the post I have switched to a rootless podman container. Running it how I did before (inside a VM) would simply yield user_id=1000,group_id=1000 I think.

[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago (7 children)

rw,nosuid,nodev,relatime,user_id=0,group_id=0

[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago

Fair. I will try NFS if anything else fails. Thanks :)

[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I strongly disagree why this would not be beneficial. Could you expand?

[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I don’t understand what you mean with the content disappearing when you mount the virtiofs on the guest - isn’t the mount empty when bound, untill the guest populates it?

Sorry I made a mistake in the original post. I wanted to say on the host instead of on the guest. My bad.

Yes, you are correct, the folder is empty until I log in insde the cloud application on the guest.

does it require local storage or support remote?

What do you mean? The cloud drive is a network drive basically. It only downloads files on demand.

if guest os is linux, nfs will probably do

This is what others have suggested and what I will probably do if the method below fails.

podman/docker seems to be the proper tool for you here

Yesterday I actually tried to spin a podman container hoping it would work but I encountered the following problem when trying to propagate mounts: https://lemmy.ml/post/22215540

Could you please assist me there if you have further ideas? Thank you :)

Keep in mind that a screwup could be interpreted by the sync client as mass-deletes

I am VERY aware of this *sweating*

[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 days ago

This is what I have been trying for the past two days actually: https://lemmy.ml/post/22215540 Could you please assist me there if you have an idea? Thanks :)

[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 days ago (9 children)

do you need them all at the same time?

I need to access all files conveniently and transparently depending on what I need at work in that particular moment.

are they mostly the same size and type?

Hard no.

[–] GathererStuff@lemmy.ml 1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

What would be the performance implications? Isn't virtiofs theoretically faster?

 

Hi everyone! I want to be able to access a folder inside the guest that corresponds to a cloud drive that is mounted inside the guest for security purposes. I have tried setting up a shared filesystem inside Virt-Manager (KVM) with virtiofs (following this tutorial: https://absprog.com/post/qemu-kvm-shared-folder) but as soon as I mount the folder in order for it to be accessible on the ~~guest~~ host the cloud drive gets unmounted. I guess a folder cannot have two mounts at the same time. Aliasing the folder using bind and then sharing the aliased folder with the host doesn't work either. The aliased folder is simply empty on the host.

Does anyone have an idea regarding how I might accomplish this? Is KVM the right choice or would something like docker or podman better suited for this job? Thank you.

 

Hi everyone! I want to be able to access a folder inside the guest that corresponds to a cloud drive that is mounted inside the guest for security purposes. I have tried setting up a shared filesystem inside Virt-Manager (KVM) with virtiofs (following this tutorial: https://absprog.com/post/qemu-kvm-shared-folder) but as soon as I mount the folder in order for it to be accessible on the ~~guest~~ host the cloud drive gets unmounted. I guess a folder cannot have two mounts at the same time. Aliasing the folder using bind and then sharing the aliased folder with the host doesn't work either. The aliased folder is simply empty on the host.

Does anyone have an idea regarding how I might accomplish this? Is KVM the right choice or would something like docker or podman better suited for this job? Thank you.

Edit: To clarify: The cloud drive is mounted inside a virtual machine for security purposes as the binary is proprietary and I do not want to mount it on the host (bwrap and the like introduce a whole lot of problems, the drive doesn't sync anymore and I have to relogin each time). I do not use the virtual machine per se, I just start it and leave it be.

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