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author | Erik Sjölund <erik.sjolund@gmail.com> | 2022-03-07 20:23:33 +0100 |
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committer | Erik Sjölund <erik.sjolund@gmail.com> | 2022-03-09 08:55:36 +0100 |
commit | db30102793e1c86e1295da929497f96f4b5e8278 (patch) | |
tree | 5c545bbf3eff9e2866c9432114fa019bcb2c2daf /troubleshooting.md | |
parent | 2873f089f7de04cadc345f36bf405ae813a60765 (diff) | |
download | podman-db30102793e1c86e1295da929497f96f4b5e8278.tar.gz podman-db30102793e1c86e1295da929497f96f4b5e8278.tar.bz2 podman-db30102793e1c86e1295da929497f96f4b5e8278.zip |
[CI:DOCS] troubleshooting.md: mention "podman unshare chown 0:0 path"
* Mention the command "podman unshare chown 0:0 dir1/a"
that changes file ownership to the regular user's UID and GID on
the host.
Co-authored-by: Tom Sweeney <tsweeney@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Erik Sjölund <erik.sjolund@gmail.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'troubleshooting.md')
-rw-r--r-- | troubleshooting.md | 15 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/troubleshooting.md b/troubleshooting.md index 93f716e00..32f14c1ee 100644 --- a/troubleshooting.md +++ b/troubleshooting.md @@ -991,12 +991,15 @@ less: dir1/a: Permission denied #### Solution -If you want to read or remove such a file, you can do so by entering a user namespace. -Instead of running commands such as `less dir1/a` or `rm dir1/a`, you would need to -prepend the command-line with `podman unshare`, i.e., -`podman unshare less dir1/a` or `podman unshare rm dir1/a`. To be able to use Bash -features, such as variable expansion and globbing, you need to wrap the command with -`bash -c`, e.g. `podman unshare bash -c 'ls $HOME/dir1/a*'`. +If you want to read, chown, or remove such a file, enter a user +namespace. Instead of running commands such as `less dir1/a` or `rm dir1/a`, you +need to prepend the command-line with `podman unshare`, i.e., +`podman unshare less dir1/a` or `podman unshare rm dir1/a`. To change the ownership +of the file _dir1/a_ to your regular user's UID and GID, run `podman unshare chown 0:0 dir1/a`. +A file having the ownership _0:0_ in the user namespace is owned by the regular +user on the host. To use Bash features, such as variable expansion and +globbing, you need to wrap the command with `bash -c`, e.g. +`podman unshare bash -c 'ls $HOME/dir1/a*'`. Would it have been possible to run Podman in another way so that your regular user would have become the owner of the file? Yes, you can use the options |