Thanks...The first one might actually be a normal GUI. However I don't see a way to compile it for non-debian (I'm running Nobara, which is Fedora-based). The second one is definitely a webUI.
iturnedintoanewt
Yeah...So far I managed to connect virt-manager to the LXC daemon after a few attempts, but I'm a bit stuck now. In order to create a new LXC container it asks for an URI and I don't know which one should I put.
Thanks...That's my fault. I guess I wanted to mention I was looking for a GUI-like way of doing it. Same way virt-manager does. It handles libvirt in the background, but I guess a nice more intuitive manner of following a process to create a VM. I wanted to see if I can do something similar for a container.
Thanks! I was hoping it would have its own GUI, not having to run from a webUI...Kinda makes integration with a virtual desktop a bit easier. I'd like to have the equivalent of a virtualbox VM, with desktop etc, but running on a container.
Hmmm I might be open to try. But my idea would be to have the equivalent of a local full blown VM running with its own desktop environment. But on a container. I can do this in proxmox, but I'd like to replicate it locally on my laptop.
Counterpart.
You can always start playing the same cat and mouse game of giving random names to all the censored terms just like the Chinese do on their chat platforms.
Or not. I'm just a message in a forum.
I reckon flights to the US will soon duplicate on cost just thanks to all the extra insurance costs due to the likelihood of having to pay a unscheduled return. Unless the US gov is paying for that. In which case it would be an interesting expense to explain.
Rest of the civilized world doesn't execute.
Thanks for the very detailed guide. Would you advice to have such a large swapfile? If I remember correctly, the old advice was to have double the storage in swap than in RAM. But after 4 or 8GB of RAM or so, this is no longer needed and just a generic amount of swap is kinda needed.
I'm moving now my swapfile to the nvme. I might put it in /var indeed. Thanks!
Yeah, it's KDE, but I wouldn't want to move away from it.
Yup! I got that far. But when I try to create a new VM/container using LXC instead, I'm prompted for an URI. i have no idea what I'm supposed to enter there. In Proxmox it just downloads the templates itself from its own repository, but i have no idea what I'm supposed to input here. I didn't find any guide about this :(