You're right and I'm not saying that I recommend settling it to permissive. You should understand the risks involved.
five82
I've been using Fedora CoreOS as my main server in my home lab for a couple years now and have been very happy with it. You still get the convenience of automatic atomic updates and you also have the flexibility of being able to install whatever additional Fedora packages you need with rpm-ostree.
I installed Docker Engine and docker-compose from upstream. You should be able to set SELinux to permissive mode if you need to so it doesn't enforce any policies.
I've been listening to it in my car over the last few weeks. I'm really enjoying it so far.
I will stay motivated for only $45 billion.
John Connor
I'm not defending Google but I think the change is just an admission that the old "Chromecast" branding is outdated. It wouldn't surprise me if less than 5% of users still regularly cast from a desktop browser.
With docker-compose and Watchtower, I'm upgraded before I even see the announcement.
Tailscale. Use Headscale if you prefer self hosting over using their cloud service.
It didn’t when I last used it. But that was also years ago. The Handbrake devs were pretty adamant back then about not adding remuxing.
If you just want to remove audio and subtitle tracks, don’t use Handbrake. That will re-encode your video which will result in quality loss. Use MKVToolNix or FFmpeg to remux instead and only remove the tracks you don’t want.
Remuxing is also much faster and less cpu intensive than re-encoding.
You do. It automatically reboots after applying rpm-ostree updates.