I figured you could get around some of the storage limitations with something like persistent volume claims. I’m testing it out at the moment. I am a big fan of LXC.
I see a few people have created docker Samba Containers and I’m giving them a whirl. Can’t say much for stability but I think it’s an interesting experiment.
I know in the past smb server didn’t work in LXC containers because certain kernel modules caused conflicts.
If you manage to create persistent containers how are you going to update them down the road? Like I have said previously, Samba isn’t designed in a way that allows for effectively hot swapping system components.
It seems like it would better to create a VM template and then setup a fail over cluster. Just make sure you have a time server somewhere on the network.
If you are dead set on containers you could try LDAP in a container. I just don’t think active directory was built for Linux containerization.
I figured you could get around some of the storage limitations with something like persistent volume claims. I’m testing it out at the moment. I am a big fan of LXC.
I see a few people have created docker Samba Containers and I’m giving them a whirl. Can’t say much for stability but I think it’s an interesting experiment.
I know in the past smb server didn’t work in LXC containers because certain kernel modules caused conflicts.
A man can dream.
If you manage to create persistent containers how are you going to update them down the road? Like I have said previously, Samba isn’t designed in a way that allows for effectively hot swapping system components.
It seems like it would better to create a VM template and then setup a fail over cluster. Just make sure you have a time server somewhere on the network.
If you are dead set on containers you could try LDAP in a container. I just don’t think active directory was built for Linux containerization.