Use the container version. Why would you install it directly anyway? Forgejo is definitely the way to go. When Fedora Project announced they were moving to it, that legitimized it for me. You know it will receive support for a while with them using it.
It’s so easy, why bother? But I have each service in a separate small Debian VM to avoid conflicts. This avoids conflicts, enforces limits, and gives kernel separation. The real kernel isn’t running anything public.
Containers are often used as a way to not have to keep things up to date, or install properly. Don’t have to be, but often are. Also, not have a separate kernel means you aren’t protected from things like the recent exploits when you allow things uploaded to run. Maintaining Debian Stable is easy really. Love me some Debian. 😀
Use the container version. Why would you install it directly anyway? Forgejo is definitely the way to go. When Fedora Project announced they were moving to it, that legitimized it for me. You know it will receive support for a while with them using it.
It’s so easy, why bother? But I have each service in a separate small Debian VM to avoid conflicts. This avoids conflicts, enforces limits, and gives kernel separation. The real kernel isn’t running anything public.
Because of all the other reasons containers are great. Mainly, avoiding maintaining a fleet of VMs…
Containers are often used as a way to not have to keep things up to date, or install properly. Don’t have to be, but often are. Also, not have a separate kernel means you aren’t protected from things like the recent exploits when you allow things uploaded to run. Maintaining Debian Stable is easy really. Love me some Debian. 😀
That’s misusing containers. You do you.