I might also recommend just running podman with systemd so that this doesn't happen. You can easily steal my unit files from here:
https://github.com/fatherlinux/code-config-data
There's also a blog linked at the bottom if you want more info.
Best RegardsScott M
On Mon, May 4, 2020 at 6:29 PM Matt Heon <mheon@redhat.com> wrote:
On 2020-05-04 18:10, Ryan Wilson wrote:
>Hi podman team,
>I wanted to try out Fedora CoreOS for a couple of upcoming projects so I
>installed it on bare metal and logged in via ssh. I can start a container
>detached (as my logged in user) and then verify that the server is running
>but when I logout of the ssh session, the container stops. From looking at
>the logs, it appears that the container process is getting SIGTERM Which I
>assume means the container was stopped gracefully. But by what? How do I
>stop this behavior? If I detach a container, I would like it to outlive my
>session. This doesn’t happen when I sudo to root and start the container,
>only when running as the non-root user. Any suggestions?
>
>Ryan
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I suspect this is systemd killing Podman as the session it was started
in dies. Enabling linger with `loginctl enable-linger` usually
resolves this.
Thanks,
Matt Heon
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--
--Scott McCarty Product Management - Containers, Red Hat Enterprise Linux & OpenShift Email: smccarty@redhat.com Phone: 312-660-3535 Cell: 330-807-1043 Web: http://crunchtools.comUsing Azure Pipelines with Red Hat Universal Base Image and Quay.io: https://red.ht/2TvYo3Y
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