Because then:
- you also need to know the correct username
- audits and logging shows which user used sudo to gain root access
Because then:
It’s more like quick and dirty. I generally try to create a volume and save the data outside the compose folder. Default is /var/lib/docker/volumes if I remember correctly.
Just to correct a mistake: - ./vaultwarden:/data/ means that the folder /data/ of the container is in the subfolder vaultwarden inside the folder that contains the docker-compose.yml. it is not located in /. for that you need to remove the leading “.”
If you remove ./ vaultwarden points to a volume named vaultwarden that need to be defined separately:
./vaultwarden = relativ path from the docker-compose folder
/vaultwarden = absolut path /
vaultwarden = a volume called vaultwarden
Your own nextcloud instance. Then move everything that is saved at Google over to your own server.
Calenders, Filesync, Contacts sync with android works really nice.
Knowing my data is stored only on my own devices and google doesn’t know more about me than I do is a nice feeling.
Does it only happen with these two drives? i would try with some other HDD/SSDs or two usb sticks. that way you can test if its some weird hardware incompatibility that sometimes happen between specific devices or if the board wont support more then one connected usb drive in general.