I hostes searxng on portainer but I still can’t seem to access http://mydomainname/20054/
Also portainer doesn’t show any Published Ports (it shows 20054:8080 for a very short period when I start the stack and then disappeared)
version: "3.7"
services:
# caddy:
# container_name: caddy
# image: docker.io/library/caddy:2-alpine
# network_mode: host
# restart: unless-stopped
# volumes:
# - /volume1/SN/Docker/searxng-stack/Caddyfile:/etc/caddy/Caddyfile:ro
# - caddy-data:/data:rw
# - caddy-config:/config:rw
# environment:
# # - SEARXNG_HOSTNAME=${SEARXNG_HOSTNAME:-http://localhost/}
# - SEARXNG_TLS=${LETSENCRYPT_EMAIL:-internal}
# cap_drop:
# - ALL
# cap_add:
# - NET_BIND_SERVICE
# logging:
# driver: "json-file"
# options:
# max-size: "1m"
# max-file: "1"
redis:
container_name: redis
image: docker.io/valkey/valkey:8-alpine
command: valkey-server --save 30 1 --loglevel warning
restart: unless-stopped
networks:
- searxng
volumes:
- valkey-data2:/data
cap_drop:
- ALL
cap_add:
- SETGID
- SETUID
- DAC_OVERRIDE
logging:
driver: "json-file"
options:
max-size: "1m"
max-file: "1"
searxng:
container_name: searxng
image: docker.io/searxng/searxng:latest
restart: unless-stopped
networks:
- searxng
ports:
# - "127.0.0.1:8080:8080"
- "20054:8080"
volumes:
- /volume1/SN/Docker/searxng-stack/searxng:/etc/searxng:rw
environment:
# - SEARXNG_BASE_URL=https://${SEARXNG_HOSTNAME:-localhost}/
- SEARXNG_BASE_URL=http://mydomainname/20054/
- UWSGI_WORKERS=${SEARXNG_UWSGI_WORKERS:-4}
- UWSGI_THREADS=${SEARXNG_UWSGI_THREADS:-4}
cap_drop:
- ALL
cap_add:
- CHOWN
- SETGID
- SETUID
logging:
driver: "json-file"
options:
max-size: "1m"
max-file: "1"
networks:
searxng:
volumes:
# caddy-data:
# caddy-config:
valkey-data2:
thx a lot!
u are right its not writable, the files are read only, that is wierd
Yep Probably you need to change ownership and/or permissions of the files outside of docker.
I dont want to give the wrong suggestion from memory so hopefully thats enough info to get you going in the direction of a fix. Basically see what user id owns the files inside of docker, make it the same uid outside of docker in the folder you are bind mounting.
SN_FR_@SN:~$ sudo docker exec -it searxng sh -c "id" uid=0(root) gid=0(root) groups=0(root)
container is running as root, so there shouldn’t be any permission error?
I’m opening those files with windows but the user permission inside docker shouldn’t cause that problem.
I’m scratching my head nw