this post was submitted on 25 Mar 2025
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Docker container can't read a bind mount. Permission issue? No, it's SELinux, again. And I didn't even install it explicitly, it just got pulled in by another package.
And to be clear, the issue isn't SELinux really, but ~~unexpected~~ non standard behaviour which I never asked for (never explicitly installed it).
Isn't that trivially simple to address though? Just add
:z
to the end of the mount value string, and restart the container.SELinux is installed by default on RHEL derivatives like AppArmour is on Debian derivatives. Sure maybe it's annoying to see a package you didn't download explicitly but I still don't see why it's a big deal. I guess having to delve into SELinux in the middle of configuring another app will cause some pain