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I don't mean to discourage you - this is a good hack. But as a seasoned code monkey, I see a few things that can be possibly improved so they will have less chances of biting you in the future. Please feel free to disregard this, of course.
This is a bit overbroad, as it replaces any “500” in those files. It works now, as this is probably only occurrence is the limit you want to tweak, but it’s a crude approach that may inadvertently break at any moment.
Those changes are ephemeral and won’t survive if container is re-created for any reason (unless
/opt/mastodon
is a volume - I guess this is how it survivesdocker container restart
?). I would rather recommend building your own custom image. Start by making a patch file:Take diff’s output, save it to
fix-limits.patch
in a new empty directory, then write a brief Dockerfile next to it, that goes like this:And finally run
docker build -t my-mastodon .
and usemy-mastodon
as a replacement image. This will ensure your changes will persist, plus you’ll have a proper patch file that you can use with any version (point is, it will warn you if something would change in a way that the patch would no longer apply cleanly).I’m writing this on a phone, from scratch, without any testing, so you may need to tweak things a little bit. E.g. I’m not sure what’s the WORKDIR in the base image - just assuming its /opt/mastodon (which it probably is), but you may need to edit the COPY command’s second argument and/or
-p
parameter to patch.> docker container restartOh I know my workaround is probably the worst possible correct answer for how to do this. Thanks for that, I'll give it a shot!
It's OK. I do hacks like this all the time - no shame in this. However, when sharing a recipe with others it's best to promote better practices :)