umami/podman
2026-02-12 14:09:22 +05:30
..
env.sample Rebrand to Syncfuse 2026-02-12 14:09:22 +05:30
install-systemd-user-service Rebrand to Syncfuse 2026-02-12 14:09:22 +05:30
podman-compose.yml Rebrand to Syncfuse 2026-02-12 14:09:22 +05:30
README.md Rebrand to Syncfuse 2026-02-12 14:09:22 +05:30
syncfuse.service Rebrand to Syncfuse 2026-02-12 14:09:22 +05:30
umami.service Added support for deployment using podman 2025-04-17 18:36:56 +02:00

How to deploy syncfuse on podman

How to use

  1. Rename env.sample to .env
  2. Edit .env file. At the minimum set the passwords.
  3. Start syncfuse by running podman-compose up -d.

If you need to stop syncfuse, you can do so by running podman-compose down.

Install systemd service (optional)

If you want to install a systemd service to run syncfuse, you can use the provided systemd service.

Edit syncfuse.service and change these two variables:

WorkingDirectory=/opt/apps/syncfuse
EnvironmentFile=/opt/apps/syncfuse/.env

WorkingDirectory should be changed to the path in which podman-compose.yml is located.

EnvironmentFile should be changed to the path in which your .envfile is located.

You can run the script install-systemd-user-service to install the systemd service under the current user.

./install-systemd-user-service

Note: this script will enable the service and also start it. So it will assume that syncfuse is not currently running. If you started it previously, bring it down using:

podman-compose down

Compatibility

These files should be compatible with podman 4.3+.

I have tested this on Debian GNU/Linux 12 (bookworm) and with the podman that is distributed with the official Debian stable mirrors (podman v4.3.1+ds1-8+deb12u1, podman-compose v1.0.3-3).