Personally, I cannot recommend One Pace enough. I watched ~500 episodes of the officual show before it just became too much.
About 1/4 of each episode is theme and credits Another 1/4 is flashbacks or closeups to fill time
The story is GREAT but the show suffers from pacing issues hard.
One pace rips out the filler and gives the story the pacing it needs. The only drawback is that it takes time for the fans making it to produce (totally understandable). Personally, I’d recommend watching One Pace where available and reading the Manga for the parts they haven’t completed yet.
I know people love the official show; there’s a lot to love! But that’s my two cents.
The only user in this thread who understood the assignment
I skimmed the guide you sent and the top says that the portions in brackets are placeholders and need to be replaced with real values. If you change {{ lemmy_docker_image }}
to be the name of the image to use dessalines/lemmy:0.18.0
for example, do you get further
Huge respect for what you’ve built here, but it might be worth reaching out to the lemm.ee admin. I only know enough DevOps and cloud hosting to be dangerous, not helpful. But his instance seems stable and scalable. He might be able to offer some insight into the issues here
Honestly, for those tools, I’d recommend posting in piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com.
Echoing some other comments, those are decently complex tools all around. I’d recommend doing a few tutorials on docker before trying out that project (short ones, just to build a mental model).
As others have said, docker is a command line tool.
docker -v
in your terminal should be enough to “find” it. That’ll show you the version of docker you have installed.From there, I’d recommend the hello world image to start (this should get you there https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/docker-hello-world/).
From there, keep messing with it. Get more familiar with docker through their docs. Read a bit on images vs containers, port mapping, and volumes and mounts.
As others have said, look for docker only in the terminal. And then expect to spend a little time familiarizing yourself with what problem docker solves and how it solves it. Once you’ve got docker in your back pocket, you’ll be very well situated to set up all kinds of apps.
And when you run into other problems, there’s communities to answer and work through the issues