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This step is only required if you run the deb package of LXD. Step 1 Mapping the user ID of the host to the container At the end, have a look at the Troubleshooting section to see commons issues and how to solve them. In subsequent sections, we see an explanation of the instructions so that you can easily port of other Linux distributions. Step 1 is only required if you run the deb package of LXD. In the following, we see the two steps to set up our system so that we can then create GUI containers on demand. Read further below on the detailed explanation of the instructions in order to adapt to your favorite distribution. These instructions should work with other distributions as well. Otherwise, if it is /snap/bin/lxd, you have the snap package of LXD. If the output is /usr/bin/lxd, then you have the deb package of LXD. To verify whether you run the deb package or the snap package, run the command which lxd. works fine with either the LXD deb package or the LXD snap package.LXD version 3.0 or newer (probably works fine with LXD 2.0.8+ as well).the containers run either Ubuntu 18.04 or Ubuntu 16.04 or Ubuntu 14.04 or Ubuntu 12.04.the host runs either Ubuntu 18.04 or Ubuntu 16.04.And finally we go through some common troubleshooting issues. Then, we explain these instructions in detail. First, we will see the instructions and explanation on how to use them. In this post, we are going to see how to easily set up our LXD installation in order to be able to launch on demand containers that we can run GUI apps in them. How to run graphics-accelerated GUI apps in LXD containers on your Ubuntu desktop