There are good April’s fools jokes and there is this. Some things you just don’t joke about.
There are good April’s fools jokes and there is this. Some things you just don’t joke about.
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).
Ah got it, yes, that would be insanely useful.
You are talking about funkwhale. I never tried it, so I can’t speak to the part about integrating it with different clients, but that surely is possible, if it doesn’t already work.
Also, one big problem with this is copyright (however you might feel about it).
Edit:
Just don’t bring any device to a protest if you consider bringing a burner device.
Looks good, I use a lot of the stuff you plan to host.
Don’t forget about enabling infrastructure. Nearly everything needs a database, so get that figured out early on. An LDAP server is also helpful, even though you can just use the file backend of Authelia. Decide if you want to enable access from outside and choose a suitable reverse proxy with a solution for certificates, if you did not already do that.
Hosting Grafana on the same host as all other services will give you no benefit if the host goes offline. If you plan to monitor that too.
I’d get the LDAP server, the database and the reverse proxy running first. Afterwards configure Authelia and and try to implement authentication for the first project. Gitea/Forgejo is a good first one, you can setup OIDC or Remote-User authentication with it. If you’ve got this down, the other projects are a breeze to set up.
Best of luck with your migration.
I already did that. It doesn’t change the fact, that a normal user will not do that and google will just not tell you straight up.
I have used the page linked to in the comments. But that just said that they received my request - no indication if I had an affected device or not. Also for my jurisdiction I cannot get the free battery replacement, just the money or store credit.
I still have to hear back from them.
Seems like I have an affected device. No thanks to google for helping me figure that out. Their useless page shows no information regarding that. Had to look at the serial number of the battery: sudo cat /sys/class/power_supply/battery/serial_number
. Which contains the string from the mastodon post.
Now, I have a custom ROM, so that means I won’t suffer degraded battery capacity, it just might be dangerous to continue to use my phone.
I just keep my history file around and have set it up to never truncate. Then grep
or ^R
.
Something like that should do it:
i = ~((~i + 1) + ~0) + 1
Not yet, though thats a feature worth looking at. I’m thinking that it should be collections instead of playlists. If you add 3 shows to a playlist only the episodes will appear there, while the collection will only show the tv show (or season, whatever you added).
Ah, should probably make that more clear. Everything can be done in the settings of the plugin.
It just manages a native jellyfin playlist, so that should work just fine.
I didn’t read the whole article, just a cursory glance really, but it seems like that is the exact other way around that I would want it.
I’m thinking of scanning a paper bill with my phone, extracting the text and matching parts of the text to firefly fields, like transaction description, source account, destination account, amount and maybe categories/tags.
I have Firefly III and am really quiet happy with it. I might write a companion program to scan bill though, since doing everything by hand is rather time consuming.
I just use ansible to generate all wireguard configs and deploy them. Works great, but then, all my devices have static ips.
The fragment of a URL is not sent to the server, so that’s where such platforms usually store the key. That’s also the way cryptpad does it. You can thus share the URL and with it the key.
Of course, you still need to trust the platform. The sourcecode link at the bottom of the page links to https://github.com/timvisee/send who forked from mozilla/send and links back to the web page.
There are minecraft reverse proxies, so, yes, a http proxy will not work, but the general idea is still viable and doable with very little effort.
Set up a few domains all resolving to one IP. Run itzg/minecraft-router and use that to proxy the traffic to different servers based on the domain.
Also, they don’t even need a reverse proxy, but just resolve the domain name to the IP (in the simple case of one domain name per I0). That can be accomplished by hosting their own dns server, editing the hosts file or just pointing a public dns record at the private ip address, which will only work in their network,l.
Halt and Catch Fire