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Joined
3 yr. ago

Just an Aussie tech guy - home automation, ESP gadgets, networking. Also love my camping and 4WDing.

Be a good motherfucker. Peace.

  • Thanks for the share - have grabbed the latest Firefox repo for my private Forgejo.

  • I haven't gone into detail on this, but I suspect some shiny-suited, greasy-haired wanker lawyer has been able to make a case that things like site-specific CSS classes and the like can somehow be covered by DMCA.

    I'm 100% speculating (not American, not a lawyer) but it's more than URIs and Javascript, is what I'm saying.

  • Adjacent question: is there a compelling reason to run HAOS? I run my HA setup in docker on a Proxmox CT, using Portainer/Watchtower to manage, so genuinely wondering if there would be benefits I'm missing out on.

  • "Change and comfort rarely come together"

    • Unattributed quote from a manager I work with
  • I edited my reply above. Could it be that both want to lock docker.sock?

  • Are you able to share any additional details about your setup? How are you running HA?

    Scratch that - I just realised that you mentioned the Supervisor container, so that kinda tells me how you're running it. I suspect the problem is that both Portainer and the Supervisor container want to maintain a lock of some sort on docker.sock.

    But I run HA in its own container, so I don't have any experience with the Supervisor container myself. I do run everything with Portainer though, and I've seen other things that wanted to use docker.sock have problems with it.

  • Yep. I didn't feel this way for a long time, then realised it was because I was married to the wrong woman. She was heavily influencing the sort of man I was outwardly portraying, and it always felt like I was wearing a badly-made suit.

    After the end of that marriage, I met my soul mate, and now have two wonderful stepkids and an incredible daughter. We've now been together for a little over 11 years, and I'm still amazed at how lucky I am. My family gives me purpose and meaning, every day.

    After that, nothing else matters.

  • I use Nginx Proxy Manager and Authelia for just this. Authelia supports a wide range of identity and MFA providers.

    Edit: although Authelia has an article on how to set it up, I found it still missed some key info. This article was the one that helped me most in getting it to work.

  • Except for the parts where, in the name of religion, people are subjected to barbaric surgical procedures; "cures" for their sexual preferences; and pedophiles in positions of authority, among many other terrible things.

    In the history of humankind, religion is responsible for more human suffering than all other causes combined.

  • I run Proxmox with a few nodes, and each of my services are (usually) dockerized, each running in a Proxmox Linux container.

    As I like to keep things segregated as much as possible, I really only have one shared Postgres, for the stuff I don't really care about (ie. if it goes down, I honestly don't care about the services it takes with it, or the time it'll take me to get them back).

    My main Postgres instances are below - there's probably others, but these are the ones I backup religiously, and test the backups frequently.

    1. RADIUS database: for wireless auth
    2. paperless-ngx: document management indexing & data
    3. Immich: because Immich has a very specific set of Postgres requirements
    4. Shared: 2 x Sonarr, 3 x Radarr, 1 x Lidarr, a few others
  • I believe they used the middle finger on their right hand, and depressed it on the second (right) button of their mouse.

    They could possibly be using their mouse in left-handed mode, which might've meant using the index finger on their left hand to achieve the same action.

    Then again, it's possible that they're using their mouse in mirrored, left-handed mode, and they could've used the middle finger on their left hand to depress the primary (left) button of their mouse.

    Of course, this only covers hand use of a traditional mouse. I can't speak as to whether OP is using an upright, ergonomic mouse of some sort, of even a stylus and tablet. There's just so many possibilities!

  • I think I remember some kids' rhyme about an old lady who swallowed a fly..?

    Edit: this one

  • It's a bullshit headline. The real benefit is quicker access to new, native features in the OS. So, for that reason, I'm happy they're making the move. But making it about how a utility product looks just seems... unimportant to me.

    ¯(ツ)_/¯

  • If you're starved for RAM, there's nothing wrong with a shared instance, as long as you're aware of the risk of that single instance bringing down multiple services.

    I run a three node Proxmox cluster, and two nodes have 80GB RAM each, so my situation is very different to yours. So, I have four Postgres instances:

    1. Mission critical: pretty much my RADIUS database, for wireless auth and not much else (yet)
    2. Important: paperless-ngx, and other similarly important services
    3. Immich: because Immich has a very specific set of Postgres requirements
    4. Meh: 2 x Sonarr, 3 x Radarr, 1 x Lidarr (not fussed if this instances goes down and takes all of those services with it)
  • Each to their own. Immich devs themselves strongly recommend not relying on Immich as a backup solution.

    I don't, therefore I don't consider it critical enough to worry about.

  • Lol - Immich is one of those stacks that I let Watchtower auto-upgrade. I don't consider it mission critical if it breaks and it takes me a day or so to notice it (all my photos and videos are also backed up using Syncthing).

    I've gotten used to just going to the repo if the error message for the container doesn't immediately lead me to the fix.

  • Hmmm - maybe I should be using "fewer" less times than I should be using "less" fewer times...

    ¯(ツ)_/¯

  • OK - count me as another convert to Heliboard. This is what I hoped Openboard would achieve. Awesome.

  • Backblaze don't have a POP in my country, unfortunately.