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I’m in this comment.
I’m in this comment.
And you can self host it!
How are you persisting Immich’s database?
Fuck all these men who think they own the women in their lives. The women are not the ones bringing shame on your families; you are.
I think you dropped this: \
I definitely trust Proton much more than I trust myself.
If you’re not paying for a service, you’re likely being monetized by watching ads or providing personal data to companies that don’t necessarily have your best interests at heart.
This is a bit out of date. Nowadays, you pay for the service and are monetized by watching ads and providing personal data to companies that definitely don’t have your best interests at heart.
Why would you need to continue using the self-signed certificates for the Cloudflare connection? Just use the valid certificate for all connections.
Connections nowadays…
The issue is keeping them working. My wife has iPods (gen 3?). We’ve backed Tangara in the hope that it will replicate the experience and let us finally replace them. It’s surprisingly difficult (read: impossible) to get something that plays music, has a wakeup alarm, and has a sleep timer.
Damn, where’d you find that deal?
I mean, you don’t have to watch it.
You want to split your domain so it resolves to a private IP internally and a public IP externally. So, your internal DNS server should return internal IPs.
Good point!
Docker network pools are huge by default. I had to change this as well.
This article covers the issue and the solution in detail:
https://straz.to/2021-09-08-docker-address-pools/
If you just want the solution, skip to the section titled How to configure docker to allow >500 bridge networks. I think you’ll need to remake all your networks after making the change, if I remember correctly.
Here’s my config now:
$ sudo cat /etc/docker/daemon.json
{
"default-address-pools": [
{ "base":"172.16.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.17.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.18.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.19.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.20.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.21.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.22.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.23.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.24.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.25.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.26.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.27.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.28.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.29.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.30.0.0/12", "size":24 },
{ "base":"172.31.0.0/12", "size":24 }
],
"log-opts": {
"max-size": "1g"
}
}
I still need to get this back up after the database requirement took it down
What’s the ear situation here?
I’m on pfSense+, but I’ll be switching to opnSense eventually.
Looks like it’s mostly for live TV? I haven’t had cable in a long time, don’t really need to record things.