I’m reading this scratching my head going “If your unit tests need a database they ain’t a unit test”.
but humanity is evil too
Emphasis on this. We humans have become Xenophobic Christofascists* turned up to 11. All aliens are bad** and anything against established doctrine is heresy of the highest order. Human labour is essentially free vs the gross expense of materiel so the leadership will think nothing of having entire generations of a planet mine out some toxic substance that kills before you age much past the ability to outbreed it.
In short, anyone who claims humans are the good guys, is misguided at best.
*EmperorFascists as the ruler is the Immortal God Emperor.
** Officially, but there exists means and people who can deal a little more diplomatically than with a gun.
Thing is, a cross post is nothing special. It’s a) a post with an identical link, and b) a post with “cross posted from…” appended to the body content.
It is still just a post. Lemmy (and k/mbin) just attempt to mask the fact there are multiple of them.
I don’t know if it can be done any better though, ActivityPub has quite a few quirks.
It’s the multiple volumes that are throwing it.
You want to mount the drive at /media/HDD1:/media
or something like that and configure Radarr to use /media/movies
and /media/downloads
as it’s storage locations.
Hardlinks only work on the same volume, which technically they are, but the environment inside the container has no way of knowing that.
Easily doable in docker using the network_mode: "service:VPN_CONTAINER"
configuration (assuming your VPN is running as a container)
The Punch Escrow is a great pulpy book along the same lines.
Company comes up with foolproof way to ensure zero transporter accidents. Don’t tell everyone that they’ve just invented a suicide booth that triggers when receipt of the copy has been verified - till that part fails and the original walks out after the copy has. Cue corporate thriller coverup story.
I’ve not used dockge so it may be great but at least for this case portainer puts all the stack (docker-compose) files on disk. It’s very easy to grab them if the app is unavailable.
I use a single Portainer service to manage 5 servers, 3 local and 2 VPS. I didn’t have to relearn anything beyond my management tool of choice (compose, swarm, k8s etc)
Without a pet-tax image I’m not sure I can upvote.
Aside from everyone who’s using flutter?
Main page of dashboard
If you long press on a tile (this is kitchen)
We use them quite extensively. They work great.
Didn’t even think 4k80 was generally available yet?
There’s a couple of caveats with it, but I think neither are worse than your proposed flow.
Immich does support folders?
https://immich.app/docs/administration/storage-template/
With this you can store your photos in whatever structure you want.
I watched something very similar to this hit at least 40mph (~65kph) down my 30mph (~50kph) limit road the other day. The guy did not have a helmet on and was in a light jacket and jeans with trainers.
It was as you said, a motorcycle with pedals - only ridden by more of an idiot than the people who ride around during summer on 600cc bikes wearing shorts and t-shirts (cause at least they have a crash helmet on)
Yes.
Docker will have only exposed container ports if you told it to.
If you used -p 8080:80
(cli) or - 8080:80
(docker-compose) then docker will have dutifully NAT’d those ports through your firewall. You can either not do either of those if it’s a port you don’t want exposed or as @[email protected] says below you can ensure it’s only mapped to localhost (or an otherwise non-public) IP.
Documentation people don’t read
Too bad people don’t read that advice
Sure, I get it, this stuff should be accessible for all. Easy to use with sane defaults and all that. But at the end of the day anyone wanting to using this stuff is exposing potential/actual vulnerabilites to the internet (via the OS, the software stack, the configuration, … ad nauseum), and the management and ultimate responsibility for that falls on their shoulders.
If they’re not doing the absolute minimum of R’ingTFM for something as complex as Docker then what else has been missed?
People expect, that, like most other services, docker binds to ports/addresses behind the firewall
Unless you tell it otherwise that’s exactly what it does. If you don’t bind ports good luck accessing your NAT’d 172.17.0.x:3001 service from the internet. Podman has the exact same functionality.
Hugo can be as simple as installing it, configuring a site with some yaml that points at a really available theme and writing your markdown content.
It gets admittedly more complex if you’re wanting to write your own theme though.
But I think this realistically applies to most all static site generators.