ranger is another good one. I very rarely end up using a terminal file manager though.
ranger is another good one. I very rarely end up using a terminal file manager though.
Worth pointing out that while ventoy is open source, iventoy is not. Might be important to some people.
They are usually released at the end of the year.
But when you say “24.04” it sounds like you are asking when the next Ubuntu LTS is released?
He keeps changing his demands all the time. If turkey are let into the EU he will just come up with another excuse. No thanks.
Thanks for pointing that out!
Fixed, I think!
That’s a great point I hadn’t considered tbh! And that learning new technologies even if there is no “purpose” to it can be… fun! :)
All software listed is FOSS.
I just run one mariadb container via docker-compose that all my other services use as their database.
version: "2"
services:
mariadb:
image: lscr.io/linuxserver/mariadb:latest
container_name: mariadb
environment:
- TZ=####/####
- PUID=###
- PGID=###
- MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD==############
volumes:
- /docker/mariadb:/config
ports:
- 3306:3306
restart: unless-stopped
Off-topic but I don’t really get the appeal in running Kubernetes (or similar technologies) in a homelab. Unless it’s something you want to learn for work of course.
I’ve never heard of Nextclouf AIO, do you have links?
UN is irrelevant in some sense I guess but that depends on what you expect them to be. If they could enforce things everyone would leave at once. It’s a place where countries can talk to eachother that might otherwise not. And that is at least worth something.
I agree for the most part but it doesn’t entirely defeat the purpose. If someone got a hold of your password for a website it would still protect you. And let’s be honest, that’s the most likely scenario. But yes if someone got into your password manager then it’s completely game over. A scenario where having a separate 2fa device would still protect you.
ZFS for RAID array and BTRFS for root is the way to go!
As usual the Arch wiki is one of the best resources for this. Not everything is applicable on Debian but should answer most questions. https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Unified_Extensible_Firmware_Interface/Secure_Boot
Since my “homelab” is just that, a homelab, I’m comfortable with using :latest-tag on all my containers and just running docker-compose pull and docker-compose up -d once per week.
Thank you so much!
The free license is so generous that a home user really should have no reason to ever pay for it.
are you even hosting it
No but as andrew mentions below you CAN self host it.
According to them it’s a way to get individual enthusiasts on board who will then get their workplaces to adopt Tailscale.
“In capitalism we call this a win/win deal. You get free stuff. You enjoy it. You tell your boss. Your boss gives us money (eventually). And nobody’s personal information got misplaced along the way. You did pay us—by talking about us.” https://tailscale.com/blog/free-plan/
A lot of those points seem like things left leaning politicians are trying to push for, so the fact that many countries are now voting right wing parties to power makes me a bit worried for EU’s future. (Recent examples are Italy, Sweden, Finland and many more coming according to polls).
Cloudflare has a catch-all option that you can enable, but they only allow you to receive emails not send them. https://developers.cloudflare.com/email-routing/setup/email-routing-addresses/