HotChickenFeet

joined 2 years ago
[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 24 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Semi-related, but several years ago I had a good experience getting my audiobooks from audible with https://github.com/rmcrackan/Libation

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 week ago

It says it downloads songs from your Spotify playlist using youtube. Granted its not dling from spotify, but it is downloading the things you indicate on Spotify.

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 week ago

Not positivr, but the FAQ says its a delta chat client, and delta chat indicates you could host your own chatmail - so, hopefully.

https://delta.chat/en/chatmail#selfhosted

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 25 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (2 children)

Proof-of-storage based cryptocurrency. The article says when it became non-profitable, the drives were reset so their smart stats would appear new, and sold them as such.

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chia_Network

Edit:

FWIW, site says you can check the FARM values with smartctl -l farm /dev/sda if you do have a Seagate drive.

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 1 points 2 weeks ago

Honestly, not sure. What you did looks close to what I'd expect reading the airvpn doc.

  1. Is port 6881 something unrelated? I think only local ports go there (e.g. your webui)

  2. obviously make sure you set the forwarded port in qbittorrent, then maybe try some external tool like ipleak.net which can give you a magnet link you can put in qbittorrent to see the reported geo location. Not sure if that perfectly vets the port you intend to use, though.

  3. glueten->gluetun in depends_on

If you attach to your docker as you launch, you might see some helpful output from either qbittorrent or gluetun (I think the "-it" flags

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 2 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

allows the running of a script whenever the VPN changes port (see PR https://github.com/qdm12/gluetun/pull/2399).

That's an unknown, but welcome change. My experience for protonvpn was cludgy because you effectively had to run another service to spin and update qbittorrent's port whenever it changed. Happy to see some form of baked in support for it now.

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 month ago

Most listed in some form elsewhere, but

  • Ugrep
  • ranger/lf
  • tmux (splitting terminal and detatching/reattaching when I'm sshing onto server, etc)

I've also been enjoying Kate. It's a decent text editor, but the ability to Ctrl + / to pipe selected lines through any Linux command (Uniq, shuf, etc) is a bit of a superpower for an editor

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 2 points 1 month ago

I love flexibility with regex, personally I use ugrep as it also allows utilization of boolean and/or/not logic for more complicated searches.

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (1 children)

Do you have experience with either ranger, lf, or yazi? I'm wondering how broot compares. Big fan of file ranger, and this looks very similar.

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 month ago

I've been self hosting for years, and am familiar with many of the topics here, but it's still an interesting read for things like talking about breaking out the three part router yourself. I'm really glad he out this together because it means I can see what others do in detail, even if it's NOT the 100% recommended way (OPNSense, wireguard, etc)

On one hand, I agree that having a small overview with links to make this non monolithic would go a long way to making this functional and less scary.

On the other hand some information is scattered fairly heavily. Take the switch discussion. He mentions a 15 dollar switch, and then the upper end 1000$ switch early on, to emphasize the range. It's not until a much much later section he talks about the more practical 20$ switch or 400$ switch he'd use here. So it being monolithic aides Ctrl+F to find this segmented info.

He also mentions the capability/value of having a manged switch (the latter switch is managed) specifically with VLAN, and yet doesn't to my mind ever state why/when I would do something with the switch management to that end. As far as I can tell, many newer switches will pass VLAN tags (even when unmanaged) from the router, which will enable you to offer a WAP with split SSIDs so you could use something like TP-link 8 port 2.5gb unmanged switch (which at 100$ seems like a meaningful bridge between the 15$ 4 port 1 GB switch, and $400 16 port 2.5gb, 8 port poe switch). He talks about PoE & speed merits but IMHO doesn't really cover the significance of a managed switch other than saying it had features for vlan (even though the cheapie would pass VLAN tags)

What does the managed switch offer me for VLAN? Specifically just the capability to isolate certain ports so specific hard lines are mapped to a certain vlan?

[–] HotChickenFeet@sopuli.xyz 1 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Edir: i see this was already mentioned.

Not sure if you meant the video, or written guide, but for the written guide -

OPNsense is not even mentioned.

When we build a router using a standard computer, we can install router software like pfSense or OPNsense,

There’s a bit of a debate between pfSense and OPNsense. TL;DR, the developers of pfSense are not the nicest people sometimes. If this bothers you, consider checking out OPNsense. Since I’ve been using pfSense for a decade, I’ve built much of my infrastructure around it. I am well aware of its quirks and don’t feel like setting up my network from scratch, so I am using pfSense for this tutorial. Regardless of the developers, you are infinitely better off using pfSense on your own hardware than standard routers.

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