something end-to-end encrypted.
required SSL certs and I did not have the mood to configure them.
…right…
Did you look into snikket? It’s XMPP-in-a-box.
That’s Wireguard, no?
Should’ve been ‘bunny’.
frustrated debugging log message
Just use porn actresses’ names. Or so a friend told me…
Cryptomator encrypts voulumes you can store/sync anywhere.
Oh, that… I think i’m using it but it seems.to expect a response from 80 when all I have there is a redirect to 443.
I thought you meant an nginx plugin.
you can automate the process (e.g. with nginx).
How does nginx automate that?
Putting up with people and not murdering them.
What exactly are you serving? Chances are you can change the listening port.
Pod Tide
Interesting read, Hetzner’s been on my radar for a while.
Good way to reduce ewaste.
Maybe @jimsalter@fosstodon.org can help. I’m not in my pool right now.
Try its fork forgejo instead.
Maybe Akkoma is easier?
'Cos the bros don’t deem Icinga cool enough.
Are you still on Hetzner? How’s their customer support in general?
When NGINX showed up it beat the then dominant apache on resource utilzation hands-down.
It’s also very configurable and has a lot of modules, both in-house and third party.
The only downside for me: as of late the whole commercial part of the project has been gobbling up everything to shove the non-free version to the point where it’s hard to find info on the free version, e.g., the wiki page that lists all the third-party modules. The nginxtutorials site seems to be a good resource.
Btw one of the main devs forked it into freenginx:
Dounin writes in his announcement that “new non-technical management” at F5 “recently decided that they know better how to run open source projects. In particular, they decided to interfere with security policy nginx uses for years, ignoring both the policy and developers’ position.” While it was “quite understandable,” given their ownership, Dounin wrote that it means he was “no longer able to control which changes are made in nginx,” hence his departure and fork.
Also, fun fact: this is probably the only instance of russian software muricans don’t cry Commie! all the time (maybe because the parent company was acquired).
I’ve been happy with Crucial’s MX500 SSDs.
Is there any other way (except for buying a PCIe to SATA card) to add more drives in the motherboard?
The site does say “1 x M.2”.
It’s what i use but on the phone i only turn it on when i want to sync, otherwise it might drain battery. Always running on the PC.
Mega also works.