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There is always the Network + book. I went through it in 2005, so no idea what the content is like nowadays though
There is always the Network + book. I went through it in 2005, so no idea what the content is like nowadays though
I use 2 cloudflare containers that the pihole points to. That gives me DNS over https but it’s more of a mission to set up.
K8s is awesome.
Okay, so how many times does it need to be said in one place? I’m counting 60 here right now… I’m pretty sure after the first 10 comments you’d have picked up on it.
I think the point was, if you’re not actively adding to the discussion, and instead are just giving the whole"kek, I use jellyfin", then rather stfu, it’s already been said 100x in the comments.
I may consider it. I hate that I have to have an entire other VM running for HA. Thanks for the insight.
Huh, very cool!
I think we’re talking about different things then, addons are not supported when running HA in a container.
https://www.home-assistant.io/installation/#compare-installation-methods
Eh, I’m not sure tbh, it was too much of a pain to do and the pi3 wasn’t powerful enough to handle it either so I moved to a VM on Debian.
How do you go about integrating it with HA?
I ran it in Docker initially and it’s annoying because you can’t use HACS, which brings in a lot of custom integrations and features. You also can’t use any addons that spin up containers either. I ended up getting a thin client and running it on there in a VM.
I wish their interface was flexible and as easy to use/customise as Grafana.
Docker and the docker-compose yaml files. They’ll be invaluable. Compose files allows you to create custom networking and run multiple containers.
Super useful and what most people use to run simple docker workloads.
You don’t have to understand how to create containers, just understand how they work and the commands to use them effectively.