Thank you, your suggestion is exactly what I was after.
Just a stranger trying things.
Thank you, your suggestion is exactly what I was after.
Can you elaborate on why it is a bad security practice? It’s the first time I’m reading about it and I’d like to read more about it. Thanks!
You are right and I would add that this is even a privacy and security measure, to make use of wildcard certificates. The reason is, those subdomains will be public because of websites like crt.sh which show all subdomains which have their dedicated certificate. Obfuscation can be helpful in not disclosing which are some services or naming schemes you use for yourself even if it is only meant to be for internal use.
If you want the trailer in Japanese:
I have heard of shadowsocks for this purpose. I have not tried it myself but I recall having read it being used to hide VPN traffic behind the great firewall. A brief intro to it here:
I tried truenas and was at first enamored but felt quite limited when it came to using docker compose. There are no official ways for using it. Additionally because it uses kubernetes under the hood it’s not as easy to go under the hood to make it work, as it requires knowledge of that in addition to docker. There is an unofficial docker compose package but there is almost no documentation that I could find and it seems to be largely unmaintained nowadays.
The other OS are good candidates, though through my research, if you are after reliability, people seem to prefer Debian with its more robust validation of updates.
I’m here mostly because I’m setting up my own homelab and I’m preparing for making use of Alpine Linux, which has no desktop environment which makes it particularly fast to boot. Additionally it is very robust, has decent documentation and allows for quite some customization but requires to learn a bit about how to make it work. With its barebone structure, it is more secure as it has a smaller attack surface and you only install what you need. Perhaps an alternative for you to consider?
Edit: to keep some sanity while needing to manage your homelab, make sure to put some weight on an os you are familiar with. I have juggled for months between OSs to find what does what I want but it has been a long battle of learning everything from scratch every time. Having tried proxmox, truenas, xcpng, and now hopefully settling with Alpine and zfs. Go the more sane way, any of those first three will work just fine.
I think there’s some truth to it. But I imagine it will be more AOSP than what android is with google services. AOSP is really a great operating system with very good security and built in features. And with neural engines and high bandwidth emmc, it is mostly just lacking a large amount of storage to make it all complete, but the latest SOCs are most probably powerful enough. Is there something like docker for android? :)
Edit: I do recognize what someone else said, which is that one big challenge would be software updates. We are not that limited by hardware when we consider servers, they can easily run for years with regular software updates.
Thank you, I’ll see if this new information can help me pinpoint the video.
Container, in proxmox speak
Yes I don’t think there could be an issue with non optimal value, it has more to do with leaving IOPS on the table. I might be too concerned about it when it might not be that important.
Do you have it set at 1M for a situation similar to mine or do you not have any small files for your video files? Setting it at 1M is indeed possible, though it would uselessly consume a large amount of extra disk space as all files of just a few KB would automatically require a whole 1MB disk space from my understanding.
Setting it at 1MB is also possible, though it would uselessly consume a large amount of extra disk space as all files of just a few KB would automatically require a whole 1MB disk space from my understanding. And as there are usually multiple tiny files for each video, it could end up growing into something quite unnecessarily large…
If the only issue is running out of disk space, why not just buy a larger hard drive to replace the 500GB with?
Also, ECC is always helpful, whether you run truenas or not, but in no way is it a requirement for truenas more than for any other OS. If you want to read more about it, click here for Jim Slater’s blog (a fantastic ZFS resource).
I personally have zero issues, been using it for a while now, both movies and TV shows and even music.
Have you tried to manually identify the show, to verify that you are indeed able to connect to it?
Otherwise, no sure if you have found it already, but there are some instructions on how to structure your directory to make it easier for jellyfin to identify your shows and download the related metadata, just sharing for other people who might be interested too: https://jellyfin.org/docs/general/server/media/shows/
This, probably. Though it’s still a lot.
You watched 378 days worth of anime in about a year?
It’s pretty new but if you are interested in degoogling and looking for ways to use android auto, there is apparently a working solution with GrapheneOS but I have not tested so can not verify it.
https://grapheneos.org/features#android-auto
Edit: typo