I did switch and had way more problems… And still no IPv6, either.
I did switch and had way more problems… And still no IPv6, either.
I honestly thought only paid users could use the official forums…
I’ll post it there, too! Thank you
Oh yeah it works so I guess by that metric it’s not dead
Of course, silly me
Or it’ll kill it!
RIP XMPP
configs are backed up I can spin up a new container in minutes, I just accept the manual labor. It’s probably a good thing to clean out the spiders and skeletons every now and then.
SEO sucks My site, which has actual content, doesn’t even show up on google. Someone else with the same domain and a different tld who has no content on his site is at the top. They have a marketing team, how am I gonna compete? Don’t worry about SEO, just have good content. People are gonna find it, SEO or not.
People will recommend Navidrome- but if you’re like me then your music collection is organized by folders and not metadata. Navidrome does not and will never (developer said as much) support folder-based browsing.
I recommend using Gonic https://github.com/sentriz/gonic and then a compatible Subsonic client. Gonic has been the simplest and smoothest out-of-house music streaming experience for me.
Reverse proxy maybe?
mydomain.org/nextcloud gets reverse-proxied to mydomain.org:1234 and will appear as the former.
What’s that CPU cooler? I’ve been looking for super low profile coolers.
That’s exactly the same reason I dropped certbot, haha
I highly recommend https://github.com/acmesh-official/acme.sh
What do you mean up keeps changing the prefix?
How are you tracking their ips on ipv6?
Are you able to type the ip off the top of your head?
I write them down, just as I do v4. I don’t type v4 off the top of my head any more than I do v6- but even if I did, I’d only have to really memorize the prefix because that’s all universal across my whole network. For example, look at this that I ripped from my documentation:
== PROXMOX CONTAINERS & VIRTUAL MACHINES ======================
C:TorRelay - 192.168.78.160 / 2a05:f6c7:8039::12ad
C:Gonic - 192.168.78.161 / 2a05:f6c7:8039::1255
C:Wireguard - 192.168.78.162 / 2a05:f6c7:8039::1666
V:ADS-B - 192.168.78.163 / NA
C:Apache - 192.168.78.164 / 2a05:f6c7:8039::1337
C:Backups - 192.168.78.165 / 2a05:f6c7:8039::0107
C:PiHole - 192.168.78.166 / 2a05:f6c7:8039::1811
C:NetworkFun - 192.168.78.167 / 2a05:f6c7:8039::1192
C:MovieSync - 192.168.78.168 / 2a05:f6c7:8039::2356
C:Owncast - 192.168.78.170 / 2a05:f6c7:8039::1368
Do you see the pattern? I could have made it even simpler. I could’ve made the last quartet of the v6 address the same as the last octet of the v4 address, but I didn’t think of it at the time. I’ve memorized more credit cards than I have IP addresses in total, which you will surely agree are more complex, so I’m not worried about when the time comes to drop v4 and its time to memorize v6. It will come naturally with use, as the credit cards have
In practice, I’ve found, that it is simply not a problem. If I don’t know the last quartet off the top of my head, I won’t know the last octet either so I have to look it up anyway. All my network documentation is available with a simple curl command. If I do know the last quartet but not the prefix, I could type ‘ip a’ and find the prefix right there.
I’m sorry you’ve had a poor experience, but I’ve had nothing but smooth sailing since my ISP gave me a /64. I had to re-learn most of what I knew and unlearn a few bad v4 habits, but v6 has solved issues that I was tired of dealing with. I can’t imagine what you’re doing to think it’s more complicated and easier to screw up than v4.
This project has hit a bit of a dead end but I appreciate your input a lot. I may get an opportunity to run tcpdump from within their network soon- which is what I was waiting for and why I didn’t reply yet, but things aren’t really happening.
My ISP gave me an rDNS and I was off several of those dumb blocklists within the hour. One person who could not previously connect to me now can, so that was the issue for that user at least. They were using Mullvad VPN, so Mullvad blocks based on uceprotect or a similar blocklist.
In theory also possible to just be a nuisance by filling out the instances available space? That sounds like it’s gonna get fixed one way or another.
Sometimes I just sit and stare at my apache access logs because I’m bored
GoAccess is pretty nice for a broad overview of Apache logs, also.
For other services I generally just look at them every now and then and if something looks off I investigate. I found a cryptominer on my network once because it was spamming DNS and that shows up in DNS logs.