If I wasn’t using so many other Nextcloud apps besides the file storage I would switch.
If I wasn’t using so many other Nextcloud apps besides the file storage I would switch.
Nextcloud as the server and DAVx⁵ with Fossify Calendar as the client on my phone. On my laptop Kontact, but I haven’t looked at that in ages, so it could be in shambles for all I know. I think I’ve also used Thunderbird with some plugin.
And my Fritzbox router uses CardDAV to populate the phonebook of all connected phones.
Guess I was always using the right combination of apps. Never had any problems with CalDAV and CardDAV. Except for frustration at outright missing support.
So, what did you do?
Just for drive redundancy it’s awesome. One drive fails you just pull it out, put in a new one and let the array rebuild. I guess the upside of hardware RAID is that some even allow you to swap a disk without powering down. Either way, you have minimal downtime.
I guess a better way would be to have multiple servers. Though with features like checksums in BTRFS I guess a RAID is still better because it can protect against bitrot. And with directly connected systems in a RAID it is generally easier to ensure consistency.
I’d stay away from hardware RAID controllers. If they fail you’re gonna have a hard time. Learned that the hard way. With a software RAID you can do what you proposed. Just put the disk in another system and use it there.
Port forwarding is what you’re looking for. You almost certainly can configure that in your router. You tell it what the port in the outside should be and to what IP and port in your LAN it should go.
Edit: Just saw your other comments. I’m a bit at a loss.
NPM won’t help you here. As you said, it’s only for http. You will have to set up port forwarding in your router. But as far as I recall Minecraft changes its port with every game. So you could either change that in your router every time you start another game.
But it would be better (for security as well) to set up a VPN. Many routers actually have that built in.
That is, if your goal is to have your Minecraft server reachable through the internet.
For DNS you will need a Dynamic DNS service to let the name always point to your public IP. For this as well many routers have built-in functionality. Maybe even a preferred service.
It’s actually K9 mail with a new name. They went over to the Mozilla foundation a year or two ago.
Running Doom on the N95 wasn’t hard. It didn’t even play that badly with the controls.
It’s meant for games but I haven’t found a better remote desktop solution than Sunshine (server) and Moonlight (client).
By default Sunshine is configured to only accept one client but that can easily be remedied.
Does it work with Wayland? That was my only complaint with Barrier last time I tried to use it.
This seems to be similar to Freedoom.
Thanks, my daughter wanted to download something from YouTube the other day.
GCompris and Minetest or Minecraft are top.
Have you tried different browsers? You should also enter the full URL sometimes they’re a bit stupid nowadays. So http://192.168.x.x:1500/
Maybe the browsers bring their own VPN. Some process all traffic to make it more “mobile friendly”. Or they have some other kind of proxy.
A bash script would probably be easiest to write and pluck into cron.
Edit: Clone all repos you want into one directory and then loop with a script over all cloned dirs and issue git fetch
. Done. If you want to add a repo you clone another.
Crossposting should be fine.
Maybe try !linux_gaming@lemmy.world or !linux_gaming@lemmy.ml.
I love Did I take my meds? to remind me take my pills but also show me if I already took them that day.