Sorry, I can’t hear you over the artillery noise.
Errar es humano. Propagar errores automáticamente es #devops
Sorry, I can’t hear you over the artillery noise.
Wait.
Does Portainer ask your email? I haven’t used it in years. I though it was just a container that you run, with mounted docker socket, and that’s it.
Is it now doing some “telemetry” and sending user data, like email, to their servers? If so, I’m glad I’m not using that anymore.
VPS + VPN is the cheapest option I believe for the services. It doesn’t have to be “elaborated”.
You can port-forward public VPS ports to your private addresses/ports. If you don’t want to use iptables
you can use firewalld
.
The only “but” will be latency. For gaming it won’t perform as you may need.
It’s no longer open source. Big Deal in my books.
Vault features are cool. I really like it. But with Hashicorp now there is this big risk of “rug pulling” regarding its license.
The wise thing, in my opinion, is to avoid this company as much as possible.
Parallel Desktop
There are several FOSS alternatives. All of them are more popular that Parallels.
Nobody likes Adobe, nobody wants to work with Adobe. Nobody can avoid Photoshop. That’s just the world we live in and I don’t like it.
This sounds like Stockholm syndrome. You are just too familiar with Photoshop, so using anything else is hard and less efficient.
In photography there is this mantra about “the most important part is right behind the camera”. A good photographer is not a good Nikon user, or good Canon user. A good photographer can deliver decent pictures with a potato camera if needed.
Sure, a potato camera is less efficient for any work that an actual good one. So it’s good to invest in a good brand. But the point is: if you are not capable to make average results with a potato software, the problem is not in the software.
If your comments have been federated to other instances, they will be there until they are deleted locally. If someone clicks on your user profile, they will get a DNS error if the domain is no longer there. Images in the comments pointing to you instance will be broken too. Nothing terrible actually happens.
Migrating accounts a la Mastodon is not happening soon in Lemmy.
My advice is: Go on and save some money.
Sorry to read that.
I’ve dd
ed an external drive instead of an SD card once by mistake. I’ve never felt more stupid than that day.
It’s running NetBSD, isn’t it?
Some security tips:
Firewall should block everything by default, and you start allowing incoming and outgoing connections when you need them or if something fails.
Disable passwords and root access in ssh daemon.
Use fail2ban or something similar to block bots failing to log-in.
Use random long passwords for everything (eg: like databases). And put then in a password manager. If you can remember the database password, it’s not strong enough. If you can remember the admin password for a public web service, it’s weak.
Don’t repeat the passwords. Everything should have its own random long password.
.env files and files with secrets should be readable only by its service user. Chmod them to 400.
Monitor logs from time to time to see if something funny is happening.
Random ports are easy to discover and there are tools to discover what service is behind a port.
It’s annoying for the legitimate user and easy to bypass by an actual attacker.
Also, if you use a random port above 1024 it could be a security issue since any user could star listening if the legitimate process crashes.
See this
Nothing illegal is being discussed.
But I’m happy to talk about Jolly Roger.
Wow! this is exactly what I needed. Although, I didn’t exactly ask for it.
Thank you very much
Thanks to both of you.
I had the hope that DMARC, SPF and DKIM was stuff I could just ignore if not sending email. It seems I was wrong about that.
I’ve got 3 tricks for ya:
You may have one psql server per region and then use Bucardo to synchronize them.
I’ve never done this in production, so take my advice with a grain of salt.
Since you posted it in a selfhosting community, this is the feeling I get:
You’re right.
I used the phrase “wrong ideas” precisely to evoke that sentiment. Stallman’s ideas may be “wrong” for us, for good reasons. But that doesn’t make them objectively wrong. And he doesn’t seem to cross any legal boundary using his blog to defend some ideas we don’t like.
And neither should we mix the work of FSF with Stallman’s weird blog posts.
git is already a decentralized version control software. Your local git repos are mirrors by themselves.
Put some
git fetch
in a server crontab, and you’re done. You can access them via ssh if your user have permissions.