

You can run this to check
findmnt --real
You can run this to check
findmnt --real
Do you actually need to move the admin ui off of port 80/443 if you are just forwarding ports? I don’t think you need to. That said I actually don’t know much about port forwarding since I use Tailscale because of CGNAT.
My understanding of port forwarding is that you are forwarding connections to your WAN IP/port to a LAN IP/port. Since the router admin ui is available only on LAN by default, you don’t need to change it’s port from 80/443.
You don’t need 2 reverse proxies as others have said. What I did is just add a DNS rewrite entry in my adguardhome instance to point my domain.tld to the LAN IP of my reverse proxy.
The Talos Principle: Gold Edition
I remember back when I was a kid, playing these random games with my siblings and friends. I still remember some of those games like feeding frenzy, farm frenzy and big city adventure.
I use some generic names.
Yeah obsidian’s pretty nice. I use the daily notes feature built into it for my journal.
I actually use both in fish. I use aliases for some longer commands. For example I have la
as an alias for eza -la --icons=auto --group-directories-first
because I don’t really want to see it every time I run la
. I use abbreviations for some shorter commands. For example systemctl
abbreviated to sys
and systemctl --user
abbreviated to sysu
.
I ran a podman quadlet setup as a test some time ago. My setup was a little like this:
If you create a new network in podman you can access other containers and pods in the same network with their name like so container_name:port
or pod_name:port
. This functionality is disabled in the default network by default. This works at least in the newer versions last I tried, so I have no idea about older podman versions.
For auto-updates just add this in your .container
file under [
section: ]
[Container]
AutoUpdate=registry
Now there’s two main ways you can choose to update:
podman-auto-update.timer
to enable periodic updates similar to watchtowerpodman auto-update
manually# Check for updates
podman auto-update --dry-run
# Update containers
podman auto-update
If you run adguard home it’s pretty easy. Just add a DNS rewrite to your local IP.
How are you running nginx and immich exactly? With containers or on the host?
I don’t know nixos that much but that looks like nixos configuration to me, so it’s running on the host I assume?
Some feeds I follow
You’d need to install the windows version of steam within the prefix you launch the game probably. I haven’t tried so that’s just a guess.
Personally, I always use MusicBrainz Picard to tag any music I download, so it doesn’t matter if what I downloaded has incomplete metadata.
If I don’t end up finding the correct release for metadata on MusicBrainz, then I just add it to the database myself (there’s tools and scripts to make it easier to add digital releases).
I use Firefox as my main browser. I use the multi-account containers extension in Firefox to seperate my browsing activities. Brave is installed as a backup in case firefox fails me. I use TOR browser for searching for stuff that I don’t want linked to me.
I just liked the atmosphere of the game and enjoyed it despite it’s flaws. I also remember having to beat cybil with only melee because I had no ammo.
Silent Hill
Obsidian with syncthing for syncing between my phone and PC.
I’m going to guess that the make dependencies are installed explicitly and not as a dependency. You can check the if they are explicitly installed or not with the output from pacman -Qi packagename
iirc. If it doesn’t work then try pacman -Qii packagename
.
So does yay and/or pacman know that the things I am installing don’t actually depend on the make dependencies?
I’m pretty sure make dependencies aren’t considered dependencies of the package you are installing.
It is the default
atime
option used when mounting if I’m correct. If it’s an ubuntu specific mount option it will be specified in/etc/fstab
file.