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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)P
Posts
55
Comments
320
Joined
3 yr. ago

  • The last time I checked postgres gets big becouse of a log activity table used for deduplication, it stores the data of 6 months. The devs mentioned you could be deleting it up to some point (IIRC they said 3 months, but confirm first).

    As for pictrs, lemmy caches a lot of stuff, so it copies a lot of data from other instances even when it's advertised only media from your instance is stored in your server.My solution was to disable pictrs since I don't upload media.Other solutions I've heard about are to ask users of your instance to upload media to any other media hosting service, the images uploaded to lemmy are just seen as urls, so it wouldn't be any different.

  • It's been great and not that expensive using a VPS.$6 for the vps and $1 for 40GB HDD.Although the HDD probably is making my instance slow, to improve it it'd be $4 for 40GB of SSD, but since the instance is only for me I don't have any issue in waiting a few minutes.

  • I've been thinking on pre-processing my library to be able to serve it on a low level device, have you thought about that option?In my case since I know what content I'll be watching the most in what devices and have the space to duplicate it (since I don't want to lose the original files)

  • That's exactly what 1:a:0 does, from the first stream, from the audio streams, select the first stream.In this case since the audio is the second stream 1:a:0 is the same as 1:1

    I just tried it the other way, moving the audio from the mkv to the mp4 and it works properly.Probably I can try to bundle the video of the mkv into an mp4 since Jellyfin is going to be doing it anyway when I try to stream to most devices.

  • Wasn't there some concern about branch?The adlist I have for my PiHole has their domains blocked.Or is this a different branch?

     
        
    # [branch.io]
    0.0.0.0 branch.io
    0.0.0.0 api2.branch.io
    0.0.0.0 cdn.branch.io
    0.0.0.0 vulcan.branch.io
    
      
  • I'm using PiHole with my tailscale to use their MagicDNS.This shares the PiHole among all the devices connected to the tailnet, and in the PiHole you can configure your local DNS to point your domains to your tailIP.My setup has several services in a single machine, so there's also the issue of ports, for that I use caddy as a reverse proxy, which also allows me to have HTTPS only configuring the key to my registrar for the DNS challenge

  • Jump
  • there’s also Aegis and 2FAS, but I have no idea about WebDAV servers and also don’t want to rely on Google Drive for backup, also because I’m moving away from Google services.

    If your only issue are the backups, then you can still use aegis with automatic encrypted backup to a folder in your device and then use syncthing to automatically send it to your machine. From there use any other backup solution like duplicati or restic.(Remember that syncthing is not a backup solution, it should only be used as a way to automatically sync files between devices) (People have had many issues with duplicate, but I've only seen posts about huge amounts of data, for something like aegis backups has been working fine for me)

    I'd also recommend you asking in !selfhosted@lemmy.world

  • The only issue I've had is with games from kakao, they crash after a few minutes of starting. I think the last time I tried it said something abiut modification to the OS. But that's the only developer I've had problems with, the rest of the games I have play without issue.

    Also the only downside I see is the tap to pay not working at all, but that's not graphenOS' problem, google won't certificate them.

  • I've been using traccar. It's more like a service for fleet management, but as a selfhosted alternative is as best as I was able to find.

  • J'ai vu cet outil il y a quelque temps, mais je ne sais pas comment obtenir les informations nécessaires, par exemple les dépenses et les impôts.

  • Here's one I've been playing with https://github.com/jhj0517/Whisper-WebUIThe small model of fast Whisper has been amazing for the 3 options it gives (files, YT, or recording), tho I have in mind the limitations and I've only used it with somewhat clear audio.

  • C'est logique, je pensais qu'il serait taxé indépendamment au lieu d'être ajouté à mon revenu annuel.

    Merci pour cette explication claire!

  • Ah, yeah, that was my question, so I need to be careful to not overcontribute at any point, is not like there's a date where the balance is checked.Thanks for the clarification!

  • If I haven't maxed out my TFSA, should I be sending my monthly expenses money there? AFAIK the overcontribution is calculated monthly, so even if I send a bit more money there as long as I take it out at the end of the month I should be fine, correct?Or should I keep this kind of money in normal savings accounts to not mess up with the contribution room?

  • Kind of, but just because I deployed it xP

  • Yes, that's the idea, if you're not running tailscale in both machines then you won't be able to connect to them (unless you do some other networking configurations).Once you have tailscale running in both machines or devices, you only need to use the Tail IP to connect to them, they will find each regardless if they are in the same local network (connected to your home router) or across the internet.If you want to have access to your jellyfin without connecting to tailscale it'll require more configuration depending on your set up and you'll have to take care of the security implications of the internet being able to reach your computer or server.

    A bit more information:My jellyfin runs in my computer, so with tailscale I have at least these IP addresses

    • 127.0.0.1: The machine itself (or localhost)
    • 192.168.X.X: The address in your local network (usually your ISP's router)
    • 100.X.X.X: The Tail IP.

    Now, in my phone I can be at several places and I can access jellyfin like this:

    • Same local network: 192.168.X of my computer, 100.X tail IP of my computer (if I'm connected to tailscale).
    • Mobile data or any other wifi: 100.X tail IP of my computer only when connected to tailscale.

    Again, I won't recommend you on making your jellyfin instance public to the internet, just make sure to always be connected to tailscale.If you want to share your instance then you can check to share it within tailscale to the specific people you want.

  • Some services usually just listen to 127.0.0.1 which makes it's only available for the current machine.The service needs to listen to 0.0.0.0 or the IP of the network adapter to be able to be reached outside the machine, this is what remote access means, both your local network and the internet are "remote access" to the services running inside a machine.

    So, yes, it's normal you have to enable remote access to be able to connect via tailscale.

    Extra note: it's good to be extra sure your services can be only accessed by you, this is what the ip address filter does, but if this is running inside a normal ISP's router network then it's already closed to the outside internet, so the filter would be a bit annoying in the case you want to share it with your other devices or any guest inside your network, you'll need to remember to update that list, and also if your IP changes for some reason.With tailscale you can just remember to close all your ports and use your tailIP to connect to the service