- 2 Posts
- 13 Comments
amp@kbin.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to implement certificate based access to self hosted services?
2·3 years agomtls over nginx is the simplest way. but be aware that while it works great on desktop browsers, other reduced browsers (incl mobile) often don’t support it.
amp@kbin.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•How to implement certificate based access to self hosted services?
12·3 years ago^ that is the way. works well on desktop browsers, but others like mobile often don’t support mtls :(
amp@kbin.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•For those who use Restic for their backups, please share your set-ups
2·3 years agonope, but you’re not the first one to ask, so maybe I’ll write that one day.
amp@kbin.socialto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•For those who use Restic for their backups, please share your set-ups
3·3 years agotwo repos, one local one remote, alternating between them manually, using https://gitlab.com/stormking/resticguigx/ (I wrote that)
no that is valid yaml in any case, it’s just a traeffic specific rule
amp@kbin.socialtoManga@kbin.social•[RT!] Food Court de, Mata Ashita. (See You Tomorrow at the Food Court)
1·3 years agoAw, for a moment I thought there’d be a new chapter to read. Such a tease!
amp@kbin.socialtoManga@kbin.social•[DISC] Damedol to Sekai ni Hitori Dake no Fan - Ch. 3 - His Name
1·3 years agoHe must carry a lot of these flash cards with him…
amp@kbin.socialtoManga@kbin.social•[DISC] Ijiranaide, Nagatoro-san - Ch. 130 - I also really want to know... what you're like here, Senpai
1·3 years agotalk about a lose/lose scenario
for me it stopped being fun when firefox couldn’t access certain OS features or usb keys because they hadn’t specifically coded that one in. and I could only wait for a patch.
I understand very well wanting to stay with the declarative nature of docker-compose. Someone should really build a better podman-compose. (or sooner or later I’ll do it myself >_<)
I’ve switched over my own server last week, using ansible to generate the systemd files, and it worked great. It’s just a dozen containers or so.
The only problems I had were with container interdependencies (network-mode=container:x). That didn’t work so well with systemd, restarting and updating, but when I used a pod instead these problems all went away.
So I can’t say I regret my experience so far. Now I’ll be starting to use it at work too, where the user-namespace problem rears its head, but only because we have this very specific, very dumb big lamp dev container that houses apache, sql, redis, and more under one supervisord. That’s why we have more than one user in it and frankly that’s our own damn fault! When you make proper containers they shouldn’t have more than one user in it and then userns=keep-id should work just fine.
So far, I fully recommend podman.




I think that’s highly likely, seeing as how comfortable they are already, with themselves and each other.