

… or just publish the source on Github and let someone else continue the legacy.
openpgp4fpr:358e81f6a54dc11eaeb0af3faa742fdc5afe2a72
… or just publish the source on Github and let someone else continue the legacy.
Prometheus and Grafana. VictoriaMetrics as a drop-in replacement for long-term metric storage.
Not with this setup, no. I specifically didn’t want The Algorithm™ involved.
It’s much more lightweight, handles Plex integration much better and automatically cuts out ads, promotions, etc.
I moved from TubeArchivist to Pinchflat. Very good.
Containers are just processes with flags. Those flags isolate the process’s filesystem, memory [1], etc.
The advantages of containers is that the software dependencies can be unique per container and not conflict with others. There are no significant disadvantages.
Without containers, if software A has the same dependency as software B but need different versions of that dependency, you’ll have issues.
[1] These all depend on how the containers are configured. These are not hard isolation but better than just running on the bare OS.
It sounds like your port forwarding settings weren’t saved and the reboot has gone back to a previous configuration.
All stored passwords should be salted and hashed. That means each one uses the same amount of space, regardless of original length.
There should definitely be a minimum length but not a maximum (within limits; let’s not break web standards or the laws of thermodynamics).
Webauthn already exists.
Victoria Metrics is a timeseries database for long term storage. Can be used as a direct plugin to Prometheus et al.
Untrue. I work for a global enterprise company that transacts hundreds of millions of dollars via LE certs.
mautrix-whatsapp and, yes, self-hosted.
I use Matrix with a WhatsApp bridge. Best of both worlds.
SELinux
The reason is “asymmetric routing”. The return ping packets are traveling a different route on the way out than on the way back.
Your tear duct drains into your nasal cavity.
Haha. Oops. I should have checked first. Well done.