How? I’m interested
How? I’m interested
Funnily enough Docker compose has never worked for me on Podman. There always seems to be something that is incompatible (also due to me running on Debian). However, I feel like it should become a standard amongst homelabbers and professionals to use Kubernetes manifests going forward, since it is the most portable.
NFS is a pain, no question about it. I used to use longhorn but these days since I’m doing a single node k3s I’m just doing hostpath. It’s that PVCs make intuitive sense to me, but I guess podman will likely work just fine for such cases other than canary deployments and OOTB service-meshes
Well I guess podman works fine for the first few months. Interestingly I still use build-ah heavily for building my custom images
Not needing Kubernetes is a broad statement. It allows for better management of storage and literally gives you a configurable reverse-proxy configured with YAML if you know what you’re doing.
Fail2ban + key-based SSH + self-hosted WAF if you can spin up another machine == 80% of your Web hosting problems gone
Thanks for the comment, that was a good read
Thanks, since the user would need to read write and execute permissions to the directory, I put in chmod 775
Thanks I changed it to chmod 755
and it worked
You can do that with Wireguard and NAT.
Traefik’s marketing as the “Docker reverse-proxy” put me off since I like technologies to stay agnostic of each other (personal preference).
Your arguments are correct, and usually I’d run a separate web server but I suppose for a homelab having less things to manage is great
Indeed, I don’t find NGINX that easy to configure either
I have heard a lot about Envoy proxy from Istio but never looked into it for baremetal usage. I’ll keep an eye out, thanks
It should technically do that already, but as extra insurance I’m running it with the -u bind
flag in ENTRYPOINT
. The problem was solved with a chmod 755
Thank you, chmod 775
worked
Thank you, I’ll keep that in mind. I didn’t actually mount volumes into the container yet, the problem was solved upon changing to chmod 755
I think ZFS does some advanced stuff which makes it better than just relying on hardware checksums (which have been shown to not be so great)
How about bitrot?
Qubes OS doesn’t have GPU acceleration using Virtio-powered interfaces if that’s something you need. Also it’s based on Xen and you are not encouraged to mess around with dom0.
TBH if there’s a way that you can attach to the display output of a VM with a GUI when you start your computer, it will probably fit your use-case perfectly. I haven’t found a method to do this but I think there should be some way to attach directly to the display of a VM after booting up.
Are these VNC?