

Pretty smooth sailing at the moment. I’ve got:
- sonarr
- radarr
- jackett
- bazarr
- transmission
- kuma uptime
- grafana
- promethius
- blackbox
- mastodon
- traefik
- authelia
- forgejo
- immich
- syncthing
All running on a 4 node raspberry pi kubernetes cluster.
I’m a nerd, doing nerd things…


Pretty smooth sailing at the moment. I’ve got:
All running on a 4 node raspberry pi kubernetes cluster.


I use 7zip on my Mac every day. Whatchu talking’ ‘bout, Willis?
Pressing caps lock for a single capital letter should be outlawed or be painful or something. That’s just weird.


It’s twoo, it’s twoo


The comment above stands on its own. Code can be overwhelming - start by going through an existing program and write a comment for every single line - describing exactly what each line does. You’ll pick it up faster than you think.


Thank you so much!


Awesome. Thanks!


I’m going to be trying this on my Kubernetes cluster. I don’t suppose either of you (Matt/fmstrat) have that working - do you?


Thanks for the extra recommendation. I’ll definitely check it out. What caught my eye mostly was the clean mobile app of Ente. Immach’s mobile app sure looks close. I don’t technically need E2E since I’m self-hosting… Decisions decisions…


But you don’t have to pay them for self-hosting. ???


Thanks for posting this. It isn’t overly obvious on their main page. I’m going to try this out. I like that their mobile apps support this as well.


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Just pass in the name of a json file as a CLI input (or default the name and act on it if present or use it if indicated [e.g. /U == use json.config]).
What process do you use to sign your binaries?
Lazygit. Nice TUI for git.
I have 4 spinny disks in my NAS. The tile the server is sitting on makes more noise than the drives. I wouldn’t worry about it too much.


I liked having them all in the same file - easier to keep everything in sync. I also had “dependency” links to keep things starting in order.
I used to do this when on Windows too: C was for the OS and apps, D was for user data. The same principle here - separating OS from data is a game changer - and even easier on Linux I think. Makes it so easy to wipe a partition and try something new.
Ye olde hornograph attack, you mean…