[-] Ooops@feddit.org 6 points 2 hours ago

No, it's actual reality. There are more than a hundred thousand packages in the AUR. There are explicit warnings that these are user content and should be used with care.

And now a miniscule percentage (~1%) of orphaned packages, so those with very little interest in, are taken over by some malicious actors to spread malware.

And people suddenly pretend like this is a catastrophe for Linux (no one cares) and for Arch and it's derivates (who don't operate the AUR be definition and explicitly warn against using it without caution). If I told you that not 1, but 10% of the most obscure software packages you can download and install on Windows are pure malware, you wouldn't even blink an eye. And yet all the morons now come crawling from their caves flooding everything with memes and bullshit of "haha, now we know you lied to us and Linux isn't secure at all!".

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 5 points 2 hours ago* (last edited 2 hours ago)

"Demnach dauern Registrierung und Bearbeitung bei Westnetz statt der vorgesehenen vier Arbeitstage oft mehr als ein Jahr."

Und diese gute Arbeit in der konsequenten Verzögerung des Fortschritts wurde bereits mit einen Ministerposten in der Bundesregierung belohnt, wodurch im Gegenzug die Rediten weiter erhöht und die Energiewende möglichst ganzt abgewürgt wird.

Läuft bei denen...

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 8 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)

Sadly it's often just marketing. The amount of devices marketed for Windows/MacOS/Linux that runs barely if at all with shitty ported drivers is still much too high.

As is the amount of hardware perfectly supported by the Linux kernel for more than a decade yet not officially supported at all.

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 3 points 15 hours ago* (last edited 15 hours ago)

Und 216 dann auch als "zweihundert-und-zehn-sechs", oder? Außerdem zehn-eins und zehn-zwei statt Elf und Zwölf.

Wenn schon dann auch alles ordentlich...

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 4 points 16 hours ago

While I understand the idea in general Tux, the penguin, is basically freely available, do whatever you want with it, and you are explicitly encouraged to integrate the design into Linux related projects... as long as you mention the author should someone ask (source)

I wouldn't even buy a pre-fabricated sticker but do one myself. But that wasn't the question...

PS: the Impressum here or here, down at the bottom labeled "Impressum"?

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 4 points 17 hours ago

In Idiocracy waren die Leute zwar dumm, aber nicht bösartig, und waren gewillt sich helfen zu lassen, statt weniger dumme Menschen zu verachten.

In so fern ist die Realität in den USA also in Wahrheit schon längst viel schlimmer als die Fiktion.

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 3 points 17 hours ago

Und wo bekommt die US Seite für dieses Abkommen jemanden her, dessen Unterschrift etwas wert ist?

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 9 points 18 hours ago* (last edited 18 hours ago)

In my country they would probably scrap the community service, too, because -to paraphrase judges in such cases- that poor driver already has to live with the knowledge that he killed someone, which is already such a harsh punishment...

It's insane what terminal car brain does to a society.

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 1 points 18 hours ago

That's basically the politics version of malicious compliance. The voters won't accept more dependency on the US, so they pretend to work for more independence as the people demand. All while feigning incompetence to actually fail as much as possible. After all they don't want to anger the US- und US-connected oligarchs actually paying them.

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 3 points 18 hours ago

"Nationalists" being the biggest traitors of their own nation always and everywhere is so rediculous I will never understand the amount of brain-damage needed to vote far-right.

[-] Ooops@feddit.org 10 points 18 hours ago

Pretending that Tulsi Gabbard isn't an obvious Russian asset and can be "caught" repeating her bosses propaganda is so insane that calling Laura Loomer an investigative journalist is just more of the same level of crazy.

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submitted 1 week ago by Ooops@feddit.org to c/unixporn@lemmy.world

26
submitted 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) by Ooops@feddit.org to c/selfhosted@lemmy.world

As this will -thanks to me being quite clueless- be a very open question I will start with the setup:

One nginx server on an old Raspi getting ports 80 and 443 routed from the access point and serving several pages as well as some reverse proxies for other sevices.

So a (very simplified) nginx server-block that looks like this:

# serve stuff internally (without a hostname) via http
server {
	listen 80 default_server;
	http2 on;
	server_name _; 
	location / {
		proxy_pass http://localhost:5555/;
                \# that's where all actual stuff is located
	}
}
# reroute http traffic with hostname to https
server {
	listen 80;
	http2 on;
	server_name server_a.bla;
	location / {
		return 301 https://$host$request_uri;
	}
}
server {
	listen 443 ssl default_server;
	http2 on;
	server_name server_a.bla;
   	ssl_certificate     A_fullchain.pem;
    	ssl_certificate_key A_privkey.pem;
	location / {
		proxy_pass http://localhost:5555/;
	}
}
#actual content here...
server {
	listen 5555;
	http2 on;
    	root /srv/http;
	location / {
        	index index.html;
   	} 
    	location = /page1 {
		return 301 page1.html;
	}
    	location = /page2 {
		return 301 page2.html;
	}
        #reverse proxy for an example webdav server 
	location /dav/ {
		proxy_pass        http://localhost:6666/;
	}
}

Which works well.

And intuitively it looked like putting Anubis into the chain should be simple. Just point the proxy_pass (and the required headers) in the "port 443"-section to Anubis and set it to pass along to localhost:5555 again.

Which really worked just as expected... but only for server_a.bla, server_a.bla/page1 or server_a.bla/page2.

server_a.bla/dav just hangs and hangs, to then time out, seemingly trying to open server_a.bla:6666/dav.

So long story short...

How does proxy_pass actually work that the first setup works, yet the second breaks? How does a call for localhost:6666 (already behind earlier proxy passes in both cases) somehow end up querying the hostname instead?

And what do I need to configure -or what information/header do I need to pass on- to keep the internal communication intact?

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Ooops

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