I absolutely have and used it for a while before landing on opensuse microos primarily. I absolutely see the benefit and enjoyed the git-centric nature, keeping flakes in repos with a flavor for each machine. What I didn't enjoy, however, was the seemingly poor documentation. Quite frankly too, the drama surrounding the community doesn't inspire confidence either. I decided I ought to try out guix but haven't gotten to it yet. I do actually still have one nixos VM that hosts some services for me and is built entirely on the concept of the impermanence flake. That was pretty cool.
That's not how that works. network_mode: host
shares the network namespace with the container host, so it doesn't do any NAT, it only exists on the host's IP. It would be akin to running a natively installed app, rather than in a container. macvlan
networking is what gives a container its own IP on the logical network, without the layer of NAT that the default bridge
mode networking that docker typically does.
God hasn't responded to a single one of my issues or merged a pull request since I started on this earth. Slacker.
Isn't it the best? Somehow all the big log and aggregation stacks are java... Elk, graylog, wazuh...
Certainly! Feel free to comment on any hardships, if I notice a glaring omission or something I'm happy to fix it. This is also a pretty new setup for me, so I'm still tweaking and working through what will become part 2 here in Grafana, currently.
Great question. I tried to very briefly touch on it in the post. The bottom line is that its benefits are there mostly for rootless podman, which I've chosen not to implement here (yet). You can also configure it so that the socket is always active and that will then trigger the service associated with it, so that you save on resources when the service isn't needed. However, I didn't want to do that as it would likely increase page load time for readers.
The other poster here is correct, this is just an account of my journey through self hosting traefik, and ultimately headscale, without the hurdles along the way. I tried to include a few links to unclear terms along the way in the narrative, maybe those would help you figure things out. Unfortunately I can't write for an audience of everyone, but hopefully you can still gain some value or learn some new things! Thank you for the feedback.
What nice feedback to read. I think you and I are aligned in what this will hopefully become. I really just wanted to start publicly sharing my hobby notes instead of holing them up in a local Joplin file or something, so that's what I'm going to do. We may have similar hobbies though, which sounds like it'll benefit you. Haha.
Excellent! Leave a note somewhere on how it measures up, I can always use more ideas!
My brother in Christ, scope your sessions... Firefox has containers, chrome has profiles, or hell, just use two different browsers.
Ran into a similar conundrum. We use mealie for recipe management and occasionally meal planning, but the shopping list is clunky. We resorted to just making a list on a card in Planks. Not purpose-built, but it has worked rather well for us.
starkzarn
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LibreNMS, which is a modern fork of observium.
https://roguesecurity.dev/blog/librenms