

Seems to be specific to rewrites using an un-named capture.
grep -rnE "\$[0-9.*].*\?" /etc/ngnix
should show if you have any potentially vulnerable directives in your config.
Also at @me@social.k3can.us on Mastodon.


Seems to be specific to rewrites using an un-named capture.
grep -rnE "\$[0-9.*].*\?" /etc/ngnix
should show if you have any potentially vulnerable directives in your config.


It’s a function of a “pod” within podman.
I wrote the podman examples for AudioMuseAI using a pod: https://github.com/NeptuneHub/AudioMuse-AI/tree/main/deployment/podman-quadlets
And I have an example *arr suite on my GitHub page: https://github.com/K3CAN/podman-arr-quadlets


I’ll second podman quadlets. Good security, full integration with systemd, pods allow applications to easily share a namespace, and you can manage graphically through Cockpit if you really want to.
The only systems with ip6v in my network are Wi-Fi devices and my public-facing reverse proxy. I use a prefix delegated by my ISP.
All of my non-public servers have ipv4 only.
I use Wireguard.
For my phone, I use the “WG Tunnel” app: https://github.com/wgtunnel/android
It’s nice because it’ll automatically enable/disable it as I move between networks.
Before that, though I used the official client and I just kept it on 24/7. It’s not like it uses extra data or battery or anything.


I’ll second that
Jellyfin can function as a music server, but it’s definitely a video server first. All the other media (music, books, podcasts, etc) are basically still treated like TV shows when it comes to how they need to be rigidly organized.
Navidrome on the other hand, can just take a pile of mp3s and sort everything out based on tags. Navidrome can also handle additional artists, so it can understand that “Eminem feat Elton John” isn’t a single artist. That was ultimately what made me switch from Jellyfin.


Personally, I ripped my CDs to MP3S, and convert anything I downloaded to MP3, as well. I’m no audiophile, so I really can’t tell the difference when listening; the difference is only noticeable when I look at my storage and bandwidth.
It never left!
Floodgap and SDF is still rocking and there are tons of personal phlogs.
Mine, for example: gopher://gopher.k3can.us
I’d look into Lubelogger for vehicles, paperless-ngx for general paperwork, and grocy for everything else.
And auto rollback to the previous image if a container fails after an update.


Meshtastic supports mqtt, so that would probably be the easiest way to send messages to/from Home Assistant. Everything is done through the GUI, no coding knowledge required.
I have the Heltec V3 personally, so I can vouch for that. I would imagine that any device would probably work, though, as long as it has Wi-Fi.
For tracking, I’d look into Airtags or Moto Tags. They have a battery life measured in years instead of hours, and they’re much smaller.
Same here.
Pulling doesn’t work if you don’t know when a system will be online, so it only makes sense for my laptop to push.