Oh damn, I hadn’t noticed. My setup is still functioning just fine.
There is an alternative though: Orbital-Sync
I haven’t actually used it, so I can’t say much about it; but I’ll probably look into replacing gravity-sync with that.
🇨🇦
Oh damn, I hadn’t noticed. My setup is still functioning just fine.
There is an alternative though: Orbital-Sync
I haven’t actually used it, so I can’t say much about it; but I’ll probably look into replacing gravity-sync with that.
https://docs.pi-hole.net/guides/dns/cloudflared/
I use this to translate DNS to DoH, and use cloudflare, and quad9 upstream.
environment:
- TUNNEL_DNS_UPSTREAM=https://1.1.1.1/dns-query,https://1.0.0.1/dns-query,https://9.9.9.9/dns-query,https://149.112.112.9/dns-query
Haven’t really noticed any DNS based lag.
Why not both?
My primary DNS is pihole on a rpi dedicated to the task; but I run a second instance of pihole via my main docker stack for redundancy. Should one or the other be unavailable, there’s a second one to pick up the slack.
I just provide both DNS IPs to LAN clients via DHCP.
Gravity Sync is a great tool to keep both piholes settings/records/lists in sync.
Same, though I’m using acme.sh and DNS-01. (had to go look at the script that triggers it to remember, lol)
I check the log file my update script writes every few months just to be sure nothings screwy, but I’ve had 0 issues in 7 years of using LE now.
A paid cert isn’t worth it.
I can’t speak for OP; but I’m interested in exploring the entire toolbox, not just ‘the official family’/what the one set of developers make.
Even that’s an incomplete list though, for example:
https://docs.pi-hole.net/guides/dns/cloudflared/
I use pihole+cloudflared to translate all DNS requests on my LAN to DoH requests. Regular DNS isn’t permitted to leave my network. (port 53 outbound is blocked)
Can’t redirect/modify/monitor DoH requests like you can plain DNS.
I work warehousing; no IT background, I just like to tinker with whatever. Have since I started breathing.
I was a fairly casual pirate, grabbing movies/shows I couldn’t find elsewhere (or just couldn’t afford). Got into Plex/Emby for my first real exploration into self-hosting (if you don’t count SRCDS and/or Minecraft Server at like 13yo); and expanded my knowledge from there. Reverse Proxys, the ‘arrs’, DNS, Docker, VPNs, etc.
Now a days, I’ve got 20+ services that I mostly access via a VPN I host, and I’m always interested in messing with new things :)
Glad I could help :)
At least this post wasn’t a total waste…
Sigh. Spend an hour looking for a solution, fall back to a post asking for help, find the solution 5min later…
For anyone else searching in the future:
From paperless-ngxs settings page (logged in as an admin)
‘Open Django-Admin’ > ‘Paperless Mail’ > ‘Processed Mails’
Select what you’d like, then delete.
Running the media streaming software on a separate machine is a good idea IF you need transcoding; ie, you need/want to translate the files into another format or a lower quality (for poor remote connections) on-the-fly before serving them to users.
If your clients can play the files just fine as-is, another machine doesn’t really add anything except complexity.
Sure; but with a simple mistake that many people would (and inevitably did in this thread) make.
I’d say it’s at least on par with people solving them.
Puts 40yo tech against current tech
How is the current tech possibly winning…
Repost: https://feddit.uk/post/16382677
It’s barely been two days…
I found my works wifi blocks most ports outbound, but switching my my vpn to a more ‘standard’ port like 80, 443, 22, etc gets through just fine.
Now I’ve got a couple port forwarding rules I can switch on, as needed, that take one of those and route it to my vpn host.
It’s honestly baffling how many people are, willfully ignorant of things they depend on.
I know far too many people that know nothing about cars beyond ‘turn key, engine turns on’. I’m no mechanic either, but I can at least identify some parts and perform basic maintenance.
ISPs with a data cap? Lmao, nope.
Because many many people know absolutely nothing about ethernet or the actual hardware behind their wifi connection, as quite often that was setup by a technician from their ISP. When it comes to acquiring internet; a wifi name+password is all they’ve ever experienced.
Have you added “server.local” as a DNS record in your dnsmasq container, pointing to your servers LAN IP? Sounds like dnsmasq isn’t resolving that name, which would lead to both of these ‘failures’.