And basically useless if you need external users to be able to connect to the services.
And basically useless if you need external users to be able to connect to the services.
In addition to the explanation you got from the other user: once you’ve set up the bouncer middleware in the configs (don’t know if there even exists a good way to do that outside of the configs files), you simply assign the middleware in the compose file as usual.
That’s because a lot of them are dependencies for the packages you actually want to use, and those needed for the system to work as designed.
You could also try OpenCloud, which is a Go rewrite of ownCloud.
A fork of the internal Owncloud Go rewrite.
AIO
Yeah, that one is basically a take-it-or-leave-it approach. It’s a lot easier to customize when running your own Docker stack. It grew over the years and the team tries to sell it as an all-in-one SharePoint replacement (which it can be), but that also means it turned into an even more convoluted system.
I was looking into alternatives earlier this year, maybe one of them could be a solution for you:
There are others, or servers like WebDAV itself.
Why would it?
Debian on my servers as a very stable base, Fedora Kionoite on the laptop to try out the concept of atomic distros.
Probably simply not a lucrative target for automated scanning/attacks, unlike e.g. ssh.
Edit: or WordPress. My logs are full of those, until Crowdsec hits.
The RSS feed is still fetched from their server. Whoever can watch your internet traffic would still see the connection to the site.
free
That’s the thing, the Google services are only free on paper, you’re basically paying with your data.
Get yourself a reliable paid email provider. Many of them are 10-15 moneys per year.
Did you actually test which drive is faster?
I’d up the RAM to whatever your budget allows. 8GB are on the low side for several heavy services at the same time.
What a load of BS.
You could tun a TOR relay.
Java edition is easy to selfhost, did it as a docker stack a while ago. Apart from that, it really depends on what addons etc. your players are usually playing. Most things can be done with not too much effort, but that’s probably the thing you need to find out.
Don’t use external drives as non-temporary storage. Backups etc, fine, but not as a replacement for internal storage. It will only lead to headaches at some point. Especially as you have one extra slot.
So your native nginx process covers ports 80 and 443. which ports does your NPM use? Are you trying to use the same ports? Because that’ll most likely clash.
Joomla worked well for me.
The ones from the applications which should do the proxying and serving.
BTW: you’re using both Nginx Proxy Manager and Nginx in parallel? Native installations, docker, something else?
How are they configured?
Incredibly rarely, and not as a part of everyday life. The few notes I take are usually digital as part of my work.