

Wdym with pure-router devices? What makes them better than smart plugs for routing? I have ~50 Zigbee devices across 4 floors and the plug/bulb routers seem to be perfectly fine.


Wdym with pure-router devices? What makes them better than smart plugs for routing? I have ~50 Zigbee devices across 4 floors and the plug/bulb routers seem to be perfectly fine.


Those for basic stuff, ssh for everything else.


Just saying that HA offers a lot of customization already. I’d start simple and only add stuff where needed.
Someone posted about git/scrapers here, pretty good read: https://vulpinecitrus.info/blog/guarding-git-forge-ai-scrapers/?ref=selfh.st
Yes, Check Anubis, scraper bots follow every link they find and especially git forges basically have infinite links (every single commit and comparison between every single commit and every other).
I haven’t thought it through but there may be some implications on opening port 22 for git via ssh.


Hi there! It’s been a while since you posted or commited, I hope you’re alright!


I just wanna say that Lemmy isn’t exactly light on resources. 4GB of RAM are barely enough, even on a single user instance. I don’t think free tiers will offer more


Big fan of how this goes. I wish I had something to blog about. :D
(I have, I just can’t get myself motivated to actually write about it)


I’m not sure a fork makes sense given the dev merged way too much nonsense already. Maybe from a point in time before it started?
I’ve been looking to check out Booklore over some annoyances I have with CWA but IDK anymore.


I never tried ABS, but since I just read ebooks and don’t listen to audiobooks, it just never seemed fitting for me.
You can use reverse proxies for local only, usually by restricting the address to local IP ranges. You can even choose a non-existent fun tld!


It worked! Very cool


Looks like @fabio@manganiello.blog made a cool thing here!


So, mentioning you like this shows up in the guestbook? @fabio@manganiello.blog


Looks pretty cool!


Opnsense is only between the servers and the pi, the pi is in the same subnet as our consumer devices and the opnsense (directly connected to the router). The issues are both on the consumer devices and on the server, so the opnsense should not be the direct issue.


Still waiting for my success. Pihole randomly doesn’t answer DNS requests in time, causing a lot of trouble between my services. It’s happening since I switched to dnsmasq in opnsense (which is upstream for my local domain for Pihole), but also for external domains. Can’t nail it down and am this short of reconsidering my whole network setup. It used to work fine for over a year though…
Opnsense dnsmasq is DHCP for my servers and also resolves them as local hosts. (e.g. server1.local.domain) and Pihole conditionally forwards there. Since the issue is also when resolving external domains, it shouldn’t be related, but the timing is suspicious. I also switched the general upstream DNS.
Pihole does have some logs indicating too many concurrent requests, but those are not always correlating with the timeouts.
I know it’s DNS, I just don’t know where yet.


Thanks for the example! The reasons you mentioned were why I wasn’t looking into it more (using it for my local docs as well).


Need? No
Want? Yes
Interesting! I have different ones and so far, all of them were working fine as routers. 🤞