

Backups are encrypted so it shouldn’t be an issue.
Backups are encrypted so it shouldn’t be an issue.
I mean… just back them up like any other file. If you want them and nothing else, then do an exclude all and then include after for those files.
But you also need to backup the rest of the data, so I’m not sure why you’d want to exclude all the other folders.
Probably KDE, it’s the most ‘complete’ feeling to me with settings and GUI for most things.
That’s just one option, there’s also a normal docker image.
Gotcha, try setting up local records on local DNS instead to see if that solves it.
Only for records on the public internet. Local DNS records are done locally. Unless you’re not using local DNS records or something?
A local service lookup like from your screenshot should be happening directly on the local DNS server, it shouldn’t be going out to any upstream DNS server…
For windows the powertoys resize extension works great, just a right click option to easily make images smaller.
The easy option is run docker in a privileged LXC container, it’s basically like running it directly on Proxmox and will have no permissions issues.
That works fine.
The other option is run a container instead of a VM and just pass-through a ZFS filesystem directly.
Thanks! Sounds like the best option
That seems very complex with a lot of overhead vs just mounting a ZFS pool into the container where jellyfin is running.
Helium only allows their own insanely expensive hardware which instantly makes it seem pointless to use.
You don’t absolutely need a domain for that stuff to work, what problem are you trying to solve?
Tailscale doesn’t require any ports open, or using a web browser with a container, it’s just a VPN which is a good way of doing it.
Or you can just open it up with a reverse proxy like any other web server, but I prefer not to do that.
It does, just not thorugh their servers like Plex does.
If Immich counts for its search system, then there’s that.
Otherwise I’ve tried some various things and found them lacking in functionality, and would require leaving my PC on all the time to use.
I thought about it, but remote access is just something I use so rarely that it doesn’t seem worth the cost to me.
Also I really distrust anything ‘lifetime’, historically those don’t work out very well on most services.
Thanks this looks great!
There are multiple apps from various devs that all use the Keepass file format, so they are all compatible.