

You might be interested in reproducible-builds.org or f-droid.org/en/docs/Reproducible_Builds
You might be interested in reproducible-builds.org or f-droid.org/en/docs/Reproducible_Builds
Difficult. Paperwm/ Niri has the best workflow.
I am looking forward to set niri as compositor on cosmic.
Visibility :/
I am no dev of rust.
My guess:
You are allowed to license your code change under gpl, you do not have to use MIT just because the package author uses MIT. You can use GPL.
You can also use MIT or no license at all. it does not force you to use MIT
You could say that, yes.
It makes sense to suggest MIT license for a MIT project
MIT is better than proprietary. MIT does not force you to not make your project free.
It’s kind of the default in the docs
SPDX license expressions support AND and OR operators to combine multiple licenses.1
[package]
# ...
license = "MIT OR Apache-2.0"
Using OR indicates the user may choose either license. Using AND indicates the user must comply with both licenses simultaneously. The WITH operator indicates a license with a special exception. Some examples:
MIT OR Apache-2.0
LGPL-2.1-only AND MIT AND BSD-2-Clause
GPL-2.0-or-later WITH Bison-exception-2.2
When I started out (I don’t write Rust but other languages), in my first years, I liked gpl and after a couple of years I got to know MIT and I started using that because I thought it is “more free”. I wasn’t aware of the consequences immediately. Once I read the GNU philosophy and started reading more about free software, I started using gplv3 again
I can recommend cockpit for managing the firewall
That’s long overdue. Many removed it in favor of flatpaks. There were still some minor issues with flatpak. I guess those are resolved now
I was curious. Not mocking you :)
I could imagine living in a valley, or an alpine hut.
What’s a/your use case?
Family Feudora
You can format it automatically
I was successful in installing anf using caddy directly on my host insteaf of podman (docker).
I mean the global android settings
Android > settings > apps > audiobookshelf > view logs
Also, you can have a look into the server logs, maybe there’s a hint. podman logs -f audiobookshelf
(or docker
)
In the global app settings there is an entry “log” maybe you can find some useful info in there. Also, check out the
Try the demo https://audiobooks.dev/ with demo/demo https://www.audiobookshelf.org/showcase
I’ve got 128GB on my phone and instead of compressing images and videos to 480p I sync them to my server with immich. Same for music and movies.
I only store the apps and local info on my device. Everything that has to be stored long term sits on a cheap hdd. I can select the audiobook whenever I want to instead of in advance.
It’s working without issues on my gos
I just update. If it breaks, I read the notes. Probably the wrong way but it worked. And I use it for a long time. To me, it was never that unstable. And since a couple of months it’s very stable. Backup first.
What does it do?