ShitpostCentral

joined 1 year ago
[–] ShitpostCentral 6 points 3 weeks ago

Just wait for your eye appointment. Looking up symptoms online always gives worst-case scenario results. Don't worry about anything you see online unless your doctor tells you to.

[–] ShitpostCentral 16 points 4 months ago (1 children)

You're second point is a good one, but you absolutely can log the IP which requested robots.txt. That's just a standard part of any http server ever, no JavaScript needed.

[–] ShitpostCentral 17 points 5 months ago (1 children)
[–] ShitpostCentral 16 points 5 months ago

This makes perfect sense. Thank you!

[–] ShitpostCentral 5 points 5 months ago* (last edited 5 months ago) (2 children)

That makes some amount of sense. I'm not sure exactly how each article is stitched together to create the full file. Do you happen to know if it's just put together sequentially or if there's XORing or more complex algorithm going on there? If it's only the former, they would still be hosting copyrighted content, just a bit less of it.

EDIT:
https://sabnzbd.org/wiki/extra/nzb-spec
This implies that they are just individually decoded and stitched together.

[–] ShitpostCentral 5 points 5 months ago

Because family or friends are always going to have them and share with you. In terms of effort, it's still a lot easier to use free-to-you streaming services (even with ads) than set up your own Jellyfin, Radarr, Sonarr, and Jellyseerr stack. I can definitely see the appeal of a streaming stick that let's you do that, is fast, and isn't riddled with ads on the home screen. Hell, I might've paid for one if I knew it existed and had less free time.

[–] ShitpostCentral 2 points 5 months ago

Pi 4B with 4 gigs of RAM. And yes! I was surprised, but it had absolutely no trouble with playing 4k, especially after using a wired connection.

[–] ShitpostCentral 2 points 5 months ago

Not easily. There are a few 3rd-party add-ons by random people which technically allow you to watch these services if you enter your account details, but the UI is generally just a list of movie and show titles with no or small thumbnails and no other info. It's worth doing this if you already have your own media server but not really otherwise.

[–] ShitpostCentral 3 points 5 months ago

Pi 4B with 4 gigs of RAM. You might be able to get away with 2gigs because of how well it runs for me, but idk. I didn't follow any guides for setting up the Pi or LibreElec. It's honestly super intuitive. Like I said, everything is set up through the GUI. The only slightly technical part is flashing the LibreElec image to the SD card, and even that is super easy. I did follow the Jellyfin documentation for setting up my Jellyfin server, but that's a whole other thing.

[–] ShitpostCentral 1 points 5 months ago

It was a Raspberry Pi 4 model B. I got it for $60 and a 25ft Ethernet cable for $10 on Amazon just because I had a gift card. You can probably find it somewhere else for cheaper. You also need a small micro SD card for the Pi. Maybe only 8 or 16 gigs because it doesn't store the media locally.

[–] ShitpostCentral 20 points 5 months ago (14 children)

I recently stopped using my firestick. Even though I only used it for Jellyfin, the ads on the home screen were too much for me. So I swapped it out for a Raspberry Pi with LibreElec as the OS, and there have been literally no downsides.

  1. Jellyfin for Kodi add-on with Embuary skin shows your entire Jellyfin library on the home screen with continue watching and next up widgets right there when you turn on the TV.
  2. You can set it up entirely through the GUI. Works with either keyboard and mouse or remote.
  3. Uses HDMI-CEC so works with my TVs original remote and even my firestick remote.
  4. If you want to use an app remote, Kore is officially supported and has no ads.
  5. Invidious add-on with the Send to Kodi and libredirect Firefox extensions means I can cast YouTube videos to my TV with no ads.
  6. You can even run an Ethernet cable from your router/Jellyfin server to the Pi. I did this and have not experienced any buffering since.
  7. It even passed the spouse test. My wife says she likes that it's faster and more responsive. Plus she likes the asteroids screensaver.
[–] ShitpostCentral 4 points 7 months ago

Pretty good tool. I took the quiz out of curiosity, and the top result was my current distro

21
submitted 8 months ago* (last edited 8 months ago) by ShitpostCentral to c/selfhosted
 

I'm trying to setup Wireguard to use as a VPN on my server using this guide. I currently run Pihole on the same machine.

LAN 192.168.1.*
WG 10.14.0.*
WG Server Addr 10.14.0.1
WG Client Addr 10.14.0.10

The handshake succeeds, and I can even ping IP addresses. However, it doesn't receive DNS responses. I checked in Wireshark and see the following:

WAN Client IP -> Server IP [Wireguard]
WG Client IP -> Server IP [DNS Request]
Server IP -> Server IP [DNS Request]
Server IP -> Server IP [DNS Response]
WG Server Addr -> WG Client Addr [DNS Response]
WG Client Addr -> WG Server Addr [ICMP Port unreachable]

I'm admittedly pretty inexperienced when it comes to routing, but I've been at this for days with no success. Any help would be greatly appreciated.

Edit

I now realize that it would have been relevant to mention the my Pihole instance was running inside a rootless podman container.

To test things further, I wrote a small echo server and spun it up on bare metal. Wireguard had no issues with that. My guess is that something between wireguard and specifically rootless podman was going wrong. I still don't know what, unfortunately.

My fix was to put Pihole in a privileged podman container with a network and static IP e.g. --net bridge:ip=10.88.0.230. I also put wireguard into a privileged podman container on the same network --net bridge. Finally, I set the peer DNS to the Pihole's static IP on the podman network (10.88.0.230).

As I said before, I still don't know why podman wasn't replying to the correct IP initially. I'm happy with my fix, but I'd still prefer the containers to be rootless so feel free to message me if you have any suggestions.

10
Comment sorting (join-lemmy.org)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by ShitpostCentral to c/[email protected]
 

What is the default comment sort? It doesn't seem to be by time or votes.

Also is there any way to change the way comments are sorted like I can with posts?

EDIT: Found this. It explains how the active and hot sorts work, but it doesn't go over default sort or changing the sort.

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