Audiobookshelf is by far my most used selfhosted app, mostly due to podcasts. It’s awesome, really wish the dev would accept donations.
Audiobookshelf is by far my most used selfhosted app, mostly due to podcasts. It’s awesome, really wish the dev would accept donations.
Couldn’t you just create a compose file for a database separately?
That’s not what calibre-web does. As per the GitHub page:
Calibre-Web is a web app that offers a clean and intuitive interface for browsing, reading, and downloading eBooks using a valid Calibre database.
There is no VNC involved.
If you really don’t want people to know your home ip, then you can use cloudflare’s proxying service for all you internet facing services.
What’s the reasoning behind using docker compose on unraid, instead of the built in docker implementation?
You can send with calibre-web to kindle if you have an amazon account. You get a specific address for your kindle. They appear under documents in your library, legal or otherwise.
Except virtual desktop servers, though that is niche outside the enterprise space
I think it stores thumbnails in the pictrs directory by default.
The ZFS update is live now
I’ve found that federation with lemmy.world has been very poor, whereas with other sites like lemmy.ml and lemmy.dbzer0.com are pretty spot on. Hopefully with a wider role out of 18.1 things will improve.
Pretty much yes.
If you want a more in-depth explanation of DNS and how nameservers work etc check out this article from cloudflare.
Specifically the part; “There are 4 DNS servers involved in loading a webpage:” It explains it much better than I can.
Because changing your nameservers to cloudflare’s allows you to use their DNS service, which comes with the CDN infrastructure.
Here is the cloudflare dns for my lemmy server’s domain:
The switch where it says proxied means that I am using the CDN to obfuscate the real IP of the server.
When you make a dns request, it goes to the nameservers first to see which server is has the dns config. A CNAME record is in the dns config
No problem! You change the name servers on your registrar to cloudflare’s so that when traffic goes to your.domain, cloudflare is the one that processes the dns request.
If you kept the name servers of your registrar then the traffic would just be processed by the registrar, cloudflare wouldn’t even see the traffic.
Basically the name server defines your domain’s current dns provider.
Hope that makes sense
It’s basically the same. Like they said, you just follow the intructions on cloudflare to change the name servers on your registrar and then you’re good
Sorry I meant in your browser. Yes dns does not point to ports.
You would have to use some sort of reverse proxy that is only accessible from internal networks
Buy your domain with cloudflare, or transfer it over to them. Then just set up dns to point to you server and make sure the proxy switch is on. Pretty sure that’s all you need to do at the free tier
Not sure how ansible works on Windows but you could use Windows Subsystem for Linux, install ansible on that and then off you go.
You can use calibre-web to send to your Kindle email. They will appear in the Kindle as “Documents”