They can also make playlist for them self. And hey as a bonus they might discover other songs they like.
They can also make playlist for them self. And hey as a bonus they might discover other songs they like.
If you are afraid of being ddosed which is very unlikely. Cloudflare has free ddos protection. You can put some but not all things behind their proxy.
Also instead of making things publicly available look in to using a VPN. Wireguard with “wireguard easy” makes this very simple.
VLANs do not make you network magically more secure. But when setup correctly can increase security a load if something has already penetrated the network. But also just to streamline a network and allow or deny some parts of the network.
Why not use a combined library if I may ask? This would be similar to things like Spotify or tidal but then self hosted.
PXE boot? It must be enable in the bios already. Then you could prep a image and deploy it that way.
For automated backups defiantly. For a one time use I often use just rsync. It is the simplest to quickly use.
I ise about the same. But that is more due to the hardware I got being a bit older. 2 dell R710s 1 R510 and a custom build server. Everything is still 1g. In my case electricity is not a big deal due to solar. We produce much more then we can use our self.
Shouldn’t be necessary. What you can try is run it with sudo just to see if it works then.
Ports below 1000 or something are reserved for root by default.
I suggest to use sftp/ssh with rsync instead. Much more secure then FTP.
If you mainly use containers perhaps OpenSUSE Micro OS is of interest to you. Other then that pretty much any distro will do. I use rocky Linux my self for a few different things.
If you want to try out many different distros virtualization is also a option. KVM or something like XCP-NG with XO or proxmox are great options.
Take a look at K3S if you plan to use kubernetes on a single node.
a small PC with kodi can do this. It can do much more as well.
it depends which device you get. Some routers are much better then others at routing. i think you want to look at the CCR series.
On one hand I love unify on the other I wish i never went this route. They do make it very simple to manage a whole suite of devices. But updates sometimes feel “Alpha/beta” some more advanced stuff requires editing jsons in the devices them self. Also recently the battery in my cloud key gen 2 has blown and their is no way to replace it without replacing the whole cloudkey. Thing lasted like 2 years. which is ridiculous. Personally I have started to look in to Mikrotik which is a load more advanced and has a higher learning curve. but if I am forced to edit jsons and use scripts to do some more advanced things i might as well.
Sorry for the slight rant… just be aware what you can get your self in to.
I looked at headscale but as far as I can tell their is no active directory or SSO integration. Which is very unfortunate.