Before killing yourself, it’s your responsibility to kill your children
Before killing yourself, it’s your responsibility to kill your children
*char // I heard it from a friend
**char //who heard it from a friend
***char // who heard it from another
"You were messing around"
Don’t use jellyfin.server.local
.local is reserved for mdns, which doesn’t support more than one dot. (Though it may still sometimes work).
In any case, to make that work you need either a DNS server on your network or something like duckdns (which supports wildcard entries).
You might be able to get the same hash if you did a backup of the disk in iso format. It doesn’t matter though since you wouldn’t be able to use that format to play anything.
All that to say that these seem to be the wrong tools for what you’re actually trying to do.
If you’re keeping the files as mkv, you’re reencoding them.
Also, if you’re reencoding the files, it’s extremely unlikely for your hash to match someone else’s
makes software for pirates
please avoid pirated versions
Good luck with that.
Those are two different repositories, one hosted by GitHub, the other by linuxserver.io. both are published by linuxserver, so there shouldn’t be a practical difference between them.
I used unraid for a long while. I recently switched to opensuse microos for a better desktop experience, and it’s been fantastic
Short answer: something like nginx proxy manager with a single wildcard dns entry makes this super simple.
Nobody tell him
Definitely started with Plex for me.
That’s great. For me, at least, getting a server restored from backup on something like aws without access to passwords was going to require more preparation than I was willing to deal with.
Definitely worth exploring if you’re prepared to handle that though.
I recently switched to cloud from vaultwarden. I was comfortable enough with the security, but when I started to actually plan disaster recovery, it was something I literally could not afford to get wrong.
So bitwarden is the one service I don’t, and have no plans to, self host.
I had a friend stay with me for a few months. We’re both effectively working from home when the Internet goes out, I ask if he wants to watch something. He gives me this weird look like, “but you just said the Internet is out” we end up watching a movie until the Internet comes back, then go back to our respective jobs.
It was fun seeing him react to something he didn’t think was possible
The best option I’ve found is configuring sonarr (or whatever you’re using to grab releases) to get the files you want up front.
I’ve not seen anyone uploading audio tracks without video. I have a somewhat similar situation where I run two sonarr instances, one for English and one for Japanese
You can point your frontend reverse proxy to the docker reverse proxy.
Element 0 is the first element of the list