Thanks, does it usually miss votes and comments then?
Active on this account: https://sh.itjust.works/u/arudesalad@lemmy.funnyname.xyz
Thanks, does it usually miss votes and comments then?
!selfhosted@lemmy.world on my instance:
and on sh.itjust.works:
It’s on the .57 machine and in the same docker environment as the proxy
I’m not sure if this is a response to my comment but the article I linked isn’t about setting a secondary dns, the fritz!box has a function that allows it to temporarily change the dns (usually to 8.8.8.8) if the specified dns isn’t working. It is separate from the “normal” dns settings.
https://fritzhelp.avm.de/help/en/FRITZ-Box-7530-AX-avme/avme/021/hilfe_internet_public_dns I found this guide for the fritz!box to set up a fallback dns, I think it should be on by default as it is on mine but I would read the article just to make sure
And crashing and burning in a production environment is an excellent thing to laugh at in 20 years
Also, could a reverse proxy be used to give cloudflare’s services to a port they don’t support?
So a reverse proxy is a way to manage subdomains? I read somewhere that it allows multiple different services to be hosted on the same port and I think I know that that is probably a lie.
I actually set up pihole today!
I have the pi5 with 8gb of ram. Is that enough?
Could you give somd examples of something to selfhost? I am only really aware of selfhosting lemmy and other fediverse stuff
Crashing and burning would be similar to most my other projects
Alright, thanks for trying to help. Will I need ssh on my main pc to get it to work on my pi?
Also in the comment this one is replying to, I meant to say set up correctly
I’ve replied to a different comment in this thread about what happened already
Do I do that from my normal pc? I’ve never used ssh before
Step 7. I dont have the errors now but I don’t think I had ansible or ssh set up correctly
I dont really understand it as this is the first thing I am trying to selfhost other than a minecraft server.
The screenshot was taken less than 8 hours after the instance was up