I managed to fix this problem by pointing my domain name to my private IP address (with pihole’s local DNS entries), so I could access it. Then, I just got certs for the domain and applied them with nginx.
I know, but for some reason my router does not let me access my domain (with duckdns) when connected to my network. So even if I get certs for the domain, I will not be able to access it. I have set up local DNS entries (with Pi-Hole) to point to my srrver, but I don’t know if it possible to get certs for that, since it is not a real domain.
EDIT: Fixed it. (See reply for fix)
I installed Void Linux on my Raspberry Pi without looking at the details, and I was surprised that it had no systemd! It was the first non-systemd distro that I had encountered and also pretty fast.
Yes, that maybe be it. But they’re like the 3-5th comments, and have thousands of likes, and seem like legit comments are first. How do they do that?
OK, I edited my comment. I hope you don’t find any more scientific proof against that too!
Making the speed of light infinite one hundred times larger and the speed of sound the current speed of light. No more blue/redshifting! Faster communication!
That’s Harry Potter
How did you describe my repositories so perfectly?
Yes, basically on internal LAN I put admin admin to everything.
You need to install Linux for the money to come.
I signed up at feddit.nl and I am not even from Netherlands.
I don’t dual boot, I just have some other Windows machines that I use rarely for Windows-only software that require an external connection, like Odin for Samsung devices.
ext4 on everything except external drives where I put NTFS.
I just use ext4 on everything. It works pretty nicely.
I think you can encrypt drives by using a key stored in the TPM, if you have one. See the Arch wiki for info.
Though I have heard the TPM is not as secure..
Is there any declarative OS that is not immutable?
I tried Fedora Silverblue once and it was all fun and games until I wanted to build a driver.
But I really like the concept of declarative systems.
I have a friend that has one of these.
I use root for the same things except for the battery management one.
You dropped this: /s