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  • 6 Posts
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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: July 1st, 2023

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  • what does not work:

    • i can not ping server.local (- for testing i have to stop the systemd-resolved.service to run the dnsmasq server, or else there are port collisions, but that should not be the problem i guess. I am happy to hear your solution :))
    • i can also not use ssh to log in to server.local, ip address works

    Have you added “server.local” as a DNS record in your dnsmasq container, pointing to your servers LAN IP? Sounds like dnsmasq isn’t resolving that name, which would lead to both of these ‘failures’.




  • Darkassassin07@lemmy.catoSelfhosted@lemmy.worldDNS?
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    3 days ago

    Why not both?

    My primary DNS is pihole on a rpi dedicated to the task; but I run a second instance of pihole via my main docker stack for redundancy. Should one or the other be unavailable, there’s a second one to pick up the slack.

    I just provide both DNS IPs to LAN clients via DHCP.

    Gravity Sync is a great tool to keep both piholes settings/records/lists in sync.






  • Yeah, when i was in school; there were no devices issued to students. We had ‘computer labs’. Ie; a room full of computers for student use. There was always one computer for the teachers to use that had a remote-desktop interface monitoring every screen in the room live. They could always see what you were doing, lockout your keyboard/mouse, blank your display.

    This really doesn’t seem any different.

    I could understand outrage if students were require to install this on their own hardware; but school issued devices are under the schools monitoring and control. Always have been.







  • I work warehousing; no IT background, I just like to tinker with whatever. Have since I started breathing.

    I was a fairly casual pirate, grabbing movies/shows I couldn’t find elsewhere (or just couldn’t afford). Got into Plex/Emby for my first real exploration into self-hosting (if you don’t count SRCDS and/or Minecraft Server at like 13yo); and expanded my knowledge from there. Reverse Proxys, the ‘arrs’, DNS, Docker, VPNs, etc.

    Now a days, I’ve got 20+ services that I mostly access via a VPN I host, and I’m always interested in messing with new things :)






  • I don’t have a problem with subscriptions on open source software myself

    That’s kind of the root of the issue imo; having a subscription based model doesn’t really work with open source as the project just gets forked every release to remove the subscription.

    This leaves Emby with little option but to go closed source if they want income through subscriptions.

    So, I’m not sure I understand what you mean with ‘the way they went about it’. Is it the subscription you had an issue with, or the fact that they were no longer open source? What would you have done differently?

    And, if you don’t mind me asking: Had you supported (paid) Embys developers prior to them shifting to closed source + ‘Emby Premiere’?

    To be clear, I’m not trying to be argumentative or divisive; I’m just trying to understand the animosity towards Emby and why it’s so often left out of the conversation, so to speak. It’s something I’ve never been able to wrap my head around. Thanks for taking the time to chat about this.