

You can test it in a virtual machine like virtualbox or virt-manager. Then you can get a good feel for it.


You can test it in a virtual machine like virtualbox or virt-manager. Then you can get a good feel for it.


c stands for community. I didn’t know on which server it is but it’s on lemmyworld !selfhosted@lemmy.world


Yunohost is probably more secure than you figuring everything out yourself. More people have a vested interest in keeping it secure. They have a minimal page on security but they have fail2ban, unattended upgrades,and a secure SSH configuration. If something is discovered, you might be vulnerable but at least there will be knowledgeable people fixing it.
Security is always difficult and nothing is 100% secure. The three letter agencies around the world have been hacked and they are in the business of hacking others. Hackers themselves get hacked on the regular. Using yunohost as a noon probably reduces the chance of you getting hacked.
If you have something only you need to access, you can also host yunohost for yourself and make it accessible only via a VPN. Headscale, tailscale, maybe even your router provides a VPN service, or setup wireguard yourself. If others have to access it… I dunno. That’s a good question to ask on /c/selfhosted


256 GB of RAM? Wow. And game servers too? If that’s small, them I don’t know what you consider big…
Anyway, proxmox does fit your scenario well. Separating your hosted services into VMs or containers makes a lot of sense. And a few game servers also have installations specific to different distros, so instead of fumbling about with your specific distro, just creating a VM with the distro you need is way easier.


Depends on what you want to do. For a small server, if you want to host multiple things, hosting them straight on the metal without putting a VM in between would be more performant. If your server doesn’t have much RAM and CPU to give, then getting rid of the emulation layer makes sense.
Can you tell me why you want to use proxmox and what for?


Glad you like it! If it’s useful to you, don’t forget to donate or at least say thanks to the contributors once everything is up and running and stable.
Don’t forget backups! Restic is in yunohost and should be useful for that. Yunohost has a guide.


Yunohost should be the software you’re looking for. Install stuff by clicking. Much less terminal stuff


It’ll be safe to host without extra software in front of it to make it read-only


I meant that https://codeberg.org/rimu/pyfedi doesn’t have a CI setup.


The Lemmy money is spread across 3 devs or so? And they have been writing it since 2018 or something. It’s not surprising that they have more momentum and name recognition.
PieFed is new and on Codeberg. Especially the Codeberg thing, I like. It does lack a CI though. How stable is it?
And they want to migrate to piefed? Does it have better performance than Lemmy? That would be hilarious if python were faster than rust.


I’d say the problem is education. Porn is only an issue because people do not get proper sex ed. The reaction to seeing a dick sucked in front of a child shouldn’t be shame, disgust, or terror but allowing the inquisitive mind to ask what is happening.
Sex is a completely normal occurrence that is the reason we are all here. There shouldn’t be any shame or stigma in explaining to a child (or any person for that matter) what it is, what it involves, why it is done, how to safely do it, what consent is, why it is stigmatised.
Want to protect children? Educate them.


Hail TOR and I2P!


Which stats? On mbin, if you hover over a user’s name, you can see their “reputation score”. Logged in mbin users can go to their profile and see how many cumulative points they made that day (sum of positive and negative upvotes). It’s a bit confusing to me why mbin decided to start going the reddit route and introduce karma when most people on the fediverse seem to enjoy being unaware of their score.


How does this compare to Notion? Can it be used as a knowledge management system? I ask because I see highlights and notes.


As an example: a company starts a free tier offering with no promises. It can sustain that because there are enough free users that convert into paying users - enough to sustain the free tier. But times change and the cost of free tier users surpasses that of paying users. Should the company continue providing the same level of service for free tier users?
Also, what other term than entitlement would you use for somebody gets something for free, is not promised that it will stay free forever, the free offering is cancelled or limited, and the user starts complaining?


Is this dude complaining that an offering he pays absolutely nothing for is reducing how much free stuff they give out? Seems quite entitled… like the people demanding opensource devs implement something and never contributing back.


How do you mirror peertube? Have they found a webtorrent HLS solution or something?


It’s just another instance
wat?