It takes special setting in addition to your normal domain DNS settings.
It takes special setting in addition to your normal domain DNS settings.
The only proprietary battery thing I’ve come across using APC for decades was a connector that combined two standard batteries. It was attached to them and bound them together with stickers and connected to the terminals of each with normal terminal connectors. I just bought 2 standard replacement batteries and put the adapter on them. It all fit right back in and ran like new.
I agree that you would want a VPN for that. Look into something like tailscale.
Those 14TB WD drives are workhorses. I run refurbished ones in my home server and have never had any issues. And they are significantly faster than the rest of my spinning rust drives.
There is such thing as an Authoritarian Left.
Yeah, I enjoyed learning German… Java on the other hand…
Some manufacturers have lower failure rates overall. But yes, you do have to mind the specific model.
ADHD aside interrupting people is rude.
I have tried them all, it’s Navidrome. It’s actually less resources for me to run 4 instances of Navidrome for my different users than it is to use any of the other servers that allow for separate user libraries. Just make sure you alter the folder scan interval, it’s stupidly frequent by default.
I have no formal IT education. But I grew up on computers when command line was how you got things done.
I switched to cloud flare because of the downtime duckdns has. Sometimes it can get really bad.
I’ll buy a server farm and train an LLM. Won’t take the whole month.
The word you’re looking for is “petty.”
I mean… We already have a very well built fork.
To anyone reading this, unless you absolutely must have the federation abilities of Funkwhale above your own sanity, it’s not worth it. Funkwhale is an absolute bear to setup by comparison to every other music server. I have been bouncing through them all spinning up containers for the same library and putting them through their paces.
Spinning up 4 Navidrome containers with 4 different domains for my user’s library preferences was quicker and easier than setting up one Funkwhale server for 4 users. It’s beyond absurd how clunky it is. And worst of all, 4 Navidrome containers are extremely faster, less resource hungry, and easier to maintain.
None of the local library importing works in the UI unless you’re the admin account. That means going into users to create libraries then spinning up an API container with a command to import the local files. But then it doesn’t watch them unless you include that flag and leave the detached container running.
On top of that, so few people are running it that you cannot just search the web for issues. It’s their lacking documentation only. You know something is obscure when you cant even find their own website by searching Funkwhale without going through the top result that links to it.
Funkwhale is just not ready for prime time compared to the other servers.
I have used Airsonic and then Airsonic-advanced for years after briefly using Subsonic. But recently as my more and more of my library migrated to FLAC I had issues with transcoding. Sometimes all transcoding would just start failing and when it did Airsonic would peg every thread it had available. (Heresy I know but when I or my users are on a mobile network I don’t want to chew through data in a few day long outings.) So that’s what led me down this path. I tried Navidrome and loved it except for the lack of library separation. I tried Funkwhale, and I tried Gonic. Gonic is wonderful in its simplicity but it’s almost too basic. It supposedly had library separation and has transcoding but neither was working out of the box so I just said fuck it and went with 4 Navidrome containers because copy and pasting is easy and everything about Navidrome just works. Most importantly, Navidrome is lightning fast loading in an app which is the only way my users interact with the server. It fires up transcoding so fast you almost cannot tell the difference between loading the native file and transcoding in terms of response. I swear there was at least one more server I looked at but passed over and I cannot recall the name.
Edit: FYI Navidrome said that they are currently reworking the entire server backend, but after that it will be easier to implement multiple libraries.
I second this comment. It’s been a long time since I set one up and it was a pain. And from what I can tell it’s only gotten harder.
There are things you can do in Linux to unlock the max number of transcoding sessions as well. You can Google it if you ever hit that wall.
It should work as long has you have integrated graphics. Make sure you have the integrated graphics set as default in your bios.
Did you read breaking changes? The ports changed recently. Also looks like you’re redirecting two ports to one.