On the website:
/etc/password
Let’s see.
EDIT: Well, maybe the Cloudfare filters are region-dependent.
On the website:
/etc/password
Let’s see.
EDIT: Well, maybe the Cloudfare filters are region-dependent.
There’s a wall of text apologizing and denying the China’s genocides in a reply. That one didn’t wake the mod up.
At least it’s a more or less comprehensive list. Made me notice that I forgot about one, and there are at least 3 major ones ongoing.
There isn’t any reason for a site to limit the lifetime of most cookies. I have no idea why that field isn’t optional.
Get an extension that will erase the cookies that you don’t care about, do not abide by everything anybody on the web asks you for. And yeah, get an ad-blocker.
Hum, no. The last thing I need on the world is a piece of non-working hard to maintain software.
I’d write something before trying Nextcloud again.
Personally, I’d really like if it could have different users on its management interface, with their own file shares.
It’s understandable why they don’t bother, but I would like to share my NAS without running several instances.
I’ll second people here in pointing that you are better allowing calls from your family during the “Do Not Disturb” than trying to set-up things not to call you during that time. Your phone almost certainly has a setting that allows “favorite contacts” or something like it.
It has a better configuration orthogonality :)
Yeah, that’s not a good reason.
It’s much easier to authorize a key than to input your password on every kind of interaction.
This is the internet. If you poke the bear, somebody will come-up with a completely reasonable use case of password authentication that happened once somewhere on the world.
If you don’t have any good reason not to, always set your SSH server to only authenticate with keys.
Anything else is irrelevant.
You may want to replace the disk on that computer after you fix your boot. (As people said, with a recovery drive, probably the same one you use to install.)
After your computer is back, get a SMART client (like smartmontools) and check your disk status.
Oh, sure, the bloat on your images requires resources from the host.
There is the option of sharing things. But, obviously that conflicts a bit with maintaining your environments isolated.
FileZila has relied in a distribution channel that has turned untrustworthy a while ago.
Since then, they migrated the project. But somebody that doesn’t know what they are doing isn’t sure to get a good version of it.
Just about this part:
Or you might set up an sFTP service to accept a GUI connection from a client like FileZilla.
FileZilla has been a troublemaker for decades (not because the software itself, but the OP won’t get it right), and sFTP requires an extra service.
I’d recommend he get WinSCP or another scp client.
Do not run databases in Docker unless you know really well what you are doing.
It’s completely possible to run them correctly in Docker. But it’s far from trivial, and if you need to ask this, it means that you probably won’t be able to.
Hetzner. But it looks like the problem is created by the pair (hoster, ISP), and neither of them have a problem by themselves.
I get the throughput I brought from my ISP. But latency to my VPS is 260ms.
To check if your problem is caused by excessive memory usage requiring constant swapping. If it is, turning swap off will make some process be killed instead of slowing the computer down.
trying to set up your GPU so it won’t destroy your battery can be a challenge
Avoid NVidia. Get a GPU from a company that respects the way you will use it instead of engaging in malicious compliance so it can claim it works, but it never does.
Have you tried turning your swap off?
Interesting, yep, passwd fails for me too.