That makes sense, except Google kinda does the same thing. Everything they have is technically just a "free tier" of the Google One subscription, right? I guess I'm saying that "free tier of paid product" doesn't automatically qualify a company as trustworthy for me. Is there something else that sets Cloudflare apart?
Why does Cloudflare get a pass on the "if it's free, you're the product" mantra of the self-hosting community? Honest question. They seem to provide a lot for free, so...
I'm doing something similar (with a lot less data), and I'm intending on syncing locally the first time to avoid this exact scenario.
I'm fairly sure that's a baby boxelder bug. They are breeding in the thousands at my house as we speak
Yep, you just said the same thing with more words 😁
Punctuation is important. It's the difference between a nice family meal and cannibalism.
I've been looking around for notes apps with similar criteria with the addition of a portable format (markdown prferably) and, ideally, the ability to add images directly from the camera. I landed on GitJournal and backed it with a self-hosted Forgejo server, but this can be any git server. This has the benefit of requiring an ssh key pair for access
If you have NextCloud, you can try Deck. I moved off from NextCloud and Deck was, oddly enough, one of the harder apps to replace. I ended up with Vikunja. They have an android app in alpha but it feels pretty polished
I'll just run on over to the Seinfeld community and start posting things about The IT Crowd and if they don't like what's being posted there then that community isn't for them and that's perfectly OK.
I use Obtainium for all apps with no f-droid presence, I just forget which ones sometimes. It's the browser extension that makes this one great. I wanted something pretty easy after losing the convenience of Authy desktop
When Authy dropped their desktop app, I picked this up for 2FA: https://2fas.com/
EDIT: oops, just realized this isn't listed on f-droid...
Oh look, a buzzword
This. Tell people to not eat meat and hear the cries of agreement. Tell people to stop having kids and all of a sudden you're another Hitler.
Fuck all humans for breeding to the point where meat farming is necessary. Eating animals isn't the problem, it's the SCALE at which we do it. Put blame where it's due
I always feel like I should throw a turtle shell at the idiot driving in front of me
The magats love him because the dems hate him. We'll still hate him when he's in prison, so they'll still love him
They want you to foot the electric bill for the LLM processing, they're still going to collect your data. Double-win for MS!
Traefik conditional certificate for same URL
Hey all!
I have a bunch of services running on my home server and was looking to expose some of them publicly via Cloudflare tunnel. This is done and working great using the origin server certificate and strict TLS.
Up until now, I've been using self-signed certs internally but now I don't want to deal with the "proceed anyway" crap on browsers. I have Traefik set up to get certs from Cloudflare using DNS challenge and that seems to be working.
So, now my problem is: how do I switch between these certificates for the same URL when I'm internal vs public? I'd rather keep that traffic local if I'm at home, which is also working, I just can't figure out how to get Traefik to use the appropriate certificate depending on if the request is coming from my LAN or Cloudflare.
Any suggestions? Is there a better way to accomplish what I want to do?
EDIT: Looks like I'm just going full Cloudflare on this one, thanks for your help everyone!