Appears to work as well as it does on windows. I guess the only downside is learning powershell if you have no previous experience with it.
Mastodon: @SeeJayEmm@noc.social
Appears to work as well as it does on windows. I guess the only downside is learning powershell if you have no previous experience with it.
I forgot where I was posting. (I use both win and Linux pretty heavily.) I have pwsh, let me see if import-excel works on linux and report back.
For Excel there is a PowerShell module called Import-Excel that I use all the time.
Is feel a lot better about this if it was a “supporter” tag not this “unlicensed” crap.
That’s the business ed not the community. There’s no limit in aware of in the community ed
Wiki.js Nginx Proxy Manager.
Enough people have already commented on the “proxy at the vps solution”. Another option is to configure routing and nat on the VPS and have it route over the wg tunnel.
Requires you to have postup/predown scripts that modify your routing tables on the wg endpoint.
I made the plunge about a year ago. Spectrum assigns me a prefix but routing was spotty at best. In the end after all the troubleshooting pointed to the problem being the ISP I gave up and stuck with what works, IPv4.
I have nextcloud AIO running behind NPM just fine. There’s a page in there docs on how to configure it.
DDOS protection is going to depend on the VPS. But for most services you could spin up a pretty lean Debian vm running a proxy like nginx proxy manager and run that over the tunnel. Something like opnsense seems like overkill.
This is how I learn and half the reason my home lab exists. I need projects to get/stay motivated.
I feel this post so hard. I’m always about 5 seconds from going Office Space on my printer.
I’m fond of Beekeeper Studio and a sqlite DB.
However, if my VPS is compromised, wouldn’t the attacker still be able to access my local network?
That depends on your setup. I terminate my wireguard tunnels on my opnsense router, where I have explicit fw rules for what the vps hosts can talk to.
I’m using CheckMk for pretty much all of that. Personally I found zabbix to have too much overhead.
No but less power hungry than a full desktop. It’s a good trade-off between power and performance.
Nextcloud AIO in docker is dead simple and has been reliable for me.
The sync client is capable of syncing the whole tree as remote pointers that didn’t take space until you access the file then it downloads it local. You can also set files to always be local.
If you want the small footprint and power costs are a concern, look for a second hand mini computer. Dell, Lenovo, Intel nuc.
Something like this as an example.
You know b2 has multi region replication now, right?
Heaven forbid I want to use an intuitive, simple, terminal based text editor when I ssh into one of my boxes.
But here’s the real kicker. Why do people like you give two shits what text editor other people use?