Yeah, YunoHost explains why http://localhost:8536/
wouldn’t be working. If cloudflared and Lemmy are in separate containers you have to put an actual IP in, since localhost points to the container itself.
Yeah, YunoHost explains why http://localhost:8536/
wouldn’t be working. If cloudflared and Lemmy are in separate containers you have to put an actual IP in, since localhost points to the container itself.
How are you accessing it without Cloudflare? How do you know that Lemmy is actually listening?
What’s the URL you using to access it without Cloudflare?
Edit: Also that curl tells me it’s not listening on that IP/port.
Can you access it without Cloudflare?
Does curl http://localhost:8536/
work?
You are using cloudflared right? Because normal (non-cloudflared) Cloudflare doesn’t support port 8536.
With dynamic DNS? Yeah it always has, as long as you can host a http server.
With a dynamic IP? It should do, the certs are only valid for 6 days for that reason.
You can host a page with an iframe, but you can’t directly change the DNS record to point to something that isn’t GitHub.
help
now actually opens the help utility on Python 3.13!
Perhaps there was an easier lighter-weight way of doing this?
Yeah, SSH tunneling. What I would do (and have done in the past) is something like:
ssh -L 8080:192.168.0.1:80 myserver
That will forward port 8080 on your host to port 80 on 192.168.0.1, so you can access your router’s web UI with http://localhost:8080/
in your own web browser.
You can also setup full tunneling with SSH, but that requires messing around with SOCKS and I usually can’t be bothered.
You can always install activate-linux, and it even works on Windows.
Ahh sorry, I thought you meant you plugged it into the input side. If that’s the case then are you running anything that measures CPU usage? I run the TIG stack, it might be able to give you some hits. Also back to my original point which is already unlikely, if it’s a modified sinewave UPS, it can confuse some measuring devices while it’s on battery.
It’s weird to do this daily, but it’s possible that the UPS is doing a self test, which would drain the battery a little and the load is from charging it back up.
The symbol they defined out is not the equals symbol but rather U+2550, so the for loop is fine.
Before other people start commenting ‘yeah obviously’, it’s their April Fools video, it’s pretty funny.
I never mentioned vulnerabilities, I just wanted to point out that, RDP doesn’t really work without a graphical session, Windows Server Core gets around this by being a graphical session (although very basic).
Also I’m not sure, but I don’t think Windows handles RDP on the kernel level, it’s just nicely tied in with DWM and doesn’t have to deal with the multitude of window managers on Linux.
Handling RDP on the kernel level does sound like a bad idea security wise, but there should be a better way.
Windows Server Core still has a window manager, just all it does show a command prompt very similar to the one in the usual Windows recovery environment.
You have to be on the March update, then go to Developer options -> Linux environment, and enable it. Then ‘Terminal’ will appear in your apps drawer.
Ahh okay, that description kinda sounds like floppy drive power, but it probably is a proprietary thing.
Could also be slimline sata.
ghost
is just GitHub’s way of saying deleted user.
Yeah they do! Actually a Japanese research paper (and this video) also theorises that they also grouped similar sounding letters in American Morse Code together (e.g. Z
∙ ∙ ∙ ∙
& SE∙ ∙ ∙ ∙
, or C∙ ∙ ∙
& S∙ ∙ ∙
)