No port forwarding though :(
I used to use Mullvad but after they disabled port forwarding I switched over to Proton.
No port forwarding though :(
I used to use Mullvad but after they disabled port forwarding I switched over to Proton.
Interesting solution! Thanks for the info. Seems like Nginx Proxy Manager doesn't support Proxy Protocol. Lmao, the world seems to be constantly pushing me towards Traefik all the time 🤣
I think there was some bad vibes when they got bought by a less than reputable company a while back. I know a lot of people, myself included switched to Mullvad. I am on Proton now though for the port forwarding.
I see. And the rest of your services are all exposed on localhost? Hmm, darn, it really looks like there's no way to use user-defined networks.
I am guessing you're not running Caddy itself in a container? Otherwise you'll run into the same real IP issue.
I see! So I am assuming you had to configure Nginx specifically to support this? Problem is I love using Nginx Proxy Manager and I am not sure how to change that to use socket activation. Thanks for the info though!
Man, I often wonder whether I should ditch docker-compose. Problem is there's just so many compose files out there and its super convenient to use those instead of converting them into systemd unit files every time.
Yeah, I thought about exposing ports on localhost for all my services just to get around this issue as well, but I lose the network separation, which I find incredibly useful. Thanks for chiming in though!
Pasta is the default, so I am already using it. It seems like for bridge networks, rootlesskit is always used alongside pasta and that's the source of the problem.
All of this is still irrelevant. If given the same hardware, one OS performs better than another, then one OS is obviously more optimized...
You're saying a lot of words but it all just boils down to "throw more hardware at the problem".
How is this relevant? If an OS performs better on old hardware, it's still an indication that it is more optimized.
My biggest issue with Syncthing is that it becomes unusable for large amounts of data due to the lack of selective sync (ignore lists are cumbersome as hell) and lack of virtual file system support. I have about 8TB of data on my NAS that I want to access remotely and it is not feasible to have duplicate copies of that much data on all of my devices.
I love Nextcloud Talk, but my biggest annoyance with it is that text chats don't properly scroll to the bottom when new messages come in.