You can change the store on the Kobo to become to your selfhosted calibre library
https://brandonjkessler.com/technology/2021/04/26/setup-kobo-sync-in-calibre-web.html
You can change the store on the Kobo to become to your selfhosted calibre library
https://brandonjkessler.com/technology/2021/04/26/setup-kobo-sync-in-calibre-web.html
How do you login from a device that doesn't have Bitwarden on it if you have passkeys.
For example a friend's computer etc
With a password I can type the 20 or so digits of the password. Can't really be done with a passkey as far as I know
Check their website for migration info. There are some caveats in special circumstances but more people can just change the docker image from gitea to forgejo.
I did exactly that with no issues.
You're github mentions you tried linkwarden but still decided to build this. What features were you missing in linkwarden? It seems to do most of what you want in terms of bookmarks and archiving.
Looks good and thanks for using SSO!
You use it to take the NextCloud files (set the NextCloud directory as a source) and Then you sent the files to a backup repository (destination).
You don't send the backup files to a NextCloud install. That's not the correct way to use the tool.
I self host a Borg repository in docker so the backup gets sent locally and then I also use borgbase as offsite backup.
You can have as many sources and destinations as you want
Borg backup is the way to go for this.
Its designed to have encrypted repos that are send to any destination remote or local.
I'm testing it now. Seems way faster and more stable.
I'm just trying to get the oauth login to work but the actual file sync works great.
Yes.
Vaultwarden.local.example.com
And
Jellyfin.example.com
This is the best and most robust way to do this
DNS challenge with a reverse proxy is that answer. I've been doing this for a while now and it works great. Most other answers here are work arounds or not very robust.
This is the way: https://youtu.be/liV3c9m_OX8
I do this with authentik for sso
I have local only things like vaultwarden and external things like seafile.
This is a good place to start to understand what you are doing: https://www.howtogeek.com/499623/how-to-use-journalctl-to-read-linux-system-logs/
But basically you shut the computer off, then on then do
journalctl -S -3m
Will show the last 3 mins of logs which you can go through and try to read the logs up until the moment it actually turns off to see what is happening.
I use this for oauth, forward proxy and ldap authentication. All my apps are authenticated via authentik and its great
Sonarr puts shows in