baner

joined 4 days ago
[–] baner@lemmy.zip 1 points 9 hours ago

Yes, you can pick the name.

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 1 points 11 hours ago

Please do it, there is a big part of the foss community that only install apps from fdroid, including me.

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 5 points 23 hours ago (1 children)

Are you using sturn/turn server? Almost always needed for calls and video, you should join prosody support channel that are really helpful xmpp:prosody@conference.prosody.im?join

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 day ago (2 children)

Looks awesome, any chance that you put this on fdroid?

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 day ago (3 children)

I tested pangolin to replace wireguard on my VPS but the problem with pangolin is that is not designed to allow external devices like a mobiles is more about to connect sites.

Tried netbird and is a great piece of software tons of options and with the new added reverse proxy is the perfect replacement for wireguard my only turn down was that exposing services unlike pangolin that let you have link like service1.domain.com in netbird is service1.proxy.example.com.

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 day ago

Thanks!! Although I don't work as a developer, I know how to program in Python, and while looking to learn about TypeScript, I decided it would be a good opportunity to learn it by doing something that would be very useful at home, I'm still learning and reading code to understand every aspect of the language and its frameworks. Although it's grown more than expected, my commitment is to continue learning and improving the game logic and correcting the errors that will appear.

Very good question. I'm very involved in the world of self-hosting; I currently have a couple of home servers and several VPSs, so for me it was the most convenient path since having a Docker image makes it much easier for me to install it on my Proxmox server.

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 5 points 1 day ago
[–] baner@lemmy.zip 2 points 2 days ago

Thanks, I have tried to follow best security practices on this like using JWT for authentication, sanitize all inputs for SQL injections, password hashing, etc. Still better to be cautious, project still need some fixes but not affecting the overall gameplay. Right now I am working on documentation. It can be played as a guest but creating an account allows the game to track stats about win, lost, captures, XPs and a lot more. is mobile friendly, there is an android app but is not part of the repository at this time. make sure to share back your experience if you check it out.

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 5 points 2 days ago (2 children)

I refuse to accept that an open platform like lemmy (fediverse) is used for anything other than freedom of expression, but I appreciate your honest comment.

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 4 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Thanks for commenting, not actually expecting everyone to get impressed but just sharing something that is useful and fun. it just works.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/60250839

Hey everyone 👋. I just wanted to share a little personal project that grew a bit more than I initially planned.

The original idea was simply to build a game so I could play Parchis (Ludo) with my family, as it’s a classic in our household. I ended up building the whole thing entirely through "vibecoding" (AI-assisted coding) because I wanted to see how far I could push current AI tools.

The result is a full web multiplayer game (React/Vite frontend + Node/Express/Socket.io backend with SQLite to store game data).

If anyone is curious or wants to spin it up on their local network to play with friends/family: 🔗 Repo: https://codeberg.org/baner/parchis (it has a docker-compose.yml ready to go in seconds).

⚠️ A big warning about security: As I mentioned, I completely built this relying on AI, and it was initially meant as a home project. I am not a cybersecurity expert by any means. While I have briefly exposed it to the internet a couple of times to play with remote relatives, my absolute recommendation is to host it ONLY on your local network (LAN) or behind a VPN (like Tailscale/Wireguard). The nature of AI-generated code means it's probably full of vulnerabilities that I haven't caught. Play at your own risk if you decide to open ports to the wild web! 😅

This is also my first project using a monorepo structure and publishing a Docker image for others to deploy. If you take a look and see something horrible (or something that works surprisingly well haha), all feedback is super welcome. I hope someone finds it fun for a local game night!

 

Hey everyone 👋. I just wanted to share a little personal project that grew a bit more than I initially planned.

The original idea was simply to build a game so I could play Parchis (Ludo) with my family, as it’s a classic in our household. I ended up building the whole thing entirely through "vibecoding" (AI-assisted coding) because I wanted to see how far I could push current AI tools.

The result is a full web multiplayer game (React/Vite frontend + Node/Express/Socket.io backend with SQLite to store game data).

If anyone is curious or wants to spin it up on their local network to play with friends/family: 🔗 Repo: https://codeberg.org/baner/parchis (it has a docker-compose.yml ready to go in seconds).

⚠️ A big warning about security: As I mentioned, I completely built this relying on AI, and it was initially meant as a home project. I am not a cybersecurity expert by any means. While I have briefly exposed it to the internet a couple of times to play with remote relatives, my absolute recommendation is to host it ONLY on your local network (LAN) or behind a VPN (like Tailscale/Wireguard). The nature of AI-generated code means it's probably full of vulnerabilities that I haven't caught. Play at your own risk if you decide to open ports to the wild web! 😅

This is also my first project using a monorepo structure and publishing a Docker image for others to deploy. If you take a look and see something horrible (or something that works surprisingly well haha), all feedback is super welcome. I hope someone finds it fun for a local game night!

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 1 points 3 days ago

What is the use case? Share with family and friends?

[–] baner@lemmy.zip 1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

You have 2 options:

1 - Open up Jellyfin port (8093) in your router if you are not behind a cgnat and add a reverse proxy

2 - Get a small vps and a domain, install a reverse proxy and use tailscale to connect the vps with your home server, point your domain to the vps and forward traffic to jellyfin.

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