Why do you need lldap if you have authentik?
Authentik can act as an ldap server.
Why do you need lldap if you have authentik?
Authentik can act as an ldap server.
I hope we get something that's not distro specific. Docker/podman work for a lot of stuff, but some apps/services aren't available via them, and I really would like an alternative to snaps, which often can ship those apps.
Also, these and the fedora one mentioned in the other comment appear to target immutable distros. Snaps work on any distro.
.
Joplin: https://joplinapp.org/
But:
Hmmmm I was gonna say they have no web app, but it appears they do:
Jotty: https://jotty.page/
But:
It's self hosted, and has no android app. You can do the browser app thing tho
Anpther solution (but no web app) is signal which can send a message to yourself. That's whay I use when I just need to get a url or something like that over quick.
Cuz there are more than just browser caches I would like to nuke.
Cuz bleachbit is more granular, seperating out site data and cookies, enabling me to delete the 1gb alpine docker image downloaded by https://github.com/MercuryWorkshop/anuraOS without logging me out of anything that is using cookies. Firefox doesn't appear to have that option.
Edit: cuz I use multiple browser profiles, and this can delete cache from all of them at once instead of me having to do it once per profile 2-3 times.
Show is better than tell:


Often, when viewing images, firefox "caches" the image in order to be able to load it faster when visiting that site again. Left unchecked, this cache (of images and other assets) can pretty much infinitely grow. Many other apps also have big caches.
Bleachbit actually is useful. Instead of hunting through your system and accidentally rm -rfing the wrong folder and losing all your precious firefox profile data, it enables you to quickly nuke all caches, freeing up a significant amount of space. I would probably free up 15gb+ if I ran it based on these images.
EDIT: just ran it. I freed up 6gb of space. Not 15gb. Huh. Still, pretty good though, and if you are space starved (I used to use a machine with only 32 gb of storage TOTAL), then it's useful to keep things slim.
Libreoffice's "extensions" website also has templates.
Example: https://extensions.libreoffice.org/en/extensions/show/99419
while the production build runs entirely client-side without a backend server. I
This eliminates many, many potential security issues and is an excellent design choice.
In production, movie data is queried using an in-browser SQLite database via WebAssembly, e
Yes it should be possible, although somewhat challenging.
If this device acts an an ethernet interface that is behind windows, then you are probably going to want:
This is the first solution I can think of, off of the off my head, provided that the external device is actually pretending to be a network interface you are connecting.
In addition to that, you will likely have to create a custom service to recreate this setup on boot. The tools for managing linux firewalls and network namespaces independently of abstraction layers aren't great.
Alternatively, if you are actually running an app that is connecting to that device via USB or the like, you can run that app within a network namespace to force traffic through the VPN. But the steps and solution would be similar.
Api tokens are also a stolen credential. They are getting stolen via things like unsandboxed malicious packages that search for them.
That is TeamPCP's main modus operandi, they have an infostealer that tries to nab whatever credentials it can find, and then uses those to spread more.
dbt fusion
Seems to use the Elastic License: https://github.com/dbt-labs/dbt-fusion/blob/main/LICENSES.md
Which is simply not open source in the first place: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elasticsearch#Licensing_changes
Elasticsearch and Kibana would be relicensed from Apache License 2.0 to a dual license under the Server Side Public License and the Elastic License, neither of which is recognised as an open-source license.[
(although elasticsearch later changed back to the AGPL. As did Redis, and Mongo which also tried similar moves lmao).
It looks like there are a mere 4 Apache 2 (open source license) programs inside, but the other 40+ programs are behind that ELv2 license, so the program can't really be called open core even (term when some of the program is open source but some features are paid only and not open source).
So no, DBT fusion is not FOSS. DBT Fusion is source available, which is the term used to refer to when you can read the source code but there are legal restrictions on what you can do with it.
I currently use joplin, but I also mentioned jotty which I tried but didn't like. Jotty doesn't have an android app.
I sync joplin to a self hosted s3 via garage. The big thing I like about this setup, is that sync is near instant, as opposed to waiting for syncthing to sync.
I do use syncthing for pretty much everything else though, like keepassxc or exported backups of my joplin notes. But, I onlu activate it occasionally since it's a battery hog.