It says it is “a” standard file system - not “the” standard. Very different things.
So for Linux that would be ext4.
It’s worth noting that the default file system varies by distro - there is no ‘Linux’ default. For example, RHEL et al use XFS as the default.
No madness. I know it works natively. I also know it works perfectly well with a rootfull container.
All of my other applications are running in containers and having Plex also run in a container would simplify my overall architecture and recovery, should I need to replace the host.
Not very helpful.
Yeah this was it. Disabled rocket and it now works fine.
Yes I bet this is it. I’ll disable and test. Thanks for the heads up!
Thanks for these. It’s good to see someone else building them!
I have the same problem using your 0.18.3 lemmy-ui image as I do when I build it - it just doesn’t seem to work on my instance. None of the feed loads up and the selector buttons don’t either.
Is it working for you?
You can’t change it yourself? When I taught my kids to drive, I also made sure they knew how to change a tyre.
I’m doing that. 4 core arm instance with 24GB ram. It’s on a paid account but using free tier.
Random guy here saying I’ve built arm64 v0.17.4…
Available on docker hub search for mpatton.
I built my own arm64 v0.17.4 docker image. It’s available on docker hub:
mpatton/lemmy:0.17.4-linux-arm
mpatton/lemmy-ui:0.17.4-linux-arm
What are you using as your reverse proxy?
From the docs / troubleshooting:
“Also ensure that the time is accurately set on your server. Activities are signed with a timestamp, and will be discarded if it is off by more than 10 seconds.”
I am not 100% surprised they refuse to do it for new accounts. If you have an account that has been with them for a while, they most likely would open it.
Problem with SES is that you start sandboxed and can only deliver to specific email addresses - which obviously won’t work here.
I didn’t bother, as I was just testing. But you are right, port 25 outbound is blocked by default. They have a defined process for you to ask for it to be unblocked and you have to tell them what you are using it for and how you are preventing spam from being sent. In this case it might be enough to say that you aren’t allowing port 25 inbound, so it can’t be used as an open relay.
Looks really good. I did it pretty much the same way, myself - but if I were looking to start again, I would definitely use this.
Edit: Ran it on a fresh AWS Ubuntu instance and it worked perfectly fine.
I use CryptoStorm - they are reasonably cheap and they allow ports.
Another vote for smtp2go - free plan allows up to 1000 emails per month.
Yeah you are right - they aren’t required. Not sure what it could be.
binhex/arch-qbittorrentvpn