whysofurious

joined 1 year ago

Ah, the storage part is interestjnf, I might spin it up to try it, thanks for mentioning it!

[–] whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 points 3 days ago (2 children)

I can send you my configs and docker files in pm, if that helps :)

I would go for hedgedoc if the team can switch to markdown, otherwise Cryptpad to stay in an office-like suite.

If you already have nextcloud then that + collabora should be good enough. Otherwise installing the whole nextcloud suite just for collaborative editing seems like a lot imho.

[–] whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com 10 points 4 days ago* (last edited 1 day ago) (4 children)

Komga is always mentioned as a good option for this. I use it for books, manga, and comics, but my requirements are quite minimal (koreader sync, opds, and mihon), so it might not work for you exactly.

I do metadata fetching using komf, documentation is a bit lacking but once setup is pretty good (I use it for both manga and comics) and it does everything automatically. There is also a browser extension that provides a UI for it. For comics sometimes I use ComicTagger for manually reviewing tags too. I would just read carefully the folder structure Komga expects if you go with that, to avoid having weird surprises :)

Going a bit against the common suggestions here but my "workflow" is like this:

  • I download books through Z-Library, I tried in the past lazylibrarian and readarr/bookshelf, but I always ended up spending a lot of time on refining the search for non-english books, which was just way easier in Z-Library.
  • I tag/update metadata of books using Calibre of my laptop. I prefer to manually do that because while it took a few days to do it for my whole library, I don't really add books in such a high number that I can justify automating it or having a Calibre container on my homeserver. (I know Calibre Web Automated will do this, but see below). I use Hardcover to track my readings, so Calibre with the hardcover plugin makes it easy to find ids or HC editions for integrations with other apps I use.
  • After moving between Kavita, CWA and Booklore, I set up on Komga for library management. I found Komga's koreader sync way more stable and mature than the other options. I am a bit annoyed by the fact that (as in Kavita) each book/series folder is a series, but at the end of the day the pros outweighs the cons for me. I can manage custom reading lists or series, so it's not really an issue personally.

Also Komga works pretty well with Koreader. I moved my books from Kavita to Komga and I found it to be more reliable regarding the two-way syncing progress (at least for me).

[–] whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com 3 points 3 months ago

I generally don't update automatically, I currently use WUD. It works fine for image checking and notifications and had no need to change it for now, but I am thinking of trying dockhand too.

[–] whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 6 months ago

Uh, nice I didn't know tempo was forked, thanks for sharing :) I'll make the switch

[–] whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com 2 points 9 months ago

Someone recently recommended me Textadept: https://orbitalquark.github.io/textadept/. Haven't tried it on linux, and I am not really using it, but the interface is clean, it also has a CLI, and I thought I could give you another option :)

[–] whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 10 months ago (1 children)

There is already a prerelease of the 2.0 app for android 🎉 (haven't tried it yet though)

[–] whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com 0 points 11 months ago

Not OP but that is quite interesting, thanks for sharing!

 

Hi all!

I'll try to be quick but I apologise first as I am pretty new to security stuff and my questions might be obvious to the more experts.

I have a VPS (hetzner) set up with docker, caddy for the reverse proxy, and authentik as the only login method for a couple of services (hedgedoc and forgejo). Since most of these has to be available and accessible on the internet, I also setup crowdsec and built caddy with the relevant bouncer. This allows crowdsec to inspect the caddy logs for all the services I am serving through it and act accordingly. Edit: all the services are in docker containers.

So far, so good. However, I also saw that crowdsec can directly monitor container logs with the docker integration or through container labels. Also, I saw a couple of collections on crowdsec hub specifically for Authentik and Gitea.

I feel I am missing something so my question are:

  1. Would it be useful to monitor container logs given my setup or would it be redundant?
  2. Should I add the app-specific collections, or would docker logs monitoring be enough?

My current crowdsec collections


  • crowdsecurity/linux
  • crowdsecurity/appsec-generic-rules
  • crowdsecurity/caddy
  • crowdsecurity/whitelist-good-actors
  • crowdsecurity/http-cve
  • crowdsecurity/iptables

Edit: bonus question, does someone know if the Gitea collection would be useful for Forgejo after it being a hard-fork now?

1
Good (canon) comics (lemmy.dbzer0.com)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by whysofurious@lemmy.dbzer0.com to c/star_wars@lemmy.world
 

As per title, I just finished Andor. I always wanted to read some star wars comics (years ago I read the Marvel's Vader series). I would love to read some good comics or storyarcs if anybody has any advice.

I would prefer something not focus on the skywalkers but that expands on the general story and lore, I was looking at Doctor Aphra, but not sure if it's good or not.

Thanks!

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