The problem is I need Unbound to send queries via one network interface (the VPN) while the specific zone needs to be routed through another.
The problem is I need Unbound to send queries via one network interface (the VPN) while the specific zone needs to be routed through another.
I know what split tunneling is, but I have my routing set up exactly as I’d like.
The issue here is that Unbound seems unable to send queries to one forwarding zone using a specific interface/IP address and sending queries to a second forwarding zone using a completely different interface/IP address.
I’m almost at the point where I want to create a virtual interface that just has rules that say “if going to 192.168.143.1
use /dev/tailscale0
” and then have a default route to /dev/wg0
.
I’m not a professional but my current Tailscale + VPN setup has been extremely nice for the past year.
It was originally released in 480, so those DVD rips are probably the “best” quality-wise (unless they did some work on it before releasing for streaming).
If that’s the case it’s probably easier to rent the discs and rip them. Obviously this is a piracy community but hey, technically it’s still piracy if you’re copying rented discs am I right?
I’m usually using it not to search the codebase but to search for something specific with a file.
I always found the code search more distracting than helpful. Just let me use the browser native Command + F ffs.
Plain HTTP means anyone between you and the server can see those credentials and gain access.
It it using HTTP Basic Auth by chance? It would be so easy to put nginx (or some other reverse proxy with TLS) in front and just pass the authentication headers.
Especially with music, if any of this is plain HTTP (or any other plaintext, non-encrypted protocol) and you live in a lawsuit happy jurisdiction you might end up with piracy letters in the mail.
I started learning HTML at the age of 10 using FrontPage and Word. There were entire utilities dedicated to stripping out Word’s atrocious HTML at the time.
I’ve always wished Markdown was better supported in email. I work with external companies’ APIs a lot where email is the medium, and typically I use a Windows monospace font for code snippets (I’m on macOS but there are a handful of monospaced fonts that work on both).
It’s very clunky, and I wish the backtick notation would work out of the box. Whoever decided HTML in email was the way to go should be shot.
IPv6. Stop engineering IoT junk on single-stack IPv4, you dipshits.
Amen
I’d never get past this. If a website forced this on me I’d probably stop using it, otherwise I’d just override it with CSS.
Or they hate updates for some fake reason like “they want to control me”
Yeah, I live in lawsuit happy USA and pirating through i2p has never landed me letters in the mail. They don’t even know what it is you’re looking at let alone where it truly came from.
Again, I really recommend reading about the subject instead of trusting some idiot (me) on the internet.
It’s next to impossible to do this. I think if you read up on the topic you’ll have a better understanding; I’d like to explain more but it’s difficult to do so without knowing your level of expertise, etc.
The TL;DR is that nodes on i2p have no clue which nodes line up with which IP addresses. It’s true that from outside the overly you can see it’s i2p traffic, but you’d need to defeat so many layers of encryption that it’s close to impossible.
Well at least you’re using i2p, I kind of wish more people would. I just don’t like generally using unencrypted communication methods, so discussing even a simple crime like piracy is no bueno for me.
I’m so paranoid I would never talk about that over SMS. 😂
I’m thinking of building my own and having it use Paperless’ API for invoices, receipts, etc.
I finally gave this a go a few days ago but wasn’t in love with the UI. I’d contribute but it’s written in .NET.
I’ll probably build something myself. One thing I’d like to do is have it integrate with other APIs (like Paperless).
What I hate is I love encrypting my flash drives but every OS prompts you to wipe the drive if it doesn’t recognize the encryption scheme of another. 👎