I mean, it is a bit rough, they’re not at 1.0 yet, also: are you looking at the stable or latest docs? That may be the reason the commands do not match with the docs.
I mean, it is a bit rough, they’re not at 1.0 yet, also: are you looking at the stable or latest docs? That may be the reason the commands do not match with the docs.
I didn’t have any issues, do you see anything in the logs?
Yeah, sounds like a security feature… I was able to configure Traefik to connect with TLS, verifying the peer certificate.
Yes, it should cover all the use cases you mention!
I use oauth2-proxy as ForwardAuth on Traefik so I can protect apps that do not support OAuth/OIDC login/
I use kanidm with oauth2-proxy. No issues so far, it was pretty easy to set up.
Note that the connection to kanidm needs to be TLS even if you have a reverse proxy!
EDIT: currently using 80MB RAM for two users and three Service Providers.
I also moved away my domains and the ones of the hackerspace I manage, mainly to:
I also use Migadu, they have been great so far!
desec.io for DNS, also great and supported by Traefik for DNS-01 ACME challenge.
I think you can create a group for friends and a group for family. If you want more separation I think Authentik handles multi-tenancy as well
I’m using sops
with my GPG key currently.
Molise, Italy, which is a whole region that doesn’t exists!
It’s a bit chaotic, and they try to force you to pay for other stuff in the process, but the prices were not that far off from other registrars. Note that I use DeSEC for the actual nameservers though.
I’ve moved mine to Infomaniak (Switzerland), no complaints so far!
Maybe you could try tryton? It’s modular and you can add a lot of useful functionality for businesses, like stocks/orders etc
I’m also leaving, migrates to infomaniak as a registrar, DeSec as DNS provider and Migadu for email… no regrets!
Sure, but it’s a question of principle. I try to use and support FLOSS software if possible.
Aw man… and I was just thinking about deploying Nomad in my homelab…
I use sops
, usually with exec-env
Huh, that’s actually way better than my current setup of spamming me on Telegram every time there’s an update
Exactly this. In a federated network, the instance with the majority of users could dictate the protocol, forcing the smaller issues to continually adapt or die. See this post for a very real example of this.
There’s SwiftFin, but it’s been a while from the last update (iOS app was updated recently though) and there’s a number of issues. It’s usable though (I’m using it).