<p>Finally reviewed LazyGit!<br>Amazing <a href="/tags/dev/" rel="tag">#dev</a> & <a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#devops</a> tool for <a href="/tags/git/" rel="tag">#git</a> <br><a href="https://jelloeater.me/review/lazygit/" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>jelloeater.me/review/lazygit/</a></p>
devops
<p>🚀 Gitea 1.23.8 is out!<br>This release includes critical bug fixes and a Go version upgrade addressing important security issues. We strongly recommend all users update ASAP.</p><p>🔗 <a href="https://blog.gitea.com/release-of-1.23.8/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="blog.gitea.com/release-of-1.23.8/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">blog.gitea.com/release-of-1.23</span><span class="invisible">.8/</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/gitea/" rel="tag">#Gitea</a> <a href="/tags/git/" rel="tag">#Git</a> <a href="/tags/opensource/" rel="tag">#OpenSource</a> <a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#DevOps</a></p>
<p>One day, we will read about the heroic efforts Palestinian networking engineers did throughout experiencing genocide to keep the network routers on, the cables connected, and getting the signal out there.<br><br>Actual war stories on a hope that we hear them asking is anyone out there who will help them. <a href="/tags/networking/" rel="tag">#Networking</a> <a href="/tags/palestine/" rel="tag">#Palestine</a> <a href="/tags/genocide/" rel="tag">#Genocide</a> <a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#DevOps</a></p>
<p>Heyho, I'm seeking an <a href="/tags/internship/" rel="tag">#Internship</a> as <a href="/tags/sysadmin/" rel="tag">#Sysadmin</a> from Sep 2025 to March 2026, ideally in or around <a href="/tags/düsseldorf/" rel="tag">#Düsseldorf</a>, but I'm open to remote. I'm passionate about Linux and I'd like to explore the <a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#DevOps</a> route too. See my website <a href="https://larmart.de" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>larmart.de</a> for contact infos and a first impression. - The costs of the Internship are covered completely, it’s a free opportunity to work in a passionate and young Linux fellow. Thank you guys, boost is appreciated 🙏🏻❤️🐧<br><a href="/tags/fedihire/" rel="tag">#FediHire</a> <a href="/tags/getfedihired/" rel="tag">#GetFediHired</a> <a href="/tags/jobs/" rel="tag">#jobs</a> <a href="/tags/jobsearch/" rel="tag">#jobsearch</a></p>
Edited 270d ago
<p>Hey! 👋 Time to update my <a href="/tags/introduction/" rel="tag">#introduction</a> post!</p><p>I'm a lead platform engineer, in my late 30s (ouch), been working with <a href="/tags/aws/" rel="tag">#AWS</a> technology for a solid 17 years now. </p><p>Some of my interests:</p><p>🏃🏼♂️ <a href="/tags/running/" rel="tag">#running</a><br>👨🏻💻 <a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#devops</a> <a href="/tags/terraform/" rel="tag">#terraform</a> <a href="/tags/fediverse/" rel="tag">#fediverse</a> <a href="/tags/cloud/" rel="tag">#cloud</a><br>🎮 <a href="/tags/nintendo/" rel="tag">#nintendo</a> <a href="/tags/games/" rel="tag">#games</a><br>🌱 <a href="/tags/climate/" rel="tag">#climate</a><br>🇪🇺 <a href="/tags/europe/" rel="tag">#europe</a><br>✨ <a href="/tags/minimalism/" rel="tag">#minimalism</a> </p><p>I run a small blog over at <a href="https://mijndertstuij.nl/" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>mijndertstuij.nl/</a></p>
<p>Dear fellow or potential fellow gotosocial instance admins,<br>I've come up with a novel way to set up a <a href="/tags/gotosocial/" rel="tag">#gotosocial</a> server behind a reverse proxy, which avoids the use of making new firewalling rules - both on a VPS, and creating port forwarding on one's home router. This method is ideal for minimizing the cost of running one's own <a href="/tags/activitypub/" rel="tag">#ActivityPub</a>/<a href="/tags/mastodon/" rel="tag">#Mastodon</a> server, in a way that leverages inexpensive fast storage on the backend (say, on a <a href="/tags/raspberrypi/" rel="tag">#RaspberryPi</a> 5, 2GB of RAM, with an NVMe). As many valiant and praiseworthy Mastodon server admins might attest to, renting cloud VPS' can cost a lot, especially when storing many tens or hundreds of GB of user data.</p><p>My method avoids the need of forwarding ports 443 and 80 into one's home LAN, using DNAT (on the VPS) and port forwarding (on one's home router). In a nutshell, it's a novel use of <a href="/tags/wireguard/" rel="tag">#Wireguard</a>, in conjunction with <a href="/tags/nginx/" rel="tag">#nginx</a> on the frontend, and gotosocial on the backend. This can save the cost of renting a dedicated VPS, to get the exclusive use of ports 443 and 80, in conjunction with static IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. My method optimizes on reliability and cheapness, but it's not the most secure - decryption and re-encryption happens on the VPS, before the data travels down the Wireguard tunnel. This exposes the data to any underlying hypervisor at one's hosting company. So full disclosure there.</p><p>I've run my method by the helpful gotosocial furries in their <a href="/tags/matrix/" rel="tag">#Matrix</a> Help chatroom (and I'm grateful for their help to debug subtle warts the method had), and got their blessing, at least to the technical soundness of the method.</p><p>I have a testing instance of gotosocial 0.21.0 set up with this new method: <a href="https://g.toque.im" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>g.toque.im</a></p><p>I'm the user <span class="h-card"><a href="https://g.toque.im/@owl" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>owl</span></a></span> on that instance, should you wish to befriend me there.</p><p>I'll make a longer blog post on this in the days to come, and post it in a reply to this post. (I also cross-posted this on another account of mine, please forgive the duplicate: <span class="h-card"><a href="https://wiseowl.club/@gtsadmin" class="u-url mention" rel="nofollow noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">@<span>gtsadmin</span></a></span> )</p><p><a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#DevOps</a> <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> <a href="/tags/infosec/" rel="tag">#infosec</a> <a href="/tags/selfhosting/" rel="tag">#SelfHosting</a> <a href="/tags/datasovereignty/" rel="tag">#DataSovereignty</a> <a href="/tags/opensource/" rel="tag">#OpenSource</a></p>
Edited 38d ago
<p>Ready-to-use virtual clusters</p><p><a href="https://blog.frankel.ch/ready-to-use-virtual-clusters/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="blog.frankel.ch/ready-to-use-virtual-clusters/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">blog.frankel.ch/ready-to-use-v</span><span class="invisible">irtual-clusters/</span></a></p><p><a href="/tags/kubernetes/" rel="tag">#kubernetes</a> <a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#devops</a></p>
<p>I turned a tiny <a href="/tags/mac/" rel="tag">#Mac</a> mini into my own <a href="/tags/mastodon/" rel="tag">#Mastodon</a> server—secure, low‑maintenance, and running like a dream. Here’s the full build, from <a href="/tags/docker/" rel="tag">#Docker</a> to <a href="/tags/cloudflare/" rel="tag">#Cloudflare</a> Tunnel, and why <a href="/tags/selfhosting/" rel="tag">#SelfHosting</a> doesn’t have to be a headache.</p><p><a href="/tags/fediverse/" rel="tag">#Fediverse</a> <a href="/tags/activitypub/" rel="tag">#ActivityPub</a> <a href="/tags/homelab/" rel="tag">#HomeLab</a> <a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#DevOps</a> <a href="/tags/sysadmin/" rel="tag">#SysAdmin</a></p><p><a href="https://phoenixtrap.com/2025/09/21/my-mini-mastodon-server/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="phoenixtrap.com/2025/09/21/my-mini-mastodon-server/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">phoenixtrap.com/2025/09/21/my-</span><span class="invisible">mini-mastodon-server/?utm_source=mastodon&utm_medium=jetpack_social</span></a></p>
manpageblog v1.6 just got released. It is a static blog engine concept that treats written content like classic Unix man pages. It puts content first without sacrificing style and delivers a clean, elegant reading experience free from JavaScript, infinite scrolling, and other distracting clutter. The result is a fast, focused, and genuinely enjoyable way to consume high-quality content which can easily be served on very low power systems and follows the pure minimalism concept.<br><br>manpageblog is written in Python and available for many systems, including <a href="/tags/freebsd/" rel="tag">#FreeBSD</a>, <a href="/tags/openbsd/" rel="tag">#OpenBSD</a>, <a href="/tags/netbsd/" rel="tag">#NetBSD</a> or <a href="/tags/solaris/" rel="tag">#Solaris</a> based ones like <a href="/tags/illumos/" rel="tag">#Illumos</a> but also on <a href="/tags/linux/" rel="tag">#Linux</a> like <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#Debian</a> or <a href="/tags/ubuntu/" rel="tag">#Ubuntu</a>.<br><br>Changelog v1.6:<br><p>Pagination support added<br>Sitemap support added<br>SEO optimized<br>LD+JSON support added</p>manpageblog was initially crafted by me to match the minimalism on FreeBSD and you can directly start with it from the ports:
<a href="https://www.freshports.org/www/manpageblog/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="www.freshports.org/www/manpageblog/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">www.freshports.org/www/manpage</span><span class="invisible">blog/</span></a><br><br>The project source is available on GitHub at:
<a href="https://github.com/gyptazy/manpageblog" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>github.com/gyptazy/manpageblog</a><br>You can find a real-life demo on my website at <a href="https://gyptazy.com" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>gyptazy.com</a><br><br><a href="/tags/opensource/" rel="tag">#opensource</a> <a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#devops</a> <a href="/tags/minimalism/" rel="tag">#minimalism</a> <a href="/tags/purism/" rel="tag">#purism</a> <a href="/tags/web/" rel="tag">#web</a> <a href="/tags/blog/" rel="tag">#blog</a> <a href="/tags/blogengine/" rel="tag">#blogengine</a> <a href="/tags/blogging/" rel="tag">#blogging</a> <a href="/tags/coding/" rel="tag">#coding</a> <a href="/tags/python/" rel="tag">#python</a> <a href="/tags/website/" rel="tag">#website</a> <a href="/tags/manpageblog/" rel="tag">#manpageblog</a><br>
<a href="/tags/proxlb/" rel="tag">#ProxLB</a> 1.1.11 for <a href="/tags/proxmox/" rel="tag">#Proxmox</a> clusters introduces many new features and now fully aligns with Proxmox’s native HA rules.<br><br>ProxLB 1.1.11 was released, focusing on deeper integration and smarter balancing for Proxmox VE clusters. This version introduces a beta integration with Proxmox’s native HA and affinity/anti-affinity rules (please report any kind of bugs!), allowing ProxLB to work seamlessly with existing placement constraints instead of duplicating them.<br><br>The balancing behavior has also been improved: operators can now prefer smaller or larger VMs during placement, and node memory reservations are respected to reduce overcommitment.<br><br>Overall, 1.1.11 makes ProxLB more predictable, safer, and better suited for production use, while paving the way for future HA-aware scheduling improvements.<br><br>Blog post: <a href="https://gyptazy.com/blog/proxlb-proxmox-ha-affinity-rules-version-1-1-11/" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="gyptazy.com/blog/proxlb-proxmox-ha-affinity-rules-version-1-1-11/"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">gyptazy.com/blog/proxlb-proxmo</span><span class="invisible">x-ha-affinity-rules-version-1-1-11/</span></a><br>Release/Changelog: <a href="https://github.com/gyptazy/ProxLB/releases/tag/v1.1.11" rel="nofollow" class="ellipsis" title="github.com/gyptazy/ProxLB/releases/tag/v1.1.11"><span class="invisible">https://</span><span class="ellipsis">github.com/gyptazy/ProxLB/rele</span><span class="invisible">ases/tag/v1.1.11</span></a><br>GitHub: <a href="https://github.com/gyptazy/ProxLB" rel="nofollow"><span class="invisible">https://</span>github.com/gyptazy/ProxLB</a><br><br><a href="/tags/virtualization/" rel="tag">#virtualization</a> <a href="/tags/vm/" rel="tag">#VM</a> <a href="/tags/vps/" rel="tag">#VPS</a> <a href="/tags/pve/" rel="tag">#PVE</a> <a href="/tags/prox/" rel="tag">#Prox</a> <a href="/tags/proxmoxve/" rel="tag">#ProxmoxVE</a> <a href="/tags/kvm/" rel="tag">#KVM</a> <a href="/tags/vmware/" rel="tag">#VMware</a> <a href="/tags/enterprise/" rel="tag">#Enterprise</a> <a href="/tags/homelab/" rel="tag">#Homelab</a> <a href="/tags/resourcescheduler/" rel="tag">#ResourceScheduler</a> <a href="/tags/affinity/" rel="tag">#affinity</a> <a href="/tags/antiaffinity/" rel="tag">#antiaffinity</a> <a href="/tags/devops/" rel="tag">#devops</a> <a href="/tags/tools/" rel="tag">#tools</a> <a href="/tags/python/" rel="tag">#python</a> <a href="/tags/debian/" rel="tag">#debian</a><br>