

Anyone remember that video of a guy proving he can cook chicken by slapping it many times?
Anyone remember that video of a guy proving he can cook chicken by slapping it many times?
I need to use the IP for specific reasons concerning my setup; and I don’t want the two containers to share a Docker network.
This used to work exactly as is when I set it up, but doesn’t anymore.
I tinkered with it some more now and I found that while I can ping the docker host, I can’t actually wget anything from any docker services from within the Homepage container. Currently at a loss why that might be.
Would love to see it.
Here’s mine from the Paperless compose.yml (non functional):
webserver:
image: ghcr.io/paperless-ngx/paperless-ngx
[...]
labels:
- homepage.group=Productivity
- homepage.name=Paperless
- homepage.icon=paperless.png
- homepage.href=https://[LOCAL URL]
- homepage.description=Document Management
- homepage.widget.type=paperlessngx
- homepage.widget.url=http://[PAPERLESS IP:PORT]
- homepage.widget.key=[PAPERLESS API TOKEN]
And here’s the error from Homepage frontend:
API Error: Unknown error
URL: http://[PAPERLESS IP:PORT]/api/statistics/?format=json
Raw Error:
{
"errno": -110,
"code": "ETIMEDOUT",
"syscall": "connect",
"address": "[PAPERLESS IP]",
"port": [PAPERLESS PORT]
}
I don’t think it’s you. The paperless widget stopped working for me recently after it had been fine before. Similar setup to yours.
It bothered me a little but since the widget isn’t actually very useful to me I didn’t care to invest more time to get to the bottom of it.
I have a docker forgejo runner for CI with Codeberg. Where did you get stuck?
Bambu-Farm self-hosted server application works well for me together with a VPN into my home network. Made to control print farms, but single printers work all the same.
I like this perspective of yours, and while I don’t think I’ll join you on your instance (I take it this was an open invitation, yes?), I’ll look into ways to hide votes on my client.
Although I do wonder, would you prefer everyone to return to long strings of “+1” and “agreed” posts?
Love the outside the box thinking though. Really inspirational!
I would totally do that. Only problem is that the third yacht really is my favourite, so I’m gonna pass if that’s okay. Thanks!
The star, of course, being the almost universally accepted sign for “entrance” in braille++. Or “exit” in certain dialects, conveniently.
… and enhanced by a sentence or two why it is worthwhile. Getting really tired of the no-effort link drops around here. Better yet, the same no-effort link drop to multiple similar communities on various instances.
Is there a block function for link-only posts?
Are there filters to prevent seeing duplicate content?
But boy, if he does…
I recommend installing calibre web on a home server, installing koreader on the Kobo, and accessing your eBook library over your WiFi and OPDS.
Koreader is such a good reading experience, I never want to go back to stock firmware (well, except for the dictionaries maybe, those are better.)
This looks promising, but I can’t get it to work.
Wireguard, even though they explicitly mention it in their tutorials, doesn’t have an allow/block list for me, so I can’t allow the proxy network bridge. Curious those settings are gone. Too bad!
Thanks, but not an option.
Much obliged.
I agree, it’s a good solution. Just not worth the downsides for my situation currently.
Really? How does that work? Maybe it’s time to look into Tailscale after all…
Short blogs with few but high quality articles are actually the salt of the earth.
I encourage you to do it, there are many options like Hugo, and your intellectual property will never be locked in a company’s app store (Prusa seems trustworthy for now, but as we’ve seen, lockout is always just a TOS change away.)
You already have the writeup and hosting a static site on github pages or similar doesn’t incur costs, so the only thing you need is some time and a domain. 🙂