I host tt-rss in docker and use Tiny Tiny RSS in GrapheneOS.
mike_wooskey
When I install qbittorrent via docker, I see this in the docker logs:
qbittorrent-1 | 2024-11-04T15:25:25.201955254Z The WebUI administrator username is: admin
qbittorrent-1 | 2024-11-04T15:25:25.201974066Z The WebUI administrator password was not set. A temporary password is provided for this session: H7ct3xPes
That's the default admin credentials for the instance. I can then change the login or pw in the UI.
Thanks for sharing about Backrest. I use Restic and Backrest looks like a great addition to it.
~/git/vendor/<gitUser>/<repo>
and
~/git/<myName>/<forge>/<user>/<repo>
Examples:
~/git/vendor/EnigmaCurry/d.rymcg.tech
~/git/mike/forgejo/mikew/myproject
~/git/mike/github/johndoe/otherProject
I should add the d.rymcg.tech includes step-ca if you want to host your own CA server, but I agree with @[email protected] : it's not necessary for securely hosting services, and ir can be dangerous I'd not done carefully.
I have a similar setup. I use d.rymcg.tech (a configuration manager for Docker, as well as a collection of open source web services and config templates) and have Traefik (reverse proxy) on a Digital Ocean dropet connected to a VM in my home lab through wireguard. This framework allows me to put authentication and authoriation in front of any apps/services I'm hosting (HTTP basic auth, oauth2, mTLS). This setup allows me to control what is allowed access from outside of my home, without opening any ports.
I self-host forgejo. I'm not a heavy or advanced user, and it suits my needs. I barely use github any more: mainly to star repos I like, and find and use repos (there's a ton there - it's almost ubiquitous).
I self-host xBrowserSync. It's a bookmark sync tool, not a link manager, but it does that very well (set-and-forget - it's almost invisible). There are browser extensions and mobile apps
I've also used Shaarli, which is more of a link sharing tool. Don't remember much about it, though - sorry.
I just learned about OpenFreeMap. I've not done it but it touts itself as a simple way to host your own tile server. I'm assuming that your proxy would work for a self hosted tile server with a few alterations.
It sounds like the password history shows generated passwords (e.g , for all entries or for no entry), not passwords saved for an entry. I haven't tested this yet, though.
If so, it wouldn't help you with any particular entry's past password, and in fact it would seem like a pretty useless feature.