robin

joined 1 year ago
 

Hi. I'm thinking about switching to Linux on my smartphone. The only reason I can't is because in my country WhatsApp is everywhere and I'm expected to have it for various school/sport things. I'd like to setup whatsapp on my laptop, but I don't know how.

I know WhatsApp Web and Desktop exist, but in the past you needed to log in to your phone at least once a month for the web session to keep working. Is it that still the case?

Or can I just log in from Android (and be fine as long as I don't accidentally log out)?

[–] [email protected] 2 points 1 year ago

Thanks, that goes a long way already :)

2
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I'm thinking about running my own pubnix/tilde. It would be invite-only and have a bunch of cool things:

  • git hosting with cgit or sourcehut
  • gemini hosting
  • web hosting
  • gopher hosting
  • FTP access
  • about 2GB of storage
  • matrix accounts + chat portal (Hydrogen seems cool)
  • internal message board/email?
  • maybe a CardDAV server?

I think it would be a very cool opportunity to learn a bit about Linux and the internet. However, I literally have no clue how to set this up. I found this comment on Reddit:

It happens that you're trying to build a tilde/pubnix? From my experience, tilde admins often give direct access to the system, but with proper permission elevation. Create a user group with limited permission (i.e. no sudo, disable specific softwares) and add their usernames to, give them a space in /home. Secondly, disable SSH password, ask them to send you their public keys and only authenticate via public key. Finally, write a good/strict policy but also send welcoming message. Also, you can look for further security practices, like changing default port, etc. but the key thing is proper user permission.

That's what I want. I was thinking about allowing password logins tho. I already have a VPS, which I want to reinstall to turn into this thing.

I basically want to configure the services in a way, that they all depend on Unix accounts. That way I can create a Unix account with suitable permissions for every member, and shit should Just Work™.

So, I was thinking:

  • Exposing all git repos in ~/git/ at the URL http(s)://git.example.com/~user/ (using cgit) and gemini://git.example.com/~user/ (using git.gmi)
  • Exposing ~/pub/gem/ at gemini://example.com/~user/
  • Exposing ~/pub/web/ at http(s)://example.com/~user/
  • Exposing ~/pub/goph/ at gopher://example.com/~user/
  • Creating @user:example.com matrix account with the same password as Unix. Changing the Unix password will also change the matrix password and changing the password from a matrix client should not be allowed.
  • Hosting Hydrogen (matrix client) at https://chat.example.com
  • Maybe host a CardDAV server with an account for every member, similar to what I want for matrix?
  • Maybe a Lemmy instance (with mlmym as frontend), same thing with accounts.

Any pointers on how to setup something like this? How would I handle backups? (I know I can just backup all files in every member's home directory, but how would I handle something more complicated, like the matrix accounts?) How would I make something like this secure?

15
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by [email protected] to c/[email protected]
 

I'm thinking about running my own pubnix/tilde. It would be invite-only and have a bunch of cool things:

  • git hosting with cgit or sourcehut
  • gemini hosting
  • web hosting
  • gopher hosting
  • FTP access
  • about 2GB of storage
  • matrix accounts + chat portal (Hydrogen seems cool)
  • internal message board/email?
  • maybe a CardDAV server?

I think it would be a very cool opportunity to learn a bit about Linux and the internet. However, I literally have no clue how to set this up. I found this comment on Reddit:

It happens that you're trying to build a tilde/pubnix? From my experience, tilde admins often give direct access to the system, but with proper permission elevation. Create a user group with limited permission (i.e. no sudo, disable specific software) and add their usernames to, give them a space in /home. Secondly, disable SSH passwords, ask them to send you their public keys, and only authenticate via public key. Finally, write a good/strict policy but also send a welcoming message. Also, you can look for further security practices, like changing default port, etc. but the key thing is proper user permission.

That's what I want. I was thinking about allowing password logins tho. I already have a VPS, which I want to reinstall to turn into this thing.

I basically want to configure the services in a way, that they all depend on Unix accounts. That way I can create a Unix account with suitable permissions for every member, and stuff should Just Work™.

So, I was thinking:

  • Exposing all git repos in ~/git/ at the URL http(s)://git.example.com/~user/ (using cgit) and gemini://git.example.com/~user/ (using git.gmi)
  • Exposing ~/pub/gem/ at gemini://example.com/~user/
  • Exposing ~/pub/web/ at http(s)://example.com/~user/
  • Exposing ~/pub/goph at gopher://example.com/~user/
  • Creating @user:example.com matrix account with the same password as Unix. Changing the Unix password will also change the matrix password and changing the password from a matrix client should not be allowed.
  • Hosting Hydrogen (matrix client) at https://chat.example.com
  • Maybe host a CardDAV server with an account for every user, similar to what I want for matrix.

Any pointers on how to set up something like this? How would I handle backups? (I know I can just backup all files in every member's home directory, but how would I handle something more complicated, like the matrix accounts?). How would I make something like this secure?