bobslaede

joined 1 year ago
[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 2 points 2 days ago

If you pasted something long, you could possible switch to a terminal (ctrl+alt+f2 or something), and kill the process.
Or you could grab another machine, and ssh into yours to kill the process.

[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 2 points 1 month ago

Awesome! I'm glad that it worked. It took me a while to figure out, when it happened to me. Glad that I could make your life easier :)

[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 4 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (2 children)

I've fixed the same issue for me.
Originally I had this in my Local DNS settings in my Pi-Hole:

- service1.domain	10.0.0.4
- service2.domain	10.0.0.4
- service3.domain	10.0.0.5

I changed that to this:

- host1.domain		10.0.0.4
- host2.domain		10.0.0.4

And then I added CNAME Records to the services like this:

- service1.domain	host1.domain
- service2.domain	host1.domain
- service3.domain	host2.domain

This fixed the whole thing for me :)

Edit: Gonna add some more info

The trick that makes this work, and probably will for you too, and allow you to keep your HTTPS queries, is that Pi Hole will just not ask upstream, if it has the DNS name in the CNAME records. Those CNAME records will have to point to a domain, that Cloudflare doesn't know about. That way there is no other records upstream that will confuse the DNS server and your browser.
The hostname you have in your local DNS records that your CNAME points to, will be something only known locally for you.

[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 3 points 1 month ago

You should change to use cname in pihole. I will write up on my computer later for you.

[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 5 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago) (4 children)

Try with nslookup and see if you're resolving the domain to both your local ipv4 address, and the Cloudflare ipv6 at the same time. I am using pihole for my local DNS, and it would give me both my local address, and also the Cloudflare ipv6 address.

Edit
My pihole will ask upstream even if the domain was listed locally. It doesn't ask Upstream for cname.

[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 8 points 1 month ago (8 children)

Any chance you are both accessing your services locally with a local DNS, and publicly with something like Cloudflare?

[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 1 points 2 months ago

Hmm. I would think so. But I haven't actually checked. That was my thought.

[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 8 points 2 months ago (6 children)

Temp files for transcoding. No need to hit the disk.

[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 5 points 2 months ago (8 children)

This is how mine works, with a Nvidia GPU

services:
  jellyfin:
    volumes:
      - jellyfin_config:/config
      - jellyfin_cache:/cache
      - type: tmpfs
        target: /cache/transcodes
        tmpfs:
          size: 8G
      - media:/media
    image: jellyfin/jellyfin:latest
    restart: unless-stopped
    deploy:
      resources:
        reservations:
          devices:
            - driver: nvidia
              device_ids:
                - "0"
              capabilities:
                - gpu
[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 1 points 2 months ago

I have tries the same on Ubuntu. It was also the desktop that had gotten removed, because if pipewire. Silly computer.

[–] bobslaede@feddit.dk 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

No. You can leave that out. That was just me showing you that it runs on my machine, with that setup. Just bind the port instead.

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