awesome! i got the same one. still waiting to buy drives, as 2x 16tb drives is a tad expensive. soon ill swap my old $40 to my fancy new one. im using plain ol debian with docker. barebones but simple and secure. youll have to update us on using OMV
awesome! i got the same one. still waiting to buy drives, as 2x 16tb drives is a tad expensive. soon ill swap my old $40 to my fancy new one. im using plain ol debian with docker. barebones but simple and secure. youll have to update us on using OMV
I have setup the same thing as a temp measure, but i believe that something like Authelia or Keycloak should replace and be better than Cloudflare’s email OTP.
thank you so much. everything is back.
i have docker containers using that folder. could that be it?
uh…didn’t work
skynet@skynet:~$ sudo umount -f /home/skynet
umount: /home/skynet: target is busy.
umount: /home/skynet: target is busy.
running mount
prints a lot, but at the bottom it has: shady@192.168.50.16:/home/shady/skynet on /home/skynet type fuse.sshfs (rw,nosuid,nodev,relatime,user_id=0,group_id=0,default_permissions,allow_other)
some sources online say that rebooting will revert it…do I risk it?
skynet@skynet:/home$ fusermount -u /home/skynet
fusermount: entry for /home/skynet not found in /etc/mtab
True. I would like to add another authentication.
I guess my question is how trustworthy is built-in authentication? I’m not really talking about vulnerabilities, but that’s a part of this, but how much trust can I put into a small projects login page being secure?
Correct. But also public access should be considered advanced