Yes, that is what i am used to.
I guess headless is better for performance and i do not see an advantage at all.
Another question: Why do you have several debians-vm’s? You also could take one, right?
Yes, that is what i am used to.
I guess headless is better for performance and i do not see an advantage at all.
Another question: Why do you have several debians-vm’s? You also could take one, right?
It is almost a fresh armbian. I just installed omv, docker, portainer and nextcloud (docker). Yes, my plan was to move to the nextcloud in yunohost, if i like it.
No, on arm-device you have to install armbian and afterwards yunohost by a script: curl https://install.yunohost.org | bash
Thank you. Had to edit the folders. Not the stack was “successfully deployed”. Have to watch now if the backup works.
That’s it. Nice. I tried ’ instead of `, so the 2nd useful thing i learnd today. Thanks.
No problem. I use vaultwarden for years. In this case I am not really worried about data-loss because bitwarden keeps an copy of your credentials offline. So in the worst case, i can export them.
I would like to post it, but i have issues with formatting. voyager does not have this “code-format” and writes everything in one line.
Is there a workaround?
This is good. there was an OLD vaultwarden-folder in my root-directory and i thought this would be the current, but you are absolutely right: The folder is in the compose-directory!
Do you really think this is a good place?
My Lemmy-client forces me to add a picture. I was pretty sure to find a solution with thunderbird - what I did
I think that is the way I want to go! Thunderbird on my PC is the „central mail client“, so I just have to draw the archived years (imap) to a local folder. The advantages: If I look for an older mail, I do not have to search in seperate archived files (mbox/eml). And with backing up thunderbird, I have a backup of all my settings AND mails!
I think that is the way I want to go! Thunderbird on my PC is the „central mail client“, so I just have to draw the archived years (imap) to a local folder. The advantages: If I look for an older mail, I do not have to search in seperate archived files (mbox/eml). And with backing up thunderbird, I have a backup of all my settings AND mails!
Sounds interesting. Never heard before. On their page I see the “ksuite standard” for free with 2 emails/15GB. The next upgrade to 5 adresses/3TB(!) would be 3,29€.
Ok, i will have to check out what a LXC is before i start, but that helped a lot. Thanks