Didn’t know about Tide, super neat! ✨
Didn’t know about Tide, super neat! ✨
Would be the three I’d choose from atleast.
mercii :)
when I do this I get the error message that the ports are already in use by the vpn container :|
but I thought the containers had to have “network_mode: container:vpn”, in order to strictly only be able to communicate through the VPN.
Ah thanks! That solves one of the services at least. Merciii <3
sorry im still quite new to this… do u have an example of another compose file that does this? Not sure where I put what.
how haha
Right, my bad for the misleading/wrong title. This is my question - how do i map a port to a container that uses network_mode: …
Sorry that was my question, dont want to use the port twice, I want to tell the compose file what to use for each container, but I dont know how.
Thanks for the detailed answer, I was able to solve my problem just with what /u/mara said suggested above :)
Yeah I also don’t want my folks to have to “ignore” the warnings either. So will defo have the https set up before giving them access.
I might give Caddy a go if the response from @Mara doesn’t work for me, thanks!
Yeah I do not have a domain. I did before but for some reason i struggled to wrap my head around reverse proxies and domains. And I prefer to not have to pay for yet another service as I’m just a student :P
This does seem like the easiest option so far, i’ll try to play around with this, thanks!
Solved it by distro hopping 😂 But wanted to hop for a while anyways, trying out the world of Fedora for some months now 🙌
I’m on laptop, I’ll do as much I can do this oldie. but thanks 😊
Hahaha right I changed the title tho, as I assumed it was the update - but it does seem to just be my end so has to be something I’ve done.
Got no plans on suing anyone 😝
Edit: Tumbleweed is not immutable, you learn something new every day, especially from your mistakes 🙃 (it’s still a really nice distro)
Personally really happy with my choice of Immutable Distro: OpenSuse Tumbleweed. To me, who is half a year into using linux, its very convenient to use an immutable system as IF i were to do a wrong command or whatever its super easy to rollback the system (at least on Suse as it uses btrfs-filesystem). Another thing worth mentioning which is also why I chose to go with immutable is that it really teaches you “the good standards” of where to tinker with files and where not to, at least for a beginner like myself this is very nice.