This is exactly what a cultist would say… Where do I sign up ?
z3bra
- 26 Posts
- 206 Comments
The neat part is that you get to imagine the “plot” yourself. @pmjv feeds us and endless stream of (lovely) flashes of the universe, and leaves you at task to connect whatever dots your brain can create :)
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
unix_surrealism@lemmy.sdf.org•first time upgrading OpenBladeEnglish
6·2 years agoSlap LibreBoot on that stick child ! DO IT !
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Setting Up a Secure Tunnel Between Two MachinesEnglish
2·2 years agoKeeping the source IP intact means you’ll have troubles routing back the traffic through host B.
Basically host A won’t be able to access the internet without going through B, which could not be what you want.
Here’s how it works:
On host A:
- add a /32 route to host B public IP through your local ISP gateway (eg. 192.168.1.1)
- setup a wireguard tunnel between A and B
- host A: 172.17.0.1/30
- host B: 172.17.0.2/30
- add a default route to host B wireguard IP
On host B:
- setup wireguard (same config)
- add PAT rules to the firewall so to DNAT incoming requests on the ports you need to 172.17.0.1
- add an SNAT masquerade rule so all outbound request from 172.17.0.1 are NATed with host B public address.
This should do what you need. However, if I may comment it out, I’d say you should give up on carrying the source IP address down to host A. This setup I described is clunky and can fail in many ways. Also I can see no benefits of doing that besides having “pretty logs” on host A. If you really need good logs, I’d suggest setting up a good reverse proxy on host B and forwarding it’s logs to a collector on host A.
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Which OS do you use for your homeserver?English
1·2 years agoOpenBSD is the most pleasing expérience I’ve had with an OS. It’s fully contained and has all the tools you need without needing to install anything (eg a DNS, HTTP, SMTP servers, a proxy, a good firewall). All config files look alike and use the same keywords for the same things, making it straightforward to configure everything.
And regarding RAID 1, I’ve never done it myself, but it totally works out of the box (as well as full disk encryption).
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Which OS do you use for your homeserver?English
8·2 years agoOpenBSD for all of them.
This one got some serious Jazz Jackrabbit vibes… I love it ❤️
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Programming@programming.dev•Do any of you program on non-US keyboard layouts?
2·2 years agoThe thing is, this layout moves symbols to places that are much easier to remember (~ is altgr+n, ç is altgr+c, $ is altgr+d, parenthesis/brackets are next to each other, etc…) I got used to it very quickly because the new placement makes sense, and the fact you only have to remember symbols and not alphanum chars helps a lot. Definitely worth trying IMO.
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Programming@programming.dev•Do any of you program on non-US keyboard layouts?
2·2 years agoDid you know about the New AZERTY ? I’ve been using it for a few years now and it’s definitely a great improvement, while remaining compatible enough with the standard one so you are not lost when you use a colleague’s setup.
I bought this album and the last song segfaults. Is it just me ?
IRC est loin d’être mort ! J’y traîne encore beaucoup perso. Il y a beaucoup de communautés sur Libera.chat surtout, mais également dans les communautés “Tilde” (genre tilde.chat). Après il faut reconnaître que ce sont en général des commus internationales et orientées tech.
Sinon en vieux protocoles, Gopher et Finger résistent toujours à l’extinction :)
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
France@jlai.lu•Dry January : allez-vous relever le défi du mois sans alcool ? - Martinique la 1èreFrançais
3·2 years agoAaah j’aimerai beaucoup mais je suis trop engagé dans le soutien aux petits producteurs (de bière !) de ma région 🙃
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
France@jlai.lu•Dry January : allez-vous relever le défi du mois sans alcool ? - Martinique la 1èreFrançais
1·2 years agodeleted by creator
Bonne année à la France décentralisée ! 🎉
Red is… Alive ?!
Please provide your details and enjoy your new unlimited anonymity :
- name
- birth date
- address
- social security number
- name of dog
- annual revenue
[ ] I accept to receive marketing popups through jack2head
[ ] I accept the privacy policy
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
cybersecurity@infosec.pub•What are You Working on WednesdayEnglish
1·2 years agoHey just a reminder, the hunt is open ;) Please share the link if you like it, the more hunters there will be, the funnier !
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Programming@programming.dev•[WireGuard] Do I have to use my own DNS on a VPS in order to avoid DNS-leaks?
6·2 years agoLooks like you shouldn’t ask for anything at all, given that you cannot take a single answer without being a condescending jerk. I’m not affiliated to cyberia.is in any mean by the way just proposing a service that you could use to solve your problem if you were not too busy being a douchebag.
z3bra@lemmy.sdf.orgto
Programming@programming.dev•[WireGuard] Do I have to use my own DNS on a VPS in order to avoid DNS-leaks?
2·2 years agoKeep in mind that using your own VPS as a VPN doesn’t bring anonymity. You’re simply replacing one IP tied to your name (your ISP) with another one (your VPS).
You hide your traffic from your ISP, and delegate it to your VPS provider.
This will be the same for your DNS. If you want true anonymity regarding DNS, you should use someone else’s service, preferably over encrypted channels, eg. cyberia.is DoT.
I personally use it as a forwarder from a box inside my home (along with others), and use this box as the local DNS when I’m home. This way I know that all DNS traffic is encrypted, and doesn’t leak anything to my ISP or VPS or whatever.










Did you seriously bring a gun to a sword fight !?