Would that be better than just mounting the NFS on the host and assigning that directory as the Immich upload directory?
AnApexBread
So your vote is an external library
just get a cheap nas eg from synology
Cheap and Synology are mutually exclusive. But I agree with the rest of what you said.
It's not a good idea due to the load on the router and a proper NAS would be better
Because SDN setups are significantly better than Mesh
I do. I monitor it in a lot of ways.
- IDS at the router
- Anomoli Detection at the router
- Host based agents on everything I can
- L7 Firewalls on everything I can
- DNS based monitoring for everything
Wireguard and Cloudflare Tunnels make network traffic monitoring difficult because it's all encrypted traffic.
I don't even let my friends have unrestricted access to my server because I don't want the liability that could come with one of them searching for/downloading illegal content.
Sure I would technically fall under safe harbor laws but I don't want to spend the money on court/lawyer fees to prove that I'm not that one downloading shit.
Cloudflare will host videos at $5 per 1000 minutes and an extra $1 per 1000 minutes watched per month.
https://www.cloudflare.com/products/cloudflare-stream/
That's the only Cloudflare approved way to do videos and images through the proxy
Google Photos.
I pay $15 a month for unlimited storage.
Photos of my family are of the most important things to me so I'm paying out for guaranteed redundancy.
I still host a local photo storage version but I also backup everything to Google Photos.
Have you tried using a USB drive bay station with proxmox before?
I'm debating getting a 5 bay station, plugging it into my proxmox and passing the USB through to an OMV VM but I'm not sure if that will work.
In short cloudflare is both a DNS server and a reverse proxy. When you add a DNS record in there and mark it as proxy cloudflare will publish the DNS record but will instead give its own IP as the destination.
When a visitor enters your URL instead of getting your IP they will be given Cloudflare's IP. The visitor will then send their web request to Cloudflare. Cloudflare will then send that request to your actual IP.
That's the basic version. However, Cloudflare's position as a proxy gives it the ability to inspect and act on traffic as a WAF, blocking traffic that meetings the IDS/IPS rules.
It all comes down to "what are you trying to do."
Not everyone runs applications, so docker is not the answer to everything.
But if you only have 8Gb of RAM and are trying to run VMs then I'd advise you to go buy more RAM.
Same. I ran OwnCloud and Nextcloud in parallel for a while until a Nextcloud update nuked it and my wife lost some of her college work.
After that I've appreciated the slower more deliberate pace of OwnCloud