bravemonkey

joined 2 years ago
[–] bravemonkey 24 points 1 week ago (1 children)

That's a bad take, there will always be people who will say we can never afford it. The real question should be 'can we afford not to' as people live and die in miserable conditions.

[–] bravemonkey 2 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago)

Having yt-dlp save the videos to S3 will just add to your costs - what benefit will it provide to your users to get the file from S3 compared to Youtube?

While 'cloud computing' is managing servers in the cloud like EC2, they're still just servers like you'd run in your lab. To do it the 'cloud way', use the cloud services instead.

My suggestion would be a price checker - create a webpage maybe with S3 or Lightsail where users can enter in a URL for a product, an email address and a scrape recurrence time like 24hours, then have Lambda scrape the page & email the price to the user on that schedule. Use DynamoDB (or a relational DB like Postgresql) to save the results, schedule, etc.

Try not to use EC2 at all if possible. Or instead of EC2, use EKS if scraping with Lambda is too difficult.

The most important thing is getting the security right, from your access to AWS to ensuring your database isn't easily downloaded by just anyone.

[–] bravemonkey 4 points 2 weeks ago (1 children)

This isn’t the Raspberry Pi Imager - it’s a tool to build custom images. From the GitHub: A tool to generate highly customised software images for Raspberry Pi devices.

[–] bravemonkey 3 points 1 month ago

Substance was probably my favourite. I haven’t heard of Bramayugam, looking forward to checking it out!

[–] bravemonkey 2 points 1 month ago

Congrats on the journey! This is something I've been enjoying lately, but it sounds like it might be too sweet. I'm still trying to find the balance that works for me.

2 oz. Canadian Whisky 1 oz. Dry orange liqueur (I use Pierre Ferrand) 0.25 oz maraschino liqueur 1 oz. lemon juice

[–] bravemonkey 2 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Nice job trying to avoid the burden of proof.

[–] bravemonkey 3 points 2 months ago (3 children)

So where are the reputable news sources for this claim?

[–] bravemonkey 5 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Looks like it took inspiration from the Tachikoma!

[–] bravemonkey 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

Someone who doesn’t use the distro is saying a tool ‘is a must’ when I do use the distro and have never needed it. You do you, but the point of my original comment was that it’s a valid distro for Europeans wanting a non-US option. Doesn’t mean you need to like it or use, but others might.

[–] bravemonkey 3 points 2 months ago (3 children)

So you find Gnome & KDE ugly? I've never needed to use Yast for any system configuration. Having BTFRS with snapshots as default makes it a great distro.

[–] bravemonkey 2 points 2 months ago (5 children)

SUSE/OpenSUSE seems like a much more European option

5
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by bravemonkey to c/[email protected]
 

Hello,

I've come across an unexpected issue that may be hard to diagnose due to required hardware, but here goes.

I have a Raspberry Pi connected to an LCD display that I'm testing turning the screen on and off (not worrying about displaying text, I've previously written a program that uses a DHT22 sensor to display the temperature & humidity and external weather conditions using the Pirate Weather API).

While trying to write a simple program just to turn the display on or off, I run into an issue.

Here's the code:

import board
import datetime
# I2C driver from:
# https://gist.github.com/vay3t/8b0577acfdb27a78101ed16dd78ecba1
import I2C_LCD_driver
import argparse
parser = argparse.ArgumentParser()
parser.add_argument("state", help="'on' to turn on the screen, 'off' to turn off",type=str)
args = parser.parse_args()

mylcd = I2C_LCD_driver.lcd()

match args.state:
    case "on":
        power = 1
    case "off":
        power = 0
    case _:
        print("Please enter 'on' or 'off'")
        power = None

if power != None:
    print(power) # this is just to test
    mylcd.backlight(power)

What's happening that I don't understand is if power == None, the if statement will not trigger but the display will turn on.

The only way I've been able to keep the display off is if I add an else statement:

else:
    pass

This is using Python 3.10. My understanding is the else should not be needed at all. Any suggestions as to why the display might be turning on, or a better suggestion on how to handle the match statement?

--EDIT--

So it turns out initializing the display is turning it on at the same time. For a community that had no activity for ~2 years before this post, I'm pleasantly surprised with the amount of responses I've gotten - you all are awesome!

 

I’m running a rootless podman container listening on port 8080 on OpenSUSE Tumbleweed.

From the same host, there's no problem accessing the container. Trying to access the container remotely fails due to firewalld blocking the connection.

What I don't understand is this:

If I configure firewalld to forward port 80 to the container on port 8080 using

firewall-cmd --add-forward-port=port=80:proto=tcp:toport=8080

I can access the container from a remote computer using port 80.

However, if I try:

firewall-cmd --add-forward-port=port=8080:proto=tcp:toport=8080

I'm not able to reach the container. It seems that every port I try will work except for port 8080 in this case, and I can't find any references explaining why this might be the case.

What's going on here? Is it a conflict by trying to forward a port to itself? Is there any way to allow port 8080? Trying to allow port 8080 in the public zone fails as well.

15
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by bravemonkey to c/[email protected]
 

I'm new to Podman and so far have been completely frustrated by it.
I don't know if the issue is with the container or Podman since there are just no logs.

I'm trying to run Stirling-PDF, using this command:

podman run -d
-p 8080:8080
-v /location/of/trainingData:/usr/share/tesseract-ocr/5/tessdata
-v /location/of/extraConfigs:/configs
-v /location/of/logs:/logs
-e DOCKER_ENABLE_SECURITY=false
--name stirling-pdf
frooodle/s-pdf:latest

With Docker, I have no issue running the this container. Under Podman the container immediately exits without logs - podman logs stirling-pdf shows nothing.

The same thing happens running the same command with sudo or without sudo but using --rootful. I've also tried removing '-e DOCKER_ENABLE_SECURITY=false ' since it's very Docker specific.

I can run podman run -dt --name webserver -p 8081:80 quay.io/libpod/banner with no issues, so is this something incompatible with the container?

I feel like I'm missing something obvious - like where are the logs?

I'm running on OpenSUSE-Tumbleweed, Podman version 4.9.0

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