Of all those, I've only heard of Heztner. Am I out of touch?
I've been a Linode customer for years, and I used to use Digital Ocean as well. I've been happy with them, did you consider them?
Ludusavi does it all for you, works great, and the dev implemented my feature request within a few weeks (handling a mounted Windows drive better)
None that article, but check my other reply and check your plan. You may be pleased, I was.
The marketing fluff doesn't, but they actually did increase upload speeds. Mine went from 10 to 20 up. And here is the DSL reports forum thread from when this round started.
Also, they are testing larger increases. I could get 100 up today, if I had a supported modem.
So, check your actual plan and modem to see what you have now.
tl;dr: self-hosted report-uri.com
?
I messed up my site's Content-Security-Policy and blew up my report quota on report-uri.com last month. I'm happy with them, but I don't really want to pay for this service, and I want to avoid that in the future. So I'm looking for something(s) to:
- Collect Content-Security-Policy browser reports (go-csp-collector is sufficient here, if not great, as it doesn't support the newer Report-To) and log to JSON (or whatever)
- Collect other browser reports such as NEL, Deprecation, Crash and log to JSON
- Collect SMTP-TLS and DMARC email reports and log to JSON
- Display them somehow for searching and for seeing trends: preferably something less manual than Grafana, but I can collect the logs and do custom dashboards in Grafana that parse JSON (or whatever) logs if I need to.
- Let me filter incoming reports based on various things (like ignore CSP reports with no URL)
In my searches I found plenty of SaaS and no source code for the whole thing. Sentry and its clones are too much; I don't want to instrument an app I don't have. I did find plenty of 5-year old abandoned projects, though.
So, what's out there in this space for self-hosting?
For reference, report-uri.com looks like the below, with the ability to drill down and filter and see reports.
Have you set your system to prefer it in gai.conf?
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/IPv6#Prefer_IPv4_over_IPv6
You said enforce in the post, but prefer in a comment. Do you mean prefer ipv6, or disable ipv4?
Yes. 2019 comment from cloudflare: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19828702
On my network, I send dns requests for only the archive domains to a DNS server that archive likes. Adguards, in this case. Everything else goes to cloudflare. Both adguardhome and unbound can do that.
I was happy with my cyber powers for years, but then the batteries died (official replacement batteries, after 3 years - the originals lasted 5) and the ups just stopped even passing power through. This is someone's old blog about this https://blog.networkprofile.org/cyberpower-ups-avoid/
The recent webp vulnerability is a bit concerning.
I might get the 8 next week. It's supposed to be a little smaller.
Ping is not a good way to test http, because they are completely different protocols, and can be blocked separately or not. From what you have posted so far, I don't see a problem being demonstrated. Your caddy log here also shows one successful request. So: define "not working" better. Are you testing from a browser? Via curl? From where? To exactly what urls? What message do you get back from your browser/curl?
It was posted from mastodon. That's also why it sounds like a completely random tweet and doesn't fit in with lent Lemmy.
But who is running the bitwarden server? Bitwarden the private company.
I self host vault warden, but it's really not something everyone can do.
I'll very likely buy a 7a in November.