

Brb, setting up tons of instances for my area so it looks popular
Brb, setting up tons of instances for my area so it looks popular
Docker compose pull; docker compose down;docker compose up -d
Pulls an update for the container, stops the container and then restarts it in the background. I’ve been told that you don’t need to bring it down, but I do it so that even if there isn’t an update, it still restarts the container.
You need to do it in each container’s folder, but it’s pretty easy to set an alias and just walk your running containers, or just script that process for each directory. If you’re smarter than I am, you could get the list from running containers (docker ps), but I didn’t name my service folders the same as the service name.
Shit, regulate the fuck out of AI if this ass pimple thinks it’s a bad idea
All your docker data can be saved to a mapped local disk, then backup is the same as it ever is. Throw borg or something on it and you’re gold.
Look into docker compose and volumes to get an idea of where to start.
That’s what my gig is, but that’s also cuz I’m salary and just work through the lunch hour so I can sign off early to ‘go home’.
Remote work has a lot of benefits.
The tale of the One Armed Man and the Pasta Fleshlight Prince
I cut family out of my life for this reason.
I don’t give a single wet shit about blood if you’re a hateful bigot.
I just use audiobookshelf for my podcasts. Self hosted, no ads, and it just works.
Unilever and coke don’t want their names attached to anything that pisses off 1/3rd of the country.
Hmmm, but which third is it that they don’t want to piss off? Because they only seem to care about the alt-reich third of the country.
And it’s 100% true
The first amendment protects citizen speech from the government. It does not protect speech from consequences or actions by private individuals or companies.
And free speech does not begin and end at the first amendment. A company can violate your ability to speak freely without also violating your first amendment rights.
Freedom of speech is infact dead. When the government and corporations are in bed with each other, that’s a convenient way to separate actions. And as we’ve seen in so many other ways, the government loves to use corporations to do the things that they “aren’t allowed” to do, because tech moves at light speed compared to laws
I don’t need to tell them that, it’s pretty obvious
I was half expecting that to be a loss meme
“It’s different when it happens to us vs when we’re doing it!”
Really wish we would have gone hyper v instead of Stack HCI
just before the bowl lands, you hear a voice in your head
“Not again…”
Forwarding messages is only good if you have a single message to send. If someone sends messages as sentences instead of complete thoughts, or if there’s a back and forth, screenshots are still much superior.
Congrats on doing it the way the website owner wants! You’re now into the content, and you had to waste seconds of processing power to do so (effectively being throttled by the owner), so everyone is happy. You can’t overload the site, but you can still get there after a short wait.
You’re given the challenge to solve by the server, yes. But just because the challenge is provided to you, that doesn’t mean you can fake your way through it.
You still have to calculate the answer before you can get any farther. You can’t bullshit/spoof your way through the math problem to bypass it, because your correct answer is required to proceed.
There is no way around this, is there?
Unless the server gives you a well-known problem you have the answer to/is easily calculated, or you find a vulnerability in something like Anubis to make it accept a wrong answer, not really. You’re stuck at the interstitial page with a math prompt until you solve it.
Unless I’m misunderstanding your position, I’m not sure what the disconnect is. The original question was about spoofing the challenge client side, but you can’t really spoof the answer to a complicated math problem unless there’s an issue with the server side validation.
I usually just do
As I would with any service restart. The up -d command is supposed to reload it as well, but I prefer knowing for certain that the service restarted.
Out of curiosity, what did you update and what broke? I had that happen a lot when I was first getting started with docker, and is part of how I learned. Once you have a basic template (or have dec supplies example files), it makes spinning up new services less of a hassle.
Though I still get yelled at about the version entry in my fines because I haven’t touched mine in forever