Personally my go-to for this would be the ipv6 experimental Yggdrasil-network. https://yggdrasil-network.github.io/
dirtyrig
Thanks for sharing. I recall hearing about this before. After reading this thread I've been trying to vend some of my selfhosted apps over yggdrasil. The documentation is difficult to find. A good tutorial would be really useful. Here are my two biggest ~~stumbling blocks~~ headaches:
- ipv6 headache: I had to update my server host binding from
0.0.0.0
to::
(from ipv4 to ipv6). Apparently ipv4 still works but now ipv6 also works. This was the biggest blocker for me gaining access to my apps over yggdrasil using ipv6. - yggdrasil.conf headache: ipv6 syntax issues (apparently I need to learn me some ipv6 stuff) You need to put ipv6 ip addresses in brackets. This is an excerpt from my Listen attribute in my yggdrasil.conf file.
# Listen addresses for incoming connections. You will need to add
# listeners in order to accept incoming peerings from non-local nodes.
# Multicast peer discovery will work regardless of any listeners set
# here. Each listener should be specified in URI format as above, e.g.
# tls://0.0.0.0:0 or tls://[::]:0 to listen on all interfaces.
Listen: [
tls://[::]:8000
tls://[::]:8080
]
I also downloaded an yggdrasil vpn app for Android and was able to access both apps with Android after adding a peer connection in the settings. Later, I added my Android public key to the AllowedPublicKeys to lock down my apps to be only accessible to my client.
Thanks @wgs for the tip! 🏆
There is so much Lemmy to go around. Cross posting this explorer for finding communities.
I'm not even a dev
Said every developer
You're thinking of DataTables. The lemmy-ui source code shows the css class as table
. It looks to me like the basic bootstrap table.
Curious what library you used for the download.
Perfect use case. pipx
is awesome for Python! Glad you found a great easy solution.
Is it over engineering or error prone?
Nope. pipx
is like a big guard rail to keep you from doing error prone things with system Python.
In these examples we'll assume your venv is at /home/TrueBlue/project/venv
Is there another way...?
- shebang: Set your #! to point at your Python venv runtime
#!/home/TrueBlue/project/venv python3
Now you can just run your Python file and it'll use the correct Python runtime. poetry
can be useful for running personal projects usingpoetry run
.- In linux you can use an alias to create to call your venv Python runtime with your package.
e.g.
I want to use a new command named sdf
to call my app.
alias sdf="/home/TrueBlue/project/venv/bin/python3 my_app.py"
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