I agree limiting application scope is useful for multiple reasons, however Jellyfin started as a fork of Emby which already had music support. I have yet to find a standalone application that has enough features to sway me from just utilizing the existing media server functionality.
Finamp’s current alpha was a huge surprise to me. I stopped looking at development for a few months and in that time they completely reworked it
Nope, but it has become a backronym https://wikipedia.org/wiki/Object_storage#Origins
You would first need to define malicious code within the context of that repo. To some people, telemetry is malicious.
Yo, they added full page copies now? Gotta give it a spin again
Microsoft tried to lock a development feature behind a paywall by introducing an artificial dependency on Visual Studio.
This also happened to occur right around the time there were also licensing and hosting issues around open source libraries. The manipulation of the .NET foundation was the really concerning part. Made it clear that MS still doesn’t give a damn about the wider community using their language.
A thinly veiled M$ ad, trying to save face after the .NET fiasco of 2021…
To me on the security side of things caddy has a feature I have yet to see anywhere else: default reverse proxy headers.
Got something you want to lock down remote js loading on unless it explicitly requests an override? Default the variable to a locked value. The application can override it with it’s own header as necessary.
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Ha, gotta add this regex to my spam filters now that you’ve pointed it out
I wish nginx had the concept of default header values for reverse proxies…
I mean, you can kind of do it with macros but man…
We’re the front line dog. Strike me down so Debian Stable’s legacy may live on.
If you’re just looking for RSS -> Push take a look at feedpushr
I use it with gotify without too many issues.
You say that like there a large overhead to containers…
Even in this case that overhead is negligible. Container configs and artifacts are also more portable and easier to backup.
It was dead however long ago when I submitted a PR. Still unmerged with no activity on the request so I just never went back to check.
It’s good to hear that they are working on it again though, if that is the case.
To be fair, C predates dependency hell. It was either there or it wasn’t. C++ has less of an excuse, but it was just object oriented concepts taped to C so it’s no surprise it was also missing dependency management.
Now with cmake, gnu-make, meson, gradel, and the world of metabuild systems that wrap those, nothing will change. It it does, it might as well kick start world war 3.