

You’re most welcome
You’re most welcome
I use pinchflat and TubeArchivist to fetch content from YouTube.
While TubeArchivist is great on it’s own when you fetch individual videos or channels that have their content organized in playlists, it has only a web UI which is OK on phone, but unusable on TV.
There is an add-on to synchronize TubeArchivist and jellyfin, but it doesn’t translate too well between how TA and JF organize their data.
I use Pinchflat exclusively to download channels whose content’s order does not necessarily matter. It nicely provides all the metadata to JF and even integrates sponsorblock as chapters into JF.
I have each of these services running as a docker container.
Yes, I use jellyfin exclusively as a frontend for local mirrors of a handful YouTube channels.
Send a bill over 80 hours of freelance work
The bestestest deal even!
I thought energy in the U.S. was laughably cheap, but those prices are surprisingly expensive compared to my feel-good-all-hydro-and-wind plan at 0,35€/kWh
The container itself has been allocated 4 cores and 4 GiB RAM on my PVE host, RAM usage currently sits at 75%. Before I had 2 GiB of RAM allocated, felt like it was slowed down a little bit by running from a HDD then. The host CPU is an i5-9400, so nothing beefy.
Besides Gitlab, I run Home Assistant, a single tenant Nextcloud instance and pfsense on the same host without any troubles. All services combined have 14 GiB Ram allocated, most of that actually goes to HASS since its doing speech recognition and speech synthesis (6GiB)
I am selfhosting my Gitlab and it’s one of the less troubling services I run.
I followed their documentation for setup and update gitlab biyearly, as far as I remembered I never had to revert to a backup, even after I skipped updates for a little over a year.
Another favorite of mine is truncating the password to a certain length w/o informing the user.
My only experience with btrfs was when trying out Opensuse Tumbleweed. Within a couple days my home partition was busted, next time it was another partition. No idea if the problems could be fixed as these were fairly new installations to give Opensuse a try and I couldn’t be bothered to fix a system that’s troubling me from the very beginning.
Between all the options that just work ™, btrfs is the one I’ve learned to stay away from.
EDIT: that was four or five years ago
Isn’t that the explicit downside to their free plan? I mean it would still be baffling if they don’t have any in-house testing.
Usually I buy them at a slower speed as I’m not in shape
Most often I use it, it’s too avoid metrics.
yet