Only 55k? Isn't that peanuts for most companies?
Scrath
I didn't look to much at the data but I think csv might actually be an appropriate format for this?
Nice simple plaintext and very easy to parse into a datastructure for analysing/using it in python or similar
Who's the character on the 3rd spot?
I don't know. If I were to wake up in the afternoon I would probably feel like I'm wasting most of my day
I don't think so. From my understanding that setting should only change how thick each individual line is though so in total the printer will make more lines
Maybe adjust the line thickness/width or whatever its called?
VLC can play blurays?
just yoink it
I'm not sure that's possible on most routers but I'm very much not an expert in networking
I don't think that's how it works with my router. I read a bit about DNS failover and the consensus seemed to be that all DNS servers listed should return equal results since requests are spread round-robin between them (at least for mikrotik routers).
You are lucky I haven't deleted my pi-hole VM yet ;D
In the Pi-Hole DNS settings I have the following configuration:
- Upstream DNS Servers => Quad9 (filtered, DNSSEC) both checkboxes for IPv4 checked
- Under Custom DNS servers I added a line with my routers IP
- Under Interface settings => Permit all origins. Note the warning written regarding this setting and check whether it applies for your setup!
- Under Advanced DNS settings I have enabled "Never forward non-FQDN A and AAAA queries" and "Never forward reverse lookups for private IP ranges". Since according to the warning this would block local hostname resolution note the next setting.
- Under conditional forwarding I have added this line
true,192.168.1.0/24,192.168.1.1,fritz.box
.fritz.box
was my local DHCP domain name but has since been changed tolan
.
The other settings in Pi-Hole were under the Local DNS Records menu where I added my domain name (let's call it example.com) to the list of local DNS records and pointed it at the IP of the server running my reverse-proxy. Finally I added each subdomain I wanted to use to the List of local CNAME records and pointed it at the domain I just entered to the other list.
I can't perfectly tell you what my router settings were unfortunately since I have recently moved and replaced my fritzbox with a mikrotik router. The main thing you have to do though is to go to the DHCP server settings of your router and set the pi-holes IP address as the DNS server. Note that in the case of the pi-hole being offline for any reason you will be unable to resolve any domains while in this network
It might be possible to do some sort of failover setup by running a second pi-hole with identical settings but I did not want my network connectivity depending on any device other than my router being on. Hence my move back to using my mikrotiks built-in DNS server which fortunately also supports adding lists for DNS adblocking.
Not OP but I'm also running GrapheneOS. After some initial difficulty I had with one of my banking apps I got everything to work just fine.
What does not work unfortunately is paying via google wallet or revolut.