Is there a decent tutorial on how to get it up and running on standard services such as systemd events, fail2ban etc? There is no quick start guide on their site.
krash
Welcome to the cult!
We all started as beginners, but before you start, take my advice and avoid hosting anything open to the internet until you've gained more experience in OS/network hardening and risk assessment.
First off, I think you're starting on a good footing. Having TCP/IP knowlege is good, but you don't need it from the beginning - it will be relevant once you get into network segmentation and setting up reverse proxies.
I'd say the first thing is to actually choose a rather simple (but useful) application that you can host on Docker and get some experience from OCI-containers and disaster recovery. A lemmy instance (even non federated) might be too much to begin with. Have you considered paperless-ngx, fresh-rss or even syncthing instead? Or begin with formulating what problem you want solved in your daily life.
I'd say, start by watching this video series to gain a better understanding of Docker (I've so far assumed that you won't do baremetal installs, right?!??). There's also a pretty good online-lab for you to play around in. Remember, you'll propably realise that your first deployments could be better, and keep yourself mentally prepared to redo and rebuild eventually.
Feel free to message me if you want guidance going forward!
"Lagom" means "just enough", and has more to do with not taking more than you need, and I believe it being strongly correlated with the cultural "jante lagen" (="thou shall live and act as a humble human."). Niksen and lagom doesn't seem to have any similarities beyond that.
"EXPLORE the UNTAPPED POTENTIAL", I love the agents unyielding optimism.
Me neither, but I'd love to hear those arguments.
Apache license 2.0
I like 3-2-1-1-0 better. Like yours, but:
- the additional 1 is for "offline" (so you have one offsite and offline backup copy).
- 0 for zero errors. Backups must be tested and verified.
Lagrange is THE SHIT!
(btw, I thought its dev hosted it on forjego?)
Edit: it's hosted on both codeberg and a gitea instance: https://git.skyjake.fi/gemini/lagrange/releases
I'd only trust my MFA tokens to a (foss) application that has undergone a security audit. I don't known if ente has eitheras I never heard of them, but I think your choices are limited if you want support for both desktop and mobile.
I work in IT and I need this. This field is vast and sometimes it's hard to know what you don't know, or how well you know what you know.
Sure, there's certs, but they just show how well you're familiar with that particular field (or worse yet, that you know how to pass that particular test).