I play Minecraft.
I’m currently using firefox nightly which seems somewhat hardened, browsing histlry and cookies are cleared on closing and adblocking is enabled by default. No add ons tho
I would also recommend firefox/firefox nightly as web browser and perhaps grayjay for youtube alternative (it still uses the youtube service tho)
Great! Thanks a lot, this will help
sounds good, do you have any docs on how to do that?
so you basically have a copy of your media library on a local machine?
I’ll also take a look at this
pterodactyl looks really neat, will definitely look into that. I have a manual system for my media library, so I want to add the directories with artwork and movies manually to the directory which jellyfin reads.
I will take a look, thank you very much!
I’m now considering syncing my minecraft world with syncthing, I already use it for some things but don’t know why I didn’t think of doing that.
On the other hand, if I have a 100+ gb media library, it seems kinda over the top to also have it fully copied on my local machine. Do you do this?
I’m considering this, as I can see by your example, you can add a domain name to the server. How would you go over doing this?
sounds like a good option, will definitely try this out
Do you automate your backups in some way? And can you also use samba remotely
will do, thanks a lot
I’m not losing them, I have a lot of single files. For example during a Minecraft update, I have to move ~20 jar files and other things to the server. I also try to make frequent backups and I upload new movies somewhat frequently to my jellyfin server, so I want to have an easy way to transfer files.
I mostly want to upload to a media server from my desktop, as that is where I download and manage the files before they go on the server
sorry, should’ve clarified: secure copy, it’s an ssh kind of way of copying files to a server
I’m mostly looking for something graphical
how would you do that with a large media library?
I’m using debian, so sftp would be an option, do you use a graphical client?
You can get more updated packages by running debian testing, which is quite stable. Debian also is more stable. Security patches are still brought to the main release, making it secure. The stability comes from the lack of a lot of new updates which come with a lot of new bugs.