@necrevistonnezr said in Godaddy.com API is down:
unfortunately none of the Cloudron supported domain providers allow moving a DE domain…
By DE domain do you mean .de?
You can definitely register those on https://gandi.net but perhaps that's different to moving them?
@girish Well, it was incredibly satisfying to see these important apps, which I use the most, get restored first. Would it be difficult to "rank" apps by usage, which could then be used for Install by Restores, or Migrations?
Anyway, it worked out super well for me. Thank you!
@jdaviescoates said in Cloudron + Selfhosted.Libhunt = Awesome:
I don't know how people live without it
Indeed, but we can still see the ads spots on a page and so still figure out there's way too much ads
@nebulon Yeah I went so far to migrate to a fresh ubuntu installation to find out if there is something wrong on a system level but that didn't help either. Moving to an external drive did work though for some reason. But that's not what I want since that is a much more expensive solution…
@cdolson thanks for reporting. I have replied in the LE forum. Looks like we introduced a bug in our DO 1-click image. I am working on a fix. Apologies for the mails you have been getting!
@scooke
@murgero
I am working on get my FreeNAS NFS mount working for the backups, but that seems to be a bit difficult to get the permissions working.
If you have experience with NFS, you might have an answer on my problem here...
https://forum.cloudron.io/topic/5927/cloudron-backups-on-truenas-nfs-mount/3?_=1636891033300
However thanks!
@ruihildt said in WP Divi theme + email form:
I think a friend of mine used a third party email form plugin to have email working with Divi on cloudron.
@robi Indeed, if it's for a simple online form any good form builder plugin will do it.
The Android apps for both OpenVPN and Wireguard seem to support this out of the box, the missing link however are the desktop apps.
I am not a customer of any of the named companies, but a way to achieve this on a linux system is with "network namespaces" (or plain routing if you know which servers the app in question is talking to). On the wireguard blog the following article explains the setup for this: https://www.wireguard.com/netns/
So my WD My Cloud EX2 device seems to be having issues connecting to no-ip to register as a DDNS client to keep the IP always updated, as one of a few issues I'm encountering right now. I have no computer at home that's always on (I only have laptops), so I'm thinking of maybe getting a cheap computer just to run Cloudron inside of VirtualBox or something which points to the WD NAS with a mount point, run the Minio app in Cloudron to store on the WD NAS, and maybe that'd work? Does that even make sense though?
@mehdi said in Sharing data between Jellyfin and Nextcloud:
@jdaviescoates No, volumes on cloudron are just for sharing a directory between apps. They do not take care of mounting it on the FS for you. In your case, as it's already mounted, it seems it would work. But you gave the example of S3, in which case you would have to find a way to mount it.
Since u said you can share data between Jellyfin and Nextcloud, it should be the same be possible with PeerTube and Nextcloud?
I didnt look into the volumes since i was working on a Nextcloud App for PeerTube but that makes it easier.
Since your Nextcloud Built is already on PostgreSQL it should be working just by changing some entrys.
@timconsidine
Cloudron seems to be using a very similar marketing strategy already, though arguably not advertising it adequately:
[image: QmcgxZFrhqUVXhBBfXyiZtBMvBBdv3ZyqS9vu3Rrf23oRL]
Whilst on this topic, some hosts are a bit nervous about Cloudron's email capability, or perhaps they are just nervous in general about email. (I think they don't want mass-mailing, emailing of newsletters, etc.) Perhaps somebody could give us some guidance or suggestions related to this?
@timconsidine Thanks, that is good to hear. I think it is quite natural when somebody discovers Cloudron to go wild installing things to try them and that takes quite a lot of RAM.
One other benefit of smaller applications is that there are often fewer lines where bad code could hide or where things could go wrong.