V3 is stable. It is the new version after V2. V1 was where the majoriry of the breaking changes happened.
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Svinhufvud@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I finally bought a domain! Now whatEnglish
2·10 days agoA single wildcard CNAME that points to your domains A record is easier to manage I would say. This comes handy when you add a new service to your stack, as you dont have to go and make a new subdomain record.
You already seem to manage all subdomain updates with that script, so it won’t help you much with dyndns. That is, unless you hit a rate limit when trying to update a very large amount of records at once.
Keeping separate TLS certificates is a separate topic from having a single wildcard CNAME record. Separate TLS certificates offer a slight security advantage over a wildcard cert, as a single leaked certificate secret wont compromize the rest of your sites.
Svinhufvud@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I finally bought a domain! Now whatEnglish
7·10 days agoUsing cloudflare tunnels means that the TLS is terminated at cloudflare. This means that cloudflare has the capability to snoop on your traffic, so you have trust cloudflare not to do that, especially if your traffic contains sensitive information.
Also, the ‘no media in free tunnels’ is outdated information as far as I know, so be sure to check up to date information on that.
Svinhufvud@sopuli.xyzto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•I finally bought a domain! Now whatEnglish
16·10 days agoI recommend you make A and AAAA records for the top level domain you own, and then set the needed subdomains (or a single wildcard) as CNAME entries.
example.com points to your IP addresses, and the subdomains point then to your top level name.
This avoids you having to point a new IP at multiple places (be it manually or by dyndns) when/if your public IP changes.
Then you can set up a reverse proxy (caddy for example, it comes with automatic TLS), bind ports 80 and 443 to it, and route the traffic based on the domain name a client is trying to connect to.
So jellyfin.example.com would lead to your reverse proxy which would forward it somewhere internally, say 192.168.1.10:8096 for example.
This way you can use one top level domain for multiple services, and not have to specify ports when connecting externally
Svinhufvud@sopuli.xyzOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[AI] Minimal expenses splitting softwareEnglish
1·12 days agoI listed the alternatives I found out about in the repo. But in short: Ihatemoney, abrechnung, nextcloud cospend and kitchenowl.
Svinhufvud@sopuli.xyzOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[AI] Minimal expenses splitting softwareEnglish
3·14 days agoHi and thanks for the comment.
Just to clarify, I am looking for neither contributors nor QA testers for the code. I generated this just for my benefit and threw it into the open. If someone gets any use out of it, cool. If not, also cool.
I am also not claiming the code to be professional or particularly robust. This is why I made the LLM part clear.
Svinhufvud@sopuli.xyzOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•[AI] Minimal expenses splitting softwareEnglish
2·14 days agoNo problem! I think making the AI tag mandatory could be good for the community. Though I also recognize that bad actors could easily omit it and try to hide AI contributions.
Svinhufvud@sopuli.xyzOPto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Looking for expenses splitting softwareEnglish
1·3 months agoUmm, did you read the post? I specifically talk about Spliit in the post.

Yes, between major releases there can be breaking changes. But within there wont be, which is what I was referring to. In “V1” we didn’t have such a guarantee.