Commented with my fix; in pfSense I have all port 53 traffic redirected with a NAT rule. Works great and catches any devices with hardcoded DNS.
Commented with my fix; in pfSense I have all port 53 traffic redirected with a NAT rule. Works great and catches any devices with hardcoded DNS.
Just put it where you need it.
Example: I have a docker stack for transmission + openvpn with the usual kill switches and randomized destinations. Transmission is protected, I still have a webui for torrents, nothing else on my network relies on a paid service and the overhead of running the traffic through a vpn.
Guide: No. I was able to do this years ago in many different ways by googling it and learning how the technology works, you can do the same with more tools and resources than I did then. Then you also have the knowledge to fix it when it eventually goes sideways instead of asking reddit for another guide.
Just put it where you need it.
Example: I have a docker stack for transmission + openvpn with the usual kill switches and randomized destinations. Transmission is protected, I still have a webui for torrents, nothing else on my network relies on a paid service and the overhead of running the traffic through a vpn.
Guide: No. I was able to do this years ago in many different ways by googling it and learning how the technology works, you can do the same with more tools and resources than I did then. Then you also have the knowledge to fix it when it eventually goes sideways instead of asking reddit for another guide.
Just put it where you need it.
Example: I have a docker stack for transmission + openvpn with the usual kill switches and randomized destinations. Transmission is protected, I still have a webui for torrents, nothing else on my network relies on a paid service and the overhead of running the traffic through a vpn.
Guide: No. I was able to do this years ago in many different ways by googling it and learning how the technology works, you can do the same with more tools and resources than I did then. Then you also have the knowledge to fix it when it eventually goes sideways instead of asking reddit for another guide.
Just put it where you need it.
Example: I have a docker stack for transmission + openvpn with the usual kill switches and randomized destinations. Transmission is protected, I still have a webui for torrents, nothing else on my network relies on a paid service and the overhead of running the traffic through a vpn.
Guide: No. I was able to do this years ago in many different ways by googling it and learning how the technology works, you can do the same with more tools and resources than I did then. Then you also have the knowledge to fix it when it eventually goes sideways instead of asking reddit for another guide.
Garden manager. Put in your zone, pull information from web (not sure where but fields like light level, germination/fruiting times), link to a calendar and add custom scheduled items (monthly fertilizer, watering schedule maybe even based in local " of precipitation (if you’ve had 5" of rain, apply that to “outside group” but not “inside group” of plants, pull links to About information for wikipedia or other pages, maybe even highlights of cooking or medicinal uses.