Proxy server for facebook

Netflix

2008.11.22 00:38 Netflix

Unofficial Netflix discussion, and all things Netflix related! (Mods are not Netflix employees, but employees occasionally post here).
[link]


2014.09.25 02:16 someordinarymutahar SomeOrdinaryGamers

The official subreddit of SomeOrdinaryGamers! Here, you can post about anything SOG-related. Fun! Please make sure to read the rules before posting.
[link]


2011.06.23 03:20 Alexanderr Mac Miller

We're a community for Mac Miller fans. Share & discuss music, share news & views, and join our most dope family.
[link]


2024.05.20 07:57 2captchacom Overview: Six ways to use residential proxies for solving corporate objectives

Overview: Six ways to use residential proxies for solving corporate objectives
https://preview.redd.it/t40pt7aksi1d1.jpg?width=800&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8b59fa66267c7320d084af9925ef140cff8690a7
IP address masking may be required for various tasks – from accessing blocked content to bypassing anti-bot systems of search engines and other online resources. We found an interesting post about how this technology can be used to solve corporate objectives.
There are several options of implementing a proxy:
  • Residential proxies. Residential IPs are the addresses that Internet service providers give to homeowners, they are marked in the databases of regional Internet registers (RIRs). Residential proxies use exactly such IP addresses, so that requests from them are indistinguishable from those sent by real users.
  • Server proxies (datacenter proxy). Such proxies are not connected in any way to Internet providers for individuals. Addresses of this type are issued by hosting providers that have purchased address pools.
  • Shared proxy. In this case, one proxy is used by several users at the same time; they can be either server or given by providers for their users.
  • Private proxies. In the case of a private or dedicated proxy, only one user has access to the IP address. Such proxies are provided by specialized services, or hosters, or Internet providers and VPN services.
All these options have their advantages, but residential proxies are being used for corporate use increasingly lately. The main reason for this is that such proxies use the real addresses of different Internet service providers in different locations (countries, states/regions, and cities). As a result, no matter whom the interaction is conducted with, it looks as if it is carried out by a real user. No online service would think of blocking requests from real addresses, because it could be an appeal from a potential client.
This opens up a number of opportunities for companies. Let's talk about how they use residential proxies to solve business problems.

Why does a business need a proxy?

According to Distil Networks, a company dedicated to combating bot traffic, on today's Internet, up to 40% of web traffic is generated by non-humans.
At the same time, not all bots are good (like crawlers of search engines), site owners seek to protect themselves from many bots in order not to allow them to access the data of the resource itself or find out important for business information.
The number of bots that are usually not hindered in 2017 was 20.40%, and another 21.80% of bots were considered to be "bad": site owners tried to ban them.
https://preview.redd.it/tugch4nuti1d1.png?width=580&format=png&auto=webp&s=00a645ea96f61fdfee3d7109087fa5a3e843f3ef
Why would companies try to circumvent such blocks?

Getting real information from competitors' websites

One of the main areas of use of residential proxies is competitive intelligence. Today, there are tools that make it easy to track the use of server proxies – pools of proxy provider addresses are known, so they can be easily blocked. Many popular online services – for example, Amazon, Netflix, Hulu – implement blocking systems by IP address ranges of hosting providers.
In the case of using a residential proxy, any request looks like it was sent by a regular user. In a case where you need to send a large number of requests, you can use residential proxies to send them from addresses from any countries, cities, and associated Internet service providers.

Brand protection

Another practical application of residential proxies is brand protection and anti-counterfeiting. For example, drug manufacturers – let's say, of the drug Viagra – are always fighting with sellers of counterfeit generics.
Sellers of such replicas usually restrict access to their websites from countries where the manufacturer's official representative offices are located: this makes it difficult to identify dealers in fakes and present them with legal requirements. With the help of residential proxies with addresses from the same country as the counterfeit website, this problem can be easily solved.

Testing new features and performance monitoring

Another important area of using residential proxies is testing new features on the websites or in applications – this allows you to see how everything works through the eyes of an ordinary user. Sending a large number of requests from IP addresses from different countries and cities also allows you to test applications under heavy loads.
This feature is also useful for performance monitoring. It is important for international services to understand, for example, how fast a site loads for users from certain countries. The use of residential proxies in the performance monitoring system helps to obtain the most relevant information.

Optimization of marketing and advertising

Another application of residential proxies is the testing of advertising campaigns. With a residential proxy, you can see how an ad looks, for example, in search results for residents of a certain region and whether it is shown at all.
In addition, when promoting in various markets, residential proxies help to understand how effectively, for example, search engine optimization works: whether a site is included in the top search engines for the necessary queries in target languages and how its positions change over time.
Search engines have an extremely negative attitude towards collecting data with the use of their resources. Therefore, they are constantly improving the mechanisms for identifying data collectors and effectively blocking them. As a result, it is now completely impossible to use them to collect data from search engines.
However, it is impossible to block the execution of a large number of identical search queries from residential proxies – search engines cannot restrict access for real users. Therefore, this tool is great for guaranteed data collection from search engines.
Residential proxies are also useful for analyzing competitors' advertising and marketing activities and their effectiveness. This technology is used by both companies themselves and agencies engaged in custom promotion.

Content aggregation

In the era of Big Data, many businesses are built on aggregating content from different sites and bringing it together on their own platform. Such companies also often have to use residential proxies, otherwise it would be difficult to maintain an up-to-date database of prices, for example, for goods of certain categories in different online stores: the risk of a ban is too high.
For example, to create a regularly updated comparison table with prices for vacuum cleaners in online stores, you need a bot that will constantly visit the necessary pages of these resources and update the table. In this case, the most effective way to bypass anti-bot systems is to use this tool.

Custom data collection and analysis

In the last few years, companies that are professionally engaged in the collection and analysis of custom data have been actively developing. One of the brightest players in this market, the PromptCloud project, is developing its own crawler tools that collect information for further use in marketing, sales, or competitive analysis.
It is logical that bots of such companies are also constantly banned, but thanks to the use of residential IPs, it is impossible to do that effectively.

Savings on getting local discounts

Among other things, having private local IP addresses can help to save resources. For example, many ticket and hotel booking sites display geo-targeted special offers. Only customers from specific regions can use them.
If a company needs to arrange a business trip to such a country, then with the help of a residential proxy, it can try to find more favorable prices and save money.

Conclusion

The ability to simulate requests from real users with real local IP addresses turns out to be very useful, both for personal and business goals. Companies use residential proxies to collect data, carry out various tests, work with necessary but blocked resources, and so on.
submitted by 2captchacom to u/2captchacom [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 07:17 CorpzXPlays_Lovely My laptop WiFi turn off every 5 min

My laptop WiFi turn off every 5 min
Hello guys I hope you are fine and I am facing this problem for around 1 months so basically my laptop name is asus tuf f15 rtx 2050 512 gb and the WiFi is going off every 5 minutes I have to restart this laptop every time to connect to my WiFi and my WiFi options just disappear every 5 minutes and I don't know the solution so plz help me to find its solution thank you
submitted by CorpzXPlays_Lovely to computers [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 07:00 CorpzXPlays_Lovely My internet going off every 5 minutes

Hello guys I hope you are fine and I am facing this problem for around 1 months so basically my laptop name is asus tuf f15 rtx 2050 512 gb and the WiFi is going off every 5 minutes I have to restart this laptop every time to connect to my WiFi and my WiFi options just disappear every 5 minutes and I don’t know the solution so plz help me to find its solution thank you
submitted by CorpzXPlays_Lovely to computer [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 06:40 Staralie Only sometimes receiving emails from certain addresses? [Zoho Mail]

Hey all, as the title says, my newly-created Zoho Mail account is only sometimes receiving mail from certain addresses. It's getting quite frustrating, and I've tested it with several other of my email accounts, and gotten different results each time. Here's what I found:
My gmail account seems to work about half the time - it will be good for about a half-hour interval, then it will fail for the next. No rhyme or reason that I can find.
Mail sent automatically from a form fill or order submission via my Shopify site will always go through.
Automated authentication emails, such as those sent by Facebook and TikTok will never go through.
I get this error from my gmail account when it doesn't work:
Address not found Your message wasn't delivered to [my email] because the address couldn't be found, or is unable to receive mail.
The response from the remote server was: 554 5.7.1 : Recipient address rejected: user [my email] does not exist
I recently set my domain's DNS settings, so its possible that this is interfering somewhere with it. I also had a previous Google Workspace account which had the same email attached, so it's also possible that this is still messing with it somehow. The old Google Workspace account is, as far as I know, no longer connected to the domain.
I am using the free version and I fully intend to upgrade to the paid plan - provided that I can get the service to function as intended. Any help would be greatly appreciated!
submitted by Staralie to Zoho [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 04:50 trophiczulu Taking CSET Multiple Subject Subset 3 - English soon, looking for Discord server groups

As the title says, I'm about to take the CSET Multiple Subject Subset 3—English, and I'm trying to find some Discord server groups to help me train for it. I recently received my Bachelor's and am now trying to pursue a career as a teacher in Special Education. I've passed one of the CSETs, Subtest 1. I need to retake Subtest 2, and on Tuesday, I'll be taking Subtest 3.
I've joined two different RICA groups on Facebook and Discord but no one has helped point me to a CSET group/server. All I ever get are people sending me Private messages telling me to call/text them for more info which makes me think it's a scam.
I would greatly appreciate any help with this and best of luck to all of us trying to pass these dang tests!
submitted by trophiczulu to Teachers [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 04:19 LiljaGu How should I add these two pieces of code to nginx.conf?

nginx.conf
GNU nano 7.2 /opt/bitnami/nginx/conf/nginx.conf

Based on https://www.nginx.com/resources/wiki/start/topics/examples/full/#nginx-conf

user daemon daemon; ## Default: nobody
worker_processes auto;
error_log "/opt/bitnami/nginx/logs/error.log";
pid "/opt/bitnami/nginx/tmp/nginx.pid";
events {
worker_connections 1024;
}
http {
include mime.types;
default_type application/octet-stream;
log_format main '$remote_addr - $remote_user [$time_local] '
'"$request" $status $body_bytes_sent "$http_referer" '
'"$http_user_agent" "$http_x_forwarded_for"';
access_log "/opt/bitnami/nginx/logs/access.log" main;
add_header X-Frame-Options SAMEORIGIN;
client_body_temp_path "/opt/bitnami/nginx/tmp/client_body" 1 2;
proxy_temp_path "/opt/bitnami/nginx/tmp/proxy" 1 2;
fastcgi_temp_path "/opt/bitnami/nginx/tmp/fastcgi" 1 2;
scgi_temp_path "/opt/bitnami/nginx/tmp/scgi" 1 2;
uwsgi_temp_path "/opt/bitnami/nginx/tmp/uwsgi" 1 2;
sendfile on;
tcp_nopush on;
tcp_nodelay off;
gzip on;
gzip_http_version 1.0;
gzip_comp_level 2;
gzip_proxied any;
gzip_types text/plain text/css application/javascript text/xml application/xml+rss;
keepalive_timeout 65;
ssl_protocols TLSv1.2 TLSv1.3;
ssl_ciphers ECDHE-ECDSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-RSA-AES128-GCM-SHA256:ECDHE-ECDSA-AES256-GCM-SHA384:ECDHE->
client_max_body_size 80M;
server_tokens off;
absolute_redirect on;
port_in_redirect on;
include "/opt/bitnami/nginx/conf/server_blocks/*.conf";

HTTP Server

server {

Port to listen on, can also be set in IP:PORT format

listen 80;
include "/opt/bitnami/nginx/conf/bitnami/*.conf";
location /status {
stub_status on;
access_log off;
allow 127.0.0.1;
deny all;
}
}
}
How should I add these two pieces of code to nginx.conf?
code a:
fastcgi_buffers 16 16k;
fastcgi_buffer_size 32k;
proxy_buffer_size 128k;
proxy_buffers 4 256k;
proxy_busy_buffers_size 256k;
code b:
pagespeed on;
pagespeed FileCachePath /opt/bitnami/nginx/vangx_pagespeed_cache;
location ~ "\.pagespeed\.([a-z]\.)?[a-z]{2}\.[^.]{10}\.[^.]+" { add_header "" ""; }
location ~ "^/ngx_pagespeed_static/" { }
location ~ "^/ngx_pagespeed_beacon$" { }
thanks a lot!
submitted by LiljaGu to nginx [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 04:15 Killy728 Did the DSi Capture Card End with Katsukity?

Did the DSi Capture Card End with Katsukity?
Preface:
This is an essay, of sorts, compiling all of the information about the Dsi Capture Card that I could find. Information may be missing or inaccurate, but what I present is my current understanding of the project.
I have an interest in reviving the concept and properly archiving every step of the process so that anyone can make a Dsi capture system. Though I didn't succeed in making the project available for people to purchase, I do hope this is a step in the right direction.
I’ll start the story and go into as much of the technical side as I can manage. If you wish to skip the story, head to the “Technical” section.

=====Story====

Introduction:
Is there a practical reason to have a Dsi capture card when the Original DS and the New 3DS/2DS family of systems can do everything the Dsi can do and more?
No, no there isn’t.
For someone like myself who adores the Dsi platform, the idea and novelty of a Dsi capture card is of great interest to me. From what I can find, the Dsi Capture card has been lost to time. Thanks to the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, what was once lost can hopefully be found.
Body:
Kastuskity was the sole provider of Dsi Capture systems and far as I could tell, one of the major players in the DS/3DS capture card providers and installers in the mid 2010s. That was, up until September 13th, 2016, when the Dsi Capture systems were removed from Katsukity’s shop. I was unable to find a direct reason as to why the sale stopped, but a quote from the Nisetoro Wiki suggested difficulty as over 40 cables were needed. On the store page, you can see how a custom bottom shell was needed in order to house that capture unit.
https://preview.redd.it/0kb4jtc7ph1d1.jpg?width=500&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8b2c76bf6e0efc230a8940bd9350d79160cc74e6
That, and I’d assume a lack of of sales due to the prevalence of 3DS capture systems must have lead to that product being phased out. This is just my best guess based on nothing
On February 2nd, 2019, Twitter (X) user .
https://preview.redd.it/xj3cgsnaph1d1.jpg?width=583&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=2dd19dba447b7636c0ca0d817d4f401e10a4e331
Their Twitter (X) has been inactive since July of 2018, their YouTube has been inactive since June of 2018, and their website and blog have all been shuttered ( I won't hyperlink these two as one redirects to a scam). Their Facebook Page also seems to have the same fate, but I cannot confirm that. From my current understanding, Katsukity has disappeared from the internet and took whatever knowledge and software with them.
Katsukity’s partner in Europe, Stefan Merki and American Inventor Neal Tew (Loopy) appear to still manufacture, install, and sell capture cards on their website, but only for the Classic DS and New 3DS/2DS. As of the writing of this post, Merki is still active on the website’s Discord Page (see their website for the invite link) and Loopy is active on their forum
It is on Merki’s Discord Server that I was able to receive a lot of information regarding the Dsi Capture System and its development. The most important, being, a video posted to Nicovideo by the user ピピン (Pippin).
This video, dating back to May 21st, 2010, shows the process of making a Nisetoro Capture card for the Dsi and its success (The videos loaded better for me on Firefox).
https://preview.redd.it/o3418l1dph1d1.jpg?width=300&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=d22aa2f7b0c5de0dba22b81110152c4254d0d3dd
https://preview.redd.it/3rjlvbxdph1d1.jpg?width=740&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=344b7b49af665836dfc1f621e94288e46d18380d
Their blog, which can only be accessed through Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine, has their blog posts of the project as well as a ZIP containing the pinout for the Chameleon USB and various pieces of software (For lack of a better term for .svf, .dpf, .pin, .pof, .qpf,.qsf and .v files)
From here, I’ll go into the technical side of this.

====Technical====

~(((((From here, I have to stick a disclaimer. As much as it pains me to say, anything involving Circuit Boards and programming is well beyond my understanding. I will continue with any and all information that I have pointing to the components and software used for the project, but I will not pretend to understand any of it. Forgive my ignorance in advance. )))))~
In Pippin’s video, all of the test pins tapped and attached to a Chameleon USB were listed on their blog.
https://preview.redd.it/4qb47xqiph1d1.jpg?width=756&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=3d555543575d1397bd1f3bb7f3251d2ef8fd5e9b
There, with the pinout sheet is a ZIP file containing various pieces of software (more on that later). I have the Pinout Sheet below in English.
https://preview.redd.it/ispt1t0lph1d1.png?width=368&format=png&auto=webp&s=c40bc7cea87f7f61aa3a839bf9909e8dba77a173
Katsuity’s store page for the Dsi capture kits mentions a different capture card.
https://preview.redd.it/wab7d5nmph1d1.jpg?width=690&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=8652968ff3d03da7ae9a2b9182e062ffd7dbfe66
On the Fake TroCaptcha website, the process for creating a capture card for the Original DS was explained further. I can only vaguely see the images of the Chameleon board that Pippin has in their blog, but as far as I can tell, it is the same board.
https://preview.redd.it/52s3rk6oph1d1.jpg?width=2592&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=35451424c69eb18216f4a5e413534e2a4d333220
https://preview.redd.it/olavcqcpph1d1.jpg?width=2592&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=1e6269f3905fb5936265eb4cadcd2e11e485710a
Following the link on the board to this website with the Chameleon USB FX2 featured prominently /)as a “Hot” item. When searching their shop, which is local only as far as I can tell, the Chameleon USB FX2 MiniB Kit is out of stock and appears to have been discontinued in 2019 (If it means anything, that board version was V1.2 instead of V1.1, so even if it was available, I do not know if that’d cause issues).
https://preview.redd.it/kyhet19rph1d1.jpg?width=1320&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=b9b15fb0f9d749e3ce5c17599475797713d4028a
Searching Google for the Chameleon brings up an OSHPark shared fine of a Chameleon USB FX2 by user splash5. Though this board appears to use the same chips, it's circuit layout and components looks entirely different than the one Pippin used and the one on the “How to make a Fake tro capture” page. I really cannot wrap my brain around trying to follow traces to see if this would work, but given the amount of components on this board vs the one for the DSi Capture Card, I imagine i'd have to spend time bridging traces where components went.

https://preview.redd.it/a635h3csph1d1.png?width=2460&format=png&auto=webp&s=a1f40410a57ef22c9d0b9a0d855e30306a5ff139
https://preview.redd.it/wxn68itsph1d1.png?width=2460&format=png&auto=webp&s=baa0cd3255a3728f2c3fa7f43508a84ae6219fe0
Going through splash5’s Github page, it would seem they are implementing a Chameleon for game capture on the Wonderswan.
That is the first major hurdle. Where can I get a comparable board? Does the Chameleon USB FX2 need to be recreated from the images in these forums?
For the software side, it is my understanding that Pippin already provided it within the ZIP. In the description of their video, they say that the software is the same as the Original DS. This is, of course, assuming that the software is the same as the one used back in 2010.
Recreating DSi capture system is well beyond my ability, I will be the first to say that. I do hope this information can help some who can revive this unique blip in DS console history.
====Resources and Additional Links==== Wayback machine last image of Katsukity’s sites:
Videos, and other webpages not used in this essay, but may be interesting:

====DSI XL Capture System====

I have this pie-in-the-sky dream of assembling and using a DSi XL with a capture card in it, but what my research dug up was a need for commissioning people much smarter than I to create the capture board and injecting the code.
That is simply something I can not do right now.
For anyone who reads this, I do hope that this pinout I made is helpful.
https://preview.redd.it/r94htkjwph1d1.jpg?width=518&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=13f53780f019cb237f84be6680a9d13d1a9d21a4
This is a pinout referencing the pinout from Pippin as well as the DSi XL test points on DSiBrew. I have to trust it is accurate as I do not know of a way to test it otherwise. Entries highlighted in Red have the same comment, but the numbering sequence suggests the order I put them is correct.
Anyway, that is enough for me.
(This post was intended for GBAtemp, but new people cannot post links sooo.... Here you go Reddit)
submitted by Killy728 to nds [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 04:02 RockedMyBoat App Clip target not running on Simulator despite running on Physical device

Hi guys, I have been stuck with a problem for a while now. I am working with an app clip and I got it working on a physical device. But when I run it in the simulator, the code of the app clip (index.appclip.js) does not run rather it falls back to the main app code (index.js).
My InfoPlist for both the main app and app clip:
NSAppTransportSecurity  NSAllowsArbitraryLoads  NSAllowsArbitraryLoadsInWebContent  NSAllowsLocalNetworking  NSExceptionDomains  localhost  NSExceptionAllowsInsecureHTTPLoads  NSIncludesSubdomains     
Any help? The logs it produces:
nw_socket_handle_socket_event [C2.1.1:2] Socket SO_ERROR 61
nw_socket_handle_socket_event [C2.1.2:2] Socket SO_ERROR 61
Connection 2: received failure notification
Connection 2: failed to connect 1:61, reason 18,446,744,073,709,551,615
Connection 2: encountered error(1:61)
Task .<1> HTTP load failed, 0/0 bytes (error code: 18,446,744,073,709,550,612 [1:61])
Task .<1> finished with error [18,446,744,073,709,550,612] Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1004 "Could not connect to the server." UserInfo={_kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=61, NSUnderlyingError=0x600000ceba80 {Error Domain=kCFErrorDomainCFNetwork Code=-1004 "(null)" UserInfo={_NSURLErrorNWPathKey=satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], expensive, uses wifi, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=61, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1}}, _NSURLErrorFailingURLSessionTaskErrorKey=LocalDataTask .<1>, _NSURLErrorRelatedURLSessionTaskErrorKey=(
"LocalDataTask .<1>"
), NSLocalizedDescription=Could not connect to the server., NSErrorFailingURLStringKey=http://localhost:8081/status, NSErrorFailingURLKey=http://localhost:8081/status, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1}
Running application Sanduk ({
initialProps = {
};
rootTag = 1;
})
nw_socket_handle_socket_event [C3.1.1:2] Socket SO_ERROR 61
nw_socket_handle_socket_event [C3.1.2:2] Socket SO_ERROR 61
Connection 3: received failure notification
Connection 3: failed to connect 1:61, reason 18,446,744,073,709,551,615
Connection 3: encountered error(1:61)
Task <4659664D-0DD3-4EA0-823F-A88CC6A08893>.<2> HTTP load failed, 0/0 bytes (error code: 18,446,744,073,709,550,612 [1:61])
Task <4659664D-0DD3-4EA0-823F-A88CC6A08893>.<2> finished with error [18,446,744,073,709,550,612] Error Domain=NSURLErrorDomain Code=-1004 "Could not connect to the server." UserInfo={_kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=61, NSUnderlyingError=0x600000ce4ff0 {Error Domain=kCFErrorDomainCFNetwork Code=-1004 "(null)" UserInfo={_NSURLErrorNWPathKey=satisfied (Path is satisfied), interface: en0[802.11], expensive, uses wifi, _kCFStreamErrorCodeKey=61, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1}}, _NSURLErrorFailingURLSessionTaskErrorKey=LocalDataTask <4659664D-0DD3-4EA0-823F-A88CC6A08893>.<2>, _NSURLErrorRelatedURLSessionTaskErrorKey=(
"LocalDataTask <4659664D-0DD3-4EA0-823F-A88CC6A08893>.<2>"
), NSLocalizedDescription=Could not connect to the server., NSErrorFailingURLStringKey=http://localhost:8081/status, NSErrorFailingURLKey=http://localhost:8081/status, _kCFStreamErrorDomainKey=1}
nw_socket_handle_socket_event [C5.1.1:1] Socket SO_ERROR 61
nw_socket_handle_socket_event [C5.1.2:1] Socket SO_ERROR 61
nw_connection_get_connected_socket_block_invoke [C5] Client called nw_connection_get_connected_socket on unconnected nw_connection
TCP Conn 0x600003320a00 Failed : error 0:61 [61]
Thread Performance Checker: Thread running at User-interactive quality-of-service class waiting on a lower QoS thread running at Default quality-of-service class. Investigate ways to avoid priority inversions
PID: 32922, TID: 2538677
Backtrace

3 SandukClip 0x0000000105850590 -[SRRunLoopThread runLoop] + 44
4 SandukClip 0x000000010584aae0 +[NSRunLoop(SRWebSocket) SR_networkRunLoop] + 56
5 SandukClip 0x000000010584eec0 -[SRProxyConnect _openConnection] + 72
6 SandukClip 0x000000010584e378 -[SRProxyConnect _configureProxy] + 916
7 SandukClip 0x000000010584db6c -[SRProxyConnect openNetworkStreamWithCompletion:] + 92
8 SandukClip 0x0000000105852320 -[SRWebSocket open] + 624
9 SandukClip 0x000000010528bf44 -[RCTReconnectingWebSocket start] + 148
10 SandukClip 0x0000000105277100 -[RCTPackagerConnection init] + 416
11 SandukClip 0x0000000105276f40 __49+[RCTPackagerConnection sharedPackagerConnection]_block_invoke + 36
12 libdispatch.dylib 0x000000010908573c _dispatch_client_callout + 16
13 libdispatch.dylib 0x0000000109087210 _dispatch_once_callout + 84
14 SandukClip 0x0000000105276ef4 +[RCTPackagerConnection sharedPackagerConnection] + 88
15 SandukClip 0x00000001053050c0 -[RCTDevSettings initialize] + 164
16 SandukClip 0x0000000105262c54 -[RCTModuleData _initializeModule] + 92
17 SandukClip 0x000000010526260c -[RCTModuleData setUpInstanceAndBridge:] + 2168
18 SandukClip 0x00000001052640a8 -[RCTModuleData instance] + 1168
19 SandukClip 0x000000010520bd10 -[RCTCxxBridge moduleForName:lazilyLoadIfNecessary:] + 704
20 SandukClip 0x000000010526cce8 -[RCTModuleRegistry moduleForName:lazilyLoadIfNecessary:] + 140
21 SandukClip 0x000000010526cc50 -[RCTModuleRegistry moduleForName:] + 48
22 SandukClip 0x0000000105314ff4 -[RCTPerfMonitor devMenuItem] + 92
23 SandukClip 0x0000000105314ec0 -[RCTPerfMonitor initialize] + 88
24 SandukClip 0x0000000105262c54 -[RCTModuleData _initializeModule] + 92
25 SandukClip 0x000000010526260c -[RCTModuleData setUpInstanceAndBridge:] + 2168
26 SandukClip 0x00000001052642e0 __25-[RCTModuleData instance]_block_invoke + 44
27 SandukClip 0x00000001052c53b0 RCTUnsafeExecuteOnMainQueueSync + 52
28 SandukClip 0x0000000105263f48 -[RCTModuleData instance] + 816
29 SandukClip 0x0000000105210590 __49-[RCTCxxBridge _prepareModulesWithDispatchGroup:]_block_invoke + 160
30 libdispatch.dylib 0x0000000109083ec4 _dispatch_call_block_and_release + 24
31 libdispatch.dylib 0x000000010908573c _dispatch_client_callout + 16
32 libdispatch.dylib 0x00000001090954c0 _dispatch_main_queue_drain + 1428
33 libdispatch.dylib 0x0000000109094f1c _dispatch_main_queue_callback_4CF + 40
34 CoreFoundation 0x000000018040e960 __CFRUNLOOP_IS_SERVICING_THE_MAIN_DISPATCH_QUEUE__ + 12
35 CoreFoundation 0x0000000180409078 __CFRunLoopRun + 1936
36 CoreFoundation 0x00000001804084d4 CFRunLoopRunSpecific + 572
37 GraphicsServices 0x000000018ef2aae4 GSEventRunModal + 160
38 UIKitCore 0x00000001853d0a28 -[UIApplication _run] + 868
39 UIKitCore 0x00000001853d46b0 UIApplicationMain + 124
40 SandukClip 0x0000000104ec768c main + 120
Unbalanced calls start/end for tag 19
Running "Sanduk
this is app
Manifest does not exist - creating a new one.
(null)
nw_socket_handle_socket_event [C6.1.1:1] Socket SO_ERROR 61
nw_socket_handle_socket_event [C6.1.2:1] Socket SO_ERROR 61
nw_connection_get_connected_socket_block_invoke [C6] Client called nw_connection_get_connected_socket on unconnected nw_connection
TCP Conn 0x600003322f80 Failed : error 0:61 [61]
[GESTURE HANDLER] Initialize gesture handler for view ; layer = > reactTag: 1; frame = {{0, 0}, {428, 926}}; layer =
submitted by RockedMyBoat to iOSProgramming [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 03:08 marsielitta this solitude is kinda getting weird. i think i need friends? how?

we all have friends for sure. but i'd like to experience that cutemaxxing, cafe dates, outfit matching, spotify blend, cubao expo digicam photoshoot typa friendships. i was always misunderstood and every friendship ends up having a terrible end.
my friends today are only two; people i speak with frequently (how frequent? 2 times a week) and one of them is someone i met online and we haven't saw each other irl.
it's been almost a month now that i'm working from home to a known bpo company (i'll be more than glad to refer u if there's an opening in our program js dm me) beyond grateful for this set up; i get to do my geeky shenanigans whenever i want, unlimited bed rotting, endless book reading; but the thing is, my already terrible social life is getting progressively worse.
anyway, because of this set up i became more chronically online than i already was. i deactivate my socials a lot, but i am always on the internet. always. when i was still working onsite, it was no different from when i was at school. the pressure is the almost the same and to both situations i didn't gain significant friends. partially my fault for being extremely quiet and reserved but that was then.
now, i want to really engage with people. but just how do i do that? i have severe social anxiety (if that ain't even obvious yet), and my workmates are always older than me and it's hard to suggest benevolence and affinity.
at the same time, ion wanna stick w discord servers. unironically, my boyfriend's ex is somehow friends with people who owns some meme servers from facebook and it weirdly has connections to this group who bullied me before lmao—so that cannot be. (but if u know sum servers, ok maybe i'll join)
is going to conventions worth it? anime cons specifically, i have weaboo roots and play genshin 24/7 so ye <( ⸝⸝•̀ - •́⸝⸝)>
i have a facebook online diary account with people of the same interest, close friends, and that actually did not work. fb moots are js fb moots. i really tried my best on this one, but it's always everyone else being on an existing friend group already and i'm js a potato moot.
i don't need any "you don't need friends" type of comments, because i am in the midst of craving for friends. very corny ik
but idk maybe i js needed to vent about it T....T not sure if this post is even worth reading or worth giving advices to
submitted by marsielitta to adultingph [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 02:15 ParticularAnt5424 CloudFlare IP Range

It came to my attention that folks use CloudFlare "proxy" DNS with public IPs without locking the public IP only to CloudFlare IP ranges.
So in case you do not know, when you flip your DNS record to "proxy" in CloudFlare (instead on "DNS Only") - all traffic you will see on that IP will come from CloudFlare IPs (they will include x-forwarded-for header with the client IP). This means that you can whitelist CloudFlare IP ranges blocking all unauthorized scanners and other wild internet traffic from accessing your server bypassing CloudFlare WAF/bot protection/workers/etc.
So please, when using CloudFlare, lock your allowed IPs only to CloudFlare IP ranges + your IPs, do not leave it open to the public (0.0.0.0/0)
P.s. CloudFlare is free, just use it and learn, a great tool to learn, it will help you even if your company uses something else.
submitted by ParticularAnt5424 to cybersecurity [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 00:27 KsmIDENS Enable Remote Access

Hello, I selfhost plex in docker and I use nginx as reverse proxy. I'm sure I setup everything right. but still when I go to remote access I see Not available outside your network Your server is signed in to Plex, but is not reachable from outside your network. Learn more and I want to fix it. tried use custom ports like 443 and 80 and added plex server URL in network tab but still face same issue so is there way to fix it?
docker compose: ```yml version: "3.8"
services: plex: image: linuxserveplex:latest container_name: plex restart: unless-stopped volumes: - /mnt/rclone:/mnt/usemedia - ./config:/config ports: - 127.0.0.1:32400:32400 #- 8089:8089 environment: PLEX_CLAIM: "claim-REMOVED" tautulli: image: ghcr.io/tautulli/tautulli container_name: tautulli restart: unless-stopped volumes: - ./tautulli:/config environment: - PUID=1000 - PGID=1000 - TZ=EG ports: - 32500:8181
volumes: media: {} config: {} Nginx conf: server { server_name plex.domain.com;
location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:32400; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for; proxy_set_header Host $host; # so Invidious knows domain proxy_http_version 1.1; # to keep alive proxy_set_header Connection ""; # to keep alive } if ($https = '') { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } # if not connected to HTTPS, perma-redirect to HTTPS listen 443 ssl; # managed by Certbot ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/plex.domain.com/fullchain.pem; # managed by Certbot ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/plex.domain.com/privkey.pem; # managed by Certbot include /etc/letsencrypt/options-ssl-nginx.conf; # managed by Certbot ssl_dhparam /etc/letsencrypt/ssl-dhparams.pem; # managed by Certbot 
}
server { server_name tautulli.domain.com;
location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:32500; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr; proxy_set_header Host $host; # so Invidious knows domain proxy_http_version 1.1; # to keep alive proxy_set_header Connection ""; # to keep alive } if ($https = '') { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } # if not connected to HTTPS, perma-redirect to HTTPS listen 443 ssl; # managed by Certbot ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/tautulli.domain.com/fullchain.pem; # managed by Certbot ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/tautulli.domain.com/privkey.pem; # managed by Certbot include /etc/letsencrypt/options-ssl-nginx.conf; # managed by Certbot ssl_dhparam /etc/letsencrypt/ssl-dhparams.pem; # managed by Certbot 
}
server { if ($host = plex.domain.com) { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } # managed by Certbot
server_name plex.domain.com; listen 80; return 404; # managed by Certbot 
}
server { if ($host = tautulli.domain.com) { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } # managed by Certbot
server_name tautulli.domain.com; listen 80; return 404; # managed by Certbot 
} ```
submitted by KsmIDENS to PleX [link] [comments]


2024.05.20 00:27 KsmIDENS Enable Plex Remote Access

Hello, I selfhost plex in docker and I use nginx as reverse proxy. I'm sure I setup everything right. but still when I go to remote access I see Not available outside your network Your server is signed in to Plex, but is not reachable from outside your network. Learn more and I want to fix it. tried use custom ports like 443 and 80 and added plex server URL in network tab but still face same issue so is there way to fix it?
docker compose: ```yml version: "3.8"
services: plex: image: linuxserveplex:latest container_name: plex restart: unless-stopped volumes: - /mnt/rclone:/mnt/usemedia - ./config:/config ports: - 127.0.0.1:32400:32400 #- 8089:8089 environment: PLEX_CLAIM: "claim-REMOVED" tautulli: image: ghcr.io/tautulli/tautulli container_name: tautulli restart: unless-stopped volumes: - ./tautulli:/config environment: - PUID=1000 - PGID=1000 - TZ=EG ports: - 32500:8181
volumes: media: {} config: {} Nginx conf: server { server_name plex.domain.com;
location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:32400; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for; proxy_set_header Host $host; # so Invidious knows domain proxy_http_version 1.1; # to keep alive proxy_set_header Connection ""; # to keep alive } if ($https = '') { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } # if not connected to HTTPS, perma-redirect to HTTPS listen 443 ssl; # managed by Certbot ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/plex.domain.com/fullchain.pem; # managed by Certbot ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/plex.domain.com/privkey.pem; # managed by Certbot include /etc/letsencrypt/options-ssl-nginx.conf; # managed by Certbot ssl_dhparam /etc/letsencrypt/ssl-dhparams.pem; # managed by Certbot 
}
server { server_name tautulli.domain.com;
location / { proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:32500; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $remote_addr; proxy_set_header Host $host; # so Invidious knows domain proxy_http_version 1.1; # to keep alive proxy_set_header Connection ""; # to keep alive } if ($https = '') { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } # if not connected to HTTPS, perma-redirect to HTTPS listen 443 ssl; # managed by Certbot ssl_certificate /etc/letsencrypt/live/tautulli.domain.com/fullchain.pem; # managed by Certbot ssl_certificate_key /etc/letsencrypt/live/tautulli.domain.com/privkey.pem; # managed by Certbot include /etc/letsencrypt/options-ssl-nginx.conf; # managed by Certbot ssl_dhparam /etc/letsencrypt/ssl-dhparams.pem; # managed by Certbot 
}
server { if ($host = plex.domain.com) { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } # managed by Certbot
server_name plex.domain.com; listen 80; return 404; # managed by Certbot 
}
server { if ($host = tautulli.domain.com) { return 301 https://$host$request_uri; } # managed by Certbot
server_name tautulli.domain.com; listen 80; return 404; # managed by Certbot 
} ```
submitted by KsmIDENS to selfhosted [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 23:59 SamJamTheGamerMan Dune - Part Two - "Failed to Open Disc"

Hello, this is my first ever Reddit post. Sorry if I'm not doing this right. I am trying to get MakeMKV (v.1.17.7 Windows x64) to read a brand new 4K Blu Ray copy of Dune - Part Two. I have been able to rip 4K Blu Rays in the past without any problems.
Here is the text log:
"Debug log started at Sun May 19 21:48:04 2024 , written by MakeMKV v1.17.7 win(x64-release)
001005:0000 MakeMKV v1.17.7 win(x64-release) started
001004:0000 Debug logging enabled, log will be saved as file://C:\Users\samue/MakeMKV_log.txt
Using 262272KB for read cache.
Network access is ENABLED, CURL version 7.72.0/Schannel/1.41.0 (x86_64-pc-win32) , proxy server not set.
WinCdArb=v1.2.0_tiny win(x64-release)
DEBUG: Code 3 at wsuH-I{pjx"D{a*<>oxG0$',:29395310
SDF v098: ASUS_BW-16D1HT_3.00_211511031110_KLMJ65G1811
DEBUG: Code 3 at wsuH-I{pjx"D{a*<>oxG0$',:29395310
SDF v098: PIONEER_BD-RW___BDR-XD05_3.10_QKDL068746UC
DEBUG: Code 3 at wsuH-I{pjx"D{a*<>oxG0$',:29395310
SDF v098: HL-DT-ST_BD-RE_BP60NB10_1.01_211905031534_SIKZ3HC9L3545
DEBUG: Code 3 at wsuH-I{pjx"D{a*<>oxG0$',:29395310
SDF v098: ASUS_BW-16D1HT_3.00_211511031110_KLMJ65G1811
DEBUG: Code 3 at wsuH-I{pjx"D{a*<>oxG0$',:29395310
SDF v098: ASUS_BW-16D1HT_3.00_211511031110_KLMJ65G1811
001011:0000 Using LibreDrive mode (v06.3 id=F0ED16432FAA)
003007:0000 Using direct disc access mode
005085:0000 Loaded content hash table, will verify integrity of M2TS files.
DEBUG: Code 2147483648 at vtE<(>?]*E! 003338:0000 Downloading latest HK to C:\Users\samue/.MakeMKV ...
001003:0020 DEBUG: Code 4279336995 at #RR.[3VW3f!jtf":121262877
001003:0020 DEBUG: Code 0 at vtE<(>?]*E! 003339:0000 Automatic HK downloading is disabled or failed.
003332:0000 Saved AACS dump file as file://C:\Users\samue/.MakeMKV/MKB20_v77_Dune-_Part_Two_13B6.tgz
003303:0000 The volume key is unknown for this disc - video can't be decrypted
001003:0020 DEBUG: Code 0 at *?fa{/h[G&00(#,E:213132721
001003:0020 DEBUG: Code 0 at *?fa{/h[G&00(#,E:213131341
005010:0000 Failed to open disc
Application exited at Sun May 19 21:54:34 2024"
Does anyone have any ideas why this might be failing to open the disc? I'm not sure what a volume key is. Does that mean this movie is so new that MakeMKV can't decript it yet?
submitted by SamJamTheGamerMan to makemkv [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 23:56 RevolutionaryHumor57 Am I designing it right? Multiple Traefik

I am trying hard to create a local environment running under "*.test" domain to reassemble the production env
The available tools? Docker swarm, Traefik, a single standalone Dnsmasq container that I am feeding with the output of docker inspect command.
Traefik #1 wires end user with all front domains using self signed cert, this works fine (a sticky cookie redirects to nginx replicas that picks stateless rounded Robin php-fpm API). This is all good.
Now from PHP container I want to connect to container named "mailer" using PHP SDK, and the SDK library yells at me that this URI does not comply with some random RFC scheme - fine, but now I have to somehow create a legit domain for this library to let me go further.
My idea is to create another Traefik instance isolated in microservice network just for that purpose, so one Traefik would stay public and another one for private traffic.
With some limited shell scripting (ehh) I am attempting to inject dnsmasq into microservice network so all containers here that would hit *.test would be proxied through the #2 private Traefik, therefore I could create something like "mailer.test" working.
I guess all of the Traefik instances here could be just simple nginx reverse proxy, but I am reducing shell scripting as much as I can, and I hate to generate server blocks at runtime
submitted by RevolutionaryHumor57 to Traefik [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 23:48 pavlyi1 Keepalived virtual servers help

Hello, I'm trying to setup a HA failover between my Raspberry Pi and my Debian VM for Pi-Hole and Nginx proxy on the same virtual IP but I can't get it working. The nodes know that if HTTP has failed on one node and successfully switches but the HTTP works on the virtual IP only when the Nginx proxy is running on the master node. Any idea how to fix this?
Raspberry Pi's /etc/keepalived/keepalived.conf
vrrp_instance VI_1 { state BACKUP interface eth0 virtual_router_id 10 priority 100 advert_int 1 authentication { auth_type PASS auth_pass test } virtual_ipaddress { 192.168.0.20 } } virtual_server 192.168.0.20 80 { delay_loop 5 lb_algo rr lb_kind NAT persistence_timeout 50 protocol TCP real_server 192.168.0.24 80 { weight 101 TCP_CHECK { connect_timeout 3 nb_get_retry 3 delay_before_retry 3 } } real_server 192.168.0.27 80 { weight 100 TCP_CHECK { connect_timeout 3 nb_get_retry 3 delay_before_retry 3 } } } 
Debian VM /etc/keepalived/keepalived.conf
vrrp_instance VI_1 { state MASTER interface enp6s18 virtual_router_id 10 priority 101 advert_int 1 authentication { auth_type PASS auth_pass test } virtual_ipaddress { 192.168.0.20 } } virtual_server 192.168.0.20 80 { delay_loop 5 lb_algo rr lb_kind NAT persistence_timeout 50 protocol TCP real_server 192.168.0.24 80 { weight 101 TCP_CHECK { connect_timeout 3 nb_get_retry 3 delay_before_retry 3 } } real_server 192.168.0.27 80 { weight 100 TCP_CHECK { connect_timeout 3 nb_get_retry 3 delay_before_retry 3 } } } 
ipvsadm when the Nginx is turned off at the Debian VM:
$ sudo ipvsadm IP Virtual Server version 1.2.1 (size=4096) Prot LocalAddress:Port Scheduler Flags -> RemoteAddress:Port Forward Weight ActiveConn InActConn TCP 192.168.0.20:http rr persistent 50 -> 192.168.0.27:http Masq 100 2 0 
ipvsadm when the Nginx is turned on the Debian VM:
$ sudo ipvsadm IP Virtual Server version 1.2.1 (size=4096) Prot LocalAddress:Port Scheduler Flags -> RemoteAddress:Port Forward Weight ActiveConn InActConn TCP 192.168.0.20:http rr persistent 50 -> 192.168.0.24:http Masq 101 0 0 -> 192.168.0.27:http Masq 100 0 0 
submitted by pavlyi1 to sysadmin [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 23:46 usrdef Traefik confusion

I'm terribly sorry for the question, but I've spent two days buried in documentation, and I'm starting to question my understanding of this type of program.
I downloaded a single docker package: https://github.com/linuxservedocker-obsidian
It's just an online version of the markdown editor Obsidian, running in a VNC.
Many people recommended placing it behind a reverse proxy, and I figured since reverse proxies are so highly talked about in terms of security and not exposing your ports, I wanted to set Traefik up with this particular container.
No matter what I do, the docker container still insists on using the default ports, which are: - 3000 (http) - 3001 (https)
```yml services: traefik: container_name: "traefik" image: traefik:2.9.8 restart: unless-stopped ports: - 80:80 - 443:443 - 6888:8080 volumes: - /varun/docker.sock:/varun/docker.sock:ro - ./data/logs:/valog/traefik - ./config/traefik.yml:/etc/traefik/traefik.yml:ro networks: - traefik_public depends_on: - obsidian
obsidian: image: lscr.io/linuxserveobsidian:latest container_name: obsidian volumes: - /home/obsidian/server:/config security_opt: - seccomp:unconfined #optional environment: - PUID=142 - PGID=152 labels: - "traefik.enable=true" - "traefik.constraint-label-stack=obsidian" - "traefik.docker.network=traefik_public" - "traefik.http.services.obsidian.loadbalancer.server.port=9001" # http - traefik.http.routers.obsidian_http.entrypoints=web - traefik.http.routers.obsidian_http.rule=PathPrefix(/) - traefik.http.routers.obsidian_http.service=obsidian # https - traefik.http.routers.obsidian_https.entrypoints=websecure - traefik.http.routers.obsidian_https.rule=PathPrefix(/) - traefik.http.routers.obsidian_https.service=obsidian - traefik.http.routers.obsidian_https.tls=true devices: - /dev/dri:/dev/dri #optional shm_size: "1gb" restart: unless-stopped networks: - traefik_public
networks: traefik_public: name: traefik_public external: false ipam: config: - subnet: 172.18.0.0/16 ```
I've tried about 30 variations of this docker file. No matter what I do, it still continues to use port 3000 / 3001, it does not use 9001
and of course I've tried accessing it via: 172.18.0.1:9001
which is the IP that the container has. But any port I try other than the default (3000) just says Connection refused, but if I go to the default port (3000), it works.
The Traefik logs however, say it's creating them: ``` time="2024-05-19T15:44:15Z" level=debug msg="Creating server 0 http://172.18.0.2:9001" entryPointName=websecure routerName=obsidian_https@docker serviceName=obsidian serverName=0
time="2024-05-19T15:44:15Z" level=debug msg="child http://172.18.0.2:9001 now UP"
time="2024-05-19T15:44:15Z" level=debug msg="Propagating new UP status" ```
I've gone as far as to shut off the firewall thinking it was a firewall config, which it's not.
At one point I added the following to the obsidian service:
yml obsidian: ports: - 9000:3000 - 9001:3001
And of course that works, but then I'm just manually changing the ports of the container itself. I"m waiting Traefik to use the default port (3001) and redirect it to accept 9001.
Am I misunderstanding this whole concept?
I hate to spam this place with my configs, but if anyone needs to see my traefik.yml file:
```yml

---------------------------------------

Global

---------------------------------------

global: checkNewVersion: false sendAnonymousUsage: false

---------------------------------------

Logs

---------------------------------------

log: level: TRACE format: "common"

---------------------------------------

Access Logs

---------------------------------------

accessLog: filePath: "/data/logs/access.log" bufferingSize: 100 format: json filters: minDuration: "10ms"

---------------------------------------

Api

---------------------------------------

api: dashboard: true insecure: true

---------------------------------------

Entry Points

---------------------------------------

entryPoints: web: address: :80 http: redirections: entryPoint: to: websecure websecure: address: :9090

---------------------------------------

Server Transport

---------------------------------------

serversTransport: insecureSkipVerify: true

---------------------------------------

Metrics

---------------------------------------

metrics: prometheus: manualRouting: true addServicesLabels: true buckets: - 0.1 - 0.3 - 1.2 - 5.0

---------------------------------------

Providers

---------------------------------------

providers: docker: endpoint: "unix:///varun/docker.sock" exposedByDefault: false network: traefik_public watch: true file: directory: /etc/traefik watch: true

---------------------------------------

Certificate Resolvers

---------------------------------------

certificatesResolvers: cloudflare: acme: email: user@domainc.om storage: /acme.json dnsChallenge: provider: cloudflare resolvers: - "1.1.1.1:53" - "1.0.0.1:53" ```
Traefik v3 is also out, but I chose to run v2.9 because there's a lot more documentation and examples. I figured if I got v2.9 actually working, then I could upgrade to v3.x
Any help with this would be a HUGE asset. I've been all over Google. And I'm obviously missing something.
There may be a few things in here out of place, I've added and removed so many lines from this, I can't even keep track of it anymore.
submitted by usrdef to selfhosted [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 22:35 MEGAUKALELE cyber security course

كورس cyber security
ابدا رحلتك في ال cyber security مع كورس شامل
يغطي كل الانت محتاج تعرفه عن cyber security من البداية مش مطلوب منك يبقى عندك خبرة في اي حاجة احنا هنبدا معاك من الاول هيبقى فيه مرحلة تاسيس قوية جدا هتحطك على اول الطريق مرحلة التاسيس تشمل الاتي
*Basic security concepts & terminology
*Introduction to networks
*Mastering linux commands
*Kali linux & its tools
*Bash scripting
*Python for cyber security
*OWASP top 10 vulnerabilities
بعد ما تخلص مرحلة التاسيس هتكون اخدت فكرة قوية وخلصت اول مرحلة بعدها هنبدا المرحلة التانية وهي ال
Attacks
*SQL injection (SQLI)
*Cross-site scripting (XSS)
*HTTP tampering
*Directory traversal
*Broken Access Control
*Server Side Request Forgery (SSRF)
*Identification & Authentication Failures
*Man in the middle attack (MITM)
*Wireless AP attacks
*Rouge Access point
*Password cracking/recovery techniques
*reverse shell attacks
وازاي تحمي نفسك منهم و المرحلة البعدها هنبدا نتعمق اكتر في ال Attacks باستخدام اشهر ال tools و ال frameworks زي
*Nmap
*Metasploit
*burp suite
*netcat
*sql map
*crunch
*hashcat
و tools تانية كتير وهنتعرف على ال
*vpn
*proxies
*proxychaining
وازاي تقدر تخبي ال ip address بتاعك وهنبدا مع كل مرحلة نطبق ctfs عشان نختبر قدراتنا ونشوف الثغرات على ارض الواقع طبعا ممكن تبدا معانا من اي مرحلة على حسب مستواك و للتفاصيل تقدر تتواصل معانا على الرقم دا 01111130209 whatsApp
submitted by MEGAUKALELE to Egypt_Developers [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 22:29 Obvious-Viking Sanity check

Edit: Literally after posting this did some checks and turns out the proxy pass needed to be the ip of the docker interface for authentik not the exposed url - i think - its working now anyway
But ill leave this here should it help
************************************************************
So i had this working on my internal network then forgot i was tunnelling into my LAN when trying on an external device.
So ive followed the ibra guide and the geekcircuit guide along with others on Youtube. It should work but im either getting an 'offline' in NPM or error 500.
so my config:
NPM:
authentik = auth.domain.co.uk https - 10.10.10.13:9443 < works and accessible online homepage = homepage.domain.co.uk http - 10.10.10.13:3001 < works and i can access online 
Authentik:
Applications:
name - homepage slug - homepage providers - homepage all others default 
Providers:
name - homepage Authentication flow- default-authentication-flow (Welcome to authentik!) Authorization flow - implicit forward auth single app external host - http://homepage.domain.co.uk all rest default 
Outposts:
name - authentik Embedded Outpost type - proxy intergration - local docker app selected authentik host - http://auth.domain.co.uk 
NPM config:
Upgrade WebSocket if requested, otherwise use keepalive map $http_upgrade $connection_upgrade_keepalive { default upgrade; '' ''; } Increase buffer size for large headers This is needed only if you get 'upstream sent too big header while reading response header from upstream' error when trying to access an application protected by goauthentik proxy_buffers 8 16k; proxy_buffer_size 32k; Make sure not to redirect traffic to a port 4443 port_in_redirect off; location / { Put your proxy_pass to your application here proxy_pass $forward_scheme://$server:$port; Set any other headers your application might need proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header ... Support for websocket proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade; proxy_set_header Connection $connection_upgrade_keepalive; authentik-specific config auth_request /outpost.goauthentik.io/auth/nginx; error_page 401 = u/goauthentik_proxy_signin; auth_request_set $auth_cookie $upstream_http_set_cookie; add_header Set-Cookie $auth_cookie; translate headers from the outposts back to the actual upstream auth_request_set $authentik_username $upstream_http_x_authentik_username; auth_request_set $authentik_groups $upstream_http_x_authentik_groups; auth_request_set $authentik_email $upstream_http_x_authentik_email; auth_request_set $authentik_name $upstream_http_x_authentik_name; auth_request_set $authentik_uid $upstream_http_x_authentik_uid; proxy_set_header X-authentik-username $authentik_username; proxy_set_header X-authentik-groups $authentik_groups; proxy_set_header X-authentik-email $authentik_email; proxy_set_header X-authentik-name $authentik_name; proxy_set_header X-authentik-uid $authentik_uid; } all requests to /outpost.goauthentik.io must be accessible without authentication location /outpost.goauthentik.io { proxy_pass https://auth.domain/outpost.goauthentik.io; ensure the host of this vserver matches your external URL you've configured in authentik proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header X-Original-URL $scheme://$http_host$request_uri; add_header Set-Cookie $auth_cookie; auth_request_set $auth_cookie $upstream_http_set_cookie; proxy_pass_request_body off; proxy_set_header Content-Length ""; } Special location for when the /auth endpoint returns a 401, redirect to the /start URL which initiates SSO location u/goauthentik_proxy_signin { internal; add_header Set-Cookie $auth_cookie; return 302 /outpost.goauthentik.io/start?rd=$request_uri; For domain level, use the below error_page to redirect to your authentik server with the full redirect path return 302 https://authentik.company/outpost.goauthentik.io/start?rd=$scheme://$http_host$request_uri; } 
submitted by Obvious-Viking to Authentik [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 22:25 JElainM Is a VPN cheaper than Shadowrocket on IOS?

Basically: I am incredibly poor so I bought Shadowrocket for my iPad, because I thought it would be cheaper than paying for a VPN, but literally no free proxy server works (if I enable the vpn then I can’t access the internet). This even goes for those not in „timeout“. At this point the only way I can think of getting it to work would be to pay for a private proxy server, which (imo) just seems to be just as expensive as a normal VPN.
So now I’m both looking for advice on still getting Shadowrocket to work as well as if a proxy server or a vpn is cheaper (if there is no other way)
submitted by JElainM to VPN [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 22:06 DutyTop8086 Starting an Amazon FBA Business: Essential Tips and Product Research Strategies

Are you planning to sell on Amazon FBA but unsure what to sell? The best products to sell are those that already have a demand. Whether you're selling your own products or reselling someone else's, I'll guide you on how to find good products to sell for yourself.
First, let me be blunt: this might not work for everyone. Everyone's success is different, and there is no one-size-fits-all plan. What works for one person might not work for another, so keep that in mind.
Don't choose a product just because you can source it cheaply, because you like it, or because you think it will sell well. The first product I tried to sell on Amazon was a complete failure because I didn't do any market research. I just saw one other product that seemed to be selling well and tried to sell the same thing. I thought, "If they are selling well, I can throw up my product, and it should sell well too, right?" Nope. I was wrong. Looking back, it's funny now, but at the time it wasn’t.
They had hundreds of reviews, a much better listing, and were already ranked. I had no idea how to set up my listing back then. I had three poor-quality iPhone pictures, horrible copywriting, and worst of all, I had no idea how to launch or rank my product. I just knew someone else was selling well.
Enough about my failed product. I say this to highlight how important it is to pick the right product, especially when you're first starting. So in general, you should approach your product research like this:
Learn From My Mistakes
Don’t choose a product just because you can source it cheaply, because you like it, or because you think it will sell well. The first product I tried to sell on Amazon was a complete failure because I didn't do any market research. I saw one product that seemed to be selling well and tried to sell the same thing. I thought, “If they are selling well, I can throw up my product and it should sell well too, right?” Nope. I was wrong.
They had hundreds of reviews, a much better listing, and were already ranked. I had no idea how to set up my listing back then. I had three poor-quality iPhone pictures, horrible copywriting, and worst of all, I had no idea how to launch or rank my product. I just knew someone else was selling well.
Enough about my failed product. I say this to highlight how important it is to pick the right product, especially when you're first starting. So here’s how you should approach your product research:
Find the Market
For your first product, look for ones that are easier to ship and manufacture so you can launch quicker. The main factors to consider are:
Small and lightweight
Non-seasonal
Non-fragile / non-electronic
Non-brand dominated
Price between $12 and $55
Already selling well (over 500 units per month)
Next, you want to find other potential, successful products that will lead you to the overall market. Here are two effective product research methods:
Free Method
Check out the New Release section of any sub-category. The idea is to find products that have just recently launched and are already selling well. Some good categories to start in are Home & Kitchen, Office Products, and Pet Supplies. Go into their sub-categories to find oddball products that are doing well. For example, Home & Kitchen > Kitchen & Dining > Tabletop > Tabletop Accessories > Kitchen & Table Linens > Tablecloths. You can use the free AMZ Scout Chrome extension to estimate how many units are being sold each month.
Paid Method
Use the Jungle Scout Web App ($40 a month). The product database lets you search through Amazon with the criteria we went over and only pulls back products that fit.
Analyze Market Trends
Research the current trends and popular products in your target market. Look for gaps and opportunities where there is a demand for new products. It's important to start doing this for just one market, ideally your country’s market.
Use Product/Keyword Research Tools
Use these tools to identify potential product ideas. They can help you identify popular search terms and phrases related to your target market. Use Amazon’s search engine autocomplete, which will show you the daily trends for that Marketplace. Start typing (for example, "car Christmas decoration") and get ideas.
Think Outside the Box
Don’t just rely on scraping Alibaba for the next big product. Millions of people are doing the same. Even Alibaba’s manufacturers are directly selling those products on Amazon. Think outside the box: attend trade shows and local markets related to your target market. This can be a great way to learn about new products and trends and to connect with potential suppliers and manufacturers. Plus, it’s not as easy for your competitors to attend a trade show.
Network and Connect with Other Sellers
This is an absolute must and a game-changer. Join Facebook groups, Discord servers, and follow relevant Twitter accounts. Meeting face-to-face and networking with other sellers on Amazon will give you new ideas, and you'll share the ups and downs of selling on Amazon. Don’t expect other sellers to show you their secret formula. They won’t give you an idea for their next great product, but exchanging ideas with someone in your same position is really helpful.
Avoid Amazon Gurus' Courses
Nobody who is going to make you a millionaire or make you drop your 9-to-5 life will give you the keys to it for $3,000 or $30,000.
Tools for Amazon Product Research
There are several tools that can help with the research process. Some popular options include:
Jungle Scout: A product research tool that helps you identify potential products to sell on Amazon based on data and analytics. The product database includes over 500 million products.
Helium 10: A suite of tools that includes a keyword research tool, product tracker, and other features that can help you research and find profitable products to sell on Amazon. The product database includes over 400 million products.
Viral Launch: A product research and launch platform that offers tools and services to help you find and launch successful products on Amazon. The product database includes over 250 million products.
AMZ Scout: A product research and tracking tool that provides data and insights to help you find the best products to sell on Amazon. The product database includes over 20 million products.
Now that you generally know how to find good product ideas, don't get overwhelmed with the entire process of selling on Amazon. No need to stress about ranking, launching, PPC, sourcing, or anything other than finding the right product to sell. Once you have a good product to sell, figuring out all that stuff becomes so much easier since you know specifically what to sell. You'll start to see how things work and what products sell well once you've been doing product research for a little bit.
Remember, success on Amazon varies for everyone, and there's no guarantee this will work for you. However, by following these guidelines, you'll have a much better chance of finding a product that can succeed in the marketplace.
submitted by DutyTop8086 to AmazonFBA_USA [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 21:53 DutyTop8086 Starting an Amazon FBA Business: Essential Tips and Product Research Strategies

Are you planning to sell on Amazon FBA but unsure what to sell? The best products to sell are those that already have a demand. Whether you're selling your own products or reselling someone else's, I'll guide you on how to find good products to sell for yourself.
First, let me be blunt: this might not work for everyone. Everyone's success is different, and there is no one-size-fits-all plan. What works for one person might not work for another, so keep that in mind.
Don't choose a product just because you can source it cheaply, because you like it, or because you think it will sell well. The first product I tried to sell on Amazon was a complete failure because I didn't do any market research. I just saw one other product that seemed to be selling well and tried to sell the same thing. I thought, "If they are selling well, I can throw up my product, and it should sell well too, right?" Nope. I was wrong. Looking back, it's funny now, but at the time it wasn’t.
They had hundreds of reviews, a much better listing, and were already ranked. I had no idea how to set up my listing back then. I had three poor-quality iPhone pictures, horrible copywriting, and worst of all, I had no idea how to launch or rank my product. I just knew someone else was selling well.
Enough about my failed product. I say this to highlight how important it is to pick the right product, especially when you're first starting. So in general, you should approach your product research like this:
Learn From My Mistakes
Don’t choose a product just because you can source it cheaply, because you like it, or because you think it will sell well. The first product I tried to sell on Amazon was a complete failure because I didn't do any market research. I saw one product that seemed to be selling well and tried to sell the same thing. I thought, “If they are selling well, I can throw up my product and it should sell well too, right?” Nope. I was wrong.
They had hundreds of reviews, a much better listing, and were already ranked. I had no idea how to set up my listing back then. I had three poor-quality iPhone pictures, horrible copywriting, and worst of all, I had no idea how to launch or rank my product. I just knew someone else was selling well.
Enough about my failed product. I say this to highlight how important it is to pick the right product, especially when you're first starting. So here’s how you should approach your product research:
Find the Market
For your first product, look for ones that are easier to ship and manufacture so you can launch quicker. The main factors to consider are:
Small and lightweight
Non-seasonal
Non-fragile / non-electronic
Non-brand dominated
Price between $12 and $55
Already selling well (over 500 units per month)
Next, you want to find other potential, successful products that will lead you to the overall market. Here are two effective product research methods:
Free Method
Check out the New Release section of any sub-category. The idea is to find products that have just recently launched and are already selling well. Some good categories to start in are Home & Kitchen, Office Products, and Pet Supplies. Go into their sub-categories to find oddball products that are doing well. For example, Home & Kitchen > Kitchen & Dining > Tabletop > Tabletop Accessories > Kitchen & Table Linens > Tablecloths. You can use the free AMZ Scout Chrome extension to estimate how many units are being sold each month.
Paid Method
Use the Jungle Scout Web App ($40 a month). The product database lets you search through Amazon with the criteria we went over and only pulls back products that fit.
Analyze Market Trends
Research the current trends and popular products in your target market. Look for gaps and opportunities where there is a demand for new products. It's important to start doing this for just one market, ideally your country’s market.
Use Product/Keyword Research Tools
Use these tools to identify potential product ideas. They can help you identify popular search terms and phrases related to your target market. Use Amazon’s search engine autocomplete, which will show you the daily trends for that Marketplace. Start typing (for example, "car Christmas decoration") and get ideas.
Think Outside the Box
Don’t just rely on scraping Alibaba for the next big product. Millions of people are doing the same. Even Alibaba’s manufacturers are directly selling those products on Amazon. Think outside the box: attend trade shows and local markets related to your target market. This can be a great way to learn about new products and trends and to connect with potential suppliers and manufacturers. Plus, it’s not as easy for your competitors to attend a trade show.
Network and Connect with Other Sellers
This is an absolute must and a game-changer. Join Facebook groups, Discord servers, and follow relevant Twitter accounts. Meeting face-to-face and networking with other sellers on Amazon will give you new ideas, and you'll share the ups and downs of selling on Amazon. Don’t expect other sellers to show you their secret formula. They won’t give you an idea for their next great product, but exchanging ideas with someone in your same position is really helpful.
Avoid Amazon Gurus' Courses
Nobody who is going to make you a millionaire or make you drop your 9-to-5 life will give you the keys to it for $3,000 or $30,000.
Tools for Amazon Product Research
There are several tools that can help with the research process. Some popular options include:
Jungle Scout: A product research tool that helps you identify potential products to sell on Amazon based on data and analytics. The product database includes over 500 million products.
Helium 10: A suite of tools that includes a keyword research tool, product tracker, and other features that can help you research and find profitable products to sell on Amazon. The product database includes over 400 million products.
Viral Launch: A product research and launch platform that offers tools and services to help you find and launch successful products on Amazon. The product database includes over 250 million products.
AMZ Scout: A product research and tracking tool that provides data and insights to help you find the best products to sell on Amazon. The product database includes over 20 million products.
Now that you generally know how to find good product ideas, don't get overwhelmed with the entire process of selling on Amazon. No need to stress about ranking, launching, PPC, sourcing, or anything other than finding the right product to sell. Once you have a good product to sell, figuring out all that stuff becomes so much easier since you know specifically what to sell. You'll start to see how things work and what products sell well once you've been doing product research for a little bit.
Remember, success on Amazon varies for everyone, and there's no guarantee this will work for you. However, by following these guidelines, you'll have a much better chance of finding a product that can succeed in the marketplace.
submitted by DutyTop8086 to AmazonFBATips [link] [comments]


2024.05.19 21:52 DutyTop8086 Starting an Amazon FBA Business: Essential Tips and Product Research Strategies

Are you planning to sell on Amazon FBA but unsure what to sell? The best products to sell are those that already have a demand. Whether you're selling your own products or reselling someone else's, I'll guide you on how to find good products to sell for yourself.
First, let me be blunt: this might not work for everyone. Everyone's success is different, and there is no one-size-fits-all plan. What works for one person might not work for another, so keep that in mind.
Don't choose a product just because you can source it cheaply, because you like it, or because you think it will sell well. The first product I tried to sell on Amazon was a complete failure because I didn't do any market research. I just saw one other product that seemed to be selling well and tried to sell the same thing. I thought, "If they are selling well, I can throw up my product, and it should sell well too, right?" Nope. I was wrong. Looking back, it's funny now, but at the time it wasn’t.
They had hundreds of reviews, a much better listing, and were already ranked. I had no idea how to set up my listing back then. I had three poor-quality iPhone pictures, horrible copywriting, and worst of all, I had no idea how to launch or rank my product. I just knew someone else was selling well.
Enough about my failed product. I say this to highlight how important it is to pick the right product, especially when you're first starting. So in general, you should approach your product research like this:

Learn From My Mistakes

Don’t choose a product just because you can source it cheaply, because you like it, or because you think it will sell well. The first product I tried to sell on Amazon was a complete failure because I didn't do any market research. I saw one product that seemed to be selling well and tried to sell the same thing. I thought, “If they are selling well, I can throw up my product and it should sell well too, right?” Nope. I was wrong.
They had hundreds of reviews, a much better listing, and were already ranked. I had no idea how to set up my listing back then. I had three poor-quality iPhone pictures, horrible copywriting, and worst of all, I had no idea how to launch or rank my product. I just knew someone else was selling well.
Enough about my failed product. I say this to highlight how important it is to pick the right product, especially when you're first starting. So here’s how you should approach your product research:

Find the Market

For your first product, look for ones that are easier to ship and manufacture so you can launch quicker. The main factors to consider are:
Next, you want to find other potential, successful products that will lead you to the overall market. Here are two effective product research methods:

Free Method

Check out the New Release section of any sub-category. The idea is to find products that have just recently launched and are already selling well. Some good categories to start in are Home & Kitchen, Office Products, and Pet Supplies. Go into their sub-categories to find oddball products that are doing well. For example, Home & Kitchen > Kitchen & Dining > Tabletop > Tabletop Accessories > Kitchen & Table Linens > Tablecloths. You can use the free AMZ Scout Chrome extension to estimate how many units are being sold each month.

Paid Method

Use the Jungle Scout Web App ($40 a month). The product database lets you search through Amazon with the criteria we went over and only pulls back products that fit.

Analyze Market Trends

Research the current trends and popular products in your target market. Look for gaps and opportunities where there is a demand for new products. It's important to start doing this for just one market, ideally your country’s market.

Use Product/Keyword Research Tools

Use these tools to identify potential product ideas. They can help you identify popular search terms and phrases related to your target market. Use Amazon’s search engine autocomplete, which will show you the daily trends for that Marketplace. Start typing (for example, "car Christmas decoration") and get ideas.

Think Outside the Box

Don’t just rely on scraping Alibaba for the next big product. Millions of people are doing the same. Even Alibaba’s manufacturers are directly selling those products on Amazon. Think outside the box: attend trade shows and local markets related to your target market. This can be a great way to learn about new products and trends and to connect with potential suppliers and manufacturers. Plus, it’s not as easy for your competitors to attend a trade show.

Network and Connect with Other Sellers

This is an absolute must and a game-changer. Join Facebook groups, Discord servers, and follow relevant Twitter accounts. Meeting face-to-face and networking with other sellers on Amazon will give you new ideas, and you'll share the ups and downs of selling on Amazon. Don’t expect other sellers to show you their secret formula. They won’t give you an idea for their next great product, but exchanging ideas with someone in your same position is really helpful.

Avoid Amazon Gurus' Courses

Nobody who is going to make you a millionaire or make you drop your 9-to-5 life will give you the keys to it for $3,000 or $30,000.

Tools for Amazon Product Research

There are several tools that can help with the research process. Some popular options include:
Now that you generally know how to find good product ideas, don't get overwhelmed with the entire process of selling on Amazon. No need to stress about ranking, launching, PPC, sourcing, or anything other than finding the right product to sell. Once you have a good product to sell, figuring out all that stuff becomes so much easier since you know specifically what to sell. You'll start to see how things work and what products sell well once you've been doing product research for a little bit.
Remember, success on Amazon varies for everyone, and there's no guarantee this will work for you. However, by following these guidelines, you'll have a much better chance of finding a product that can succeed in the marketplace.
submitted by DutyTop8086 to AmazonFBA [link] [comments]


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