

Oops, you’re right! I had something there and deleted it before posting :)
Added a short sentence now, thanks for the heads up!


Oops, you’re right! I had something there and deleted it before posting :)
Added a short sentence now, thanks for the heads up!


deleted by creator


Hehe, alright, no worries! If you change your mind the PRs are open :)


🤓 you got it! Mascots are underrated!


Hi! Thanks a lot for trying it out!
I manage all my apps via docker compose, so I’m actually less familiar with TrueNAS apps, so I’m happy that setup was quick :) Would you be interested in contributing a short guide on the setup?
When viewing a snapshot, highlight files (and possibly folders) that differ from the current state (deleted files in red, modified files in yellow, for example)
Yeah, I was thinking something along those lines as well. Maybe being able to “diff” between two snapshots as well, for example to see what was changed in a snapshot compared to its predecessor. Would be cool to have file diffs as well :)
Downloading entire folders, that would probably require timeship to zip them up beforehand, though.
Yeah, that would be nice too. I think archiving / zipping multiple files or folders on the fly is fairly straightforward in Go, it’s just the matter of putting in the time to make it happen.
If you have any other ideas, let me know! Or open an issue directly :)
Some of the other things I was thinking of are just in the README roadmap, but I’ll move them to issues soon enough I guess
You don’t need a “platform” if you just want a simple blog. I don’t know your values, but you can check mine: https://lnar.dev/blog/blog-setup/
I’m just getting my feet wet really, but I love that setup. The only change since that post is that I use Obsidian for editing (and some minor extension changes). It’s a shame Obsidian is not FOSS, but it also doesn’t matter as there is no lock-in and easy to switch.


Thanks! Hmm, not sure what you mean, that I shouldn’t install devDependencies when building the release? That’s a good point, I’ll need to look into it


Oh interesting! Thanks for explaining :)


Thanks for the explanation, makes sense! This app relies quite heavily on in-memory caches, so it’s somewhat incompatible with that model :)
That said, I wonder if the startup time would be noticeable. Depends a lot on the configuration, but it shouldn’t take more than a few 100ms (esp. if you use skip_collection_counts).


Thx! Out of interest, what is your use case?


I don’t know a lot about fastcgi, but looking it up it seems like it also keeps a persistent process running to avoid execution overhead, but I don’t know how that process is managed 🤷♂️
Either way, you could use a supervisor of sorts that shuts down the process/container after some idle time (at least for containers I know some exist) and that should probably work fine (outside of interrupting scanning operations).
I haven’t tried it myself yet though :)


Thanks for trying it out! Let me know if you run into any issues or have some ideas :)


Hey thanks! The Immich folks are doing an astounding job indeed :)
Vielleicht ist die Tür nicht dafür geeignet, aber ich hab’s schon mit drei verschieden erfolgreich gemacht. Es sieht immer hoffnungslos, aber nach 10-60 min findest du schon den richtigen Winkel, vllt dieses Video hilft: https://youtu.be/3VBHxC6H_gY
Versuche auch mit mehr Druck am verschieden Stellen, die Karte ist meistens dann ziemlich kaputt


I believe fossil (vcs by sqlite folks) works like that, but that’s like a niche within a niche within a niche 😄


What open source stuff are you writing? :)


Let me know if you encounter any issues! ☺️


Hmm, I’m not sure I understand exactly. By default it uses each subfolder as an album / collection that you can pick on the home page. You can also configure custom collections/albums consisting of arbitrary directories. You could also configure e.g. an “all” collection with all the photos combined by listing the root directory(s). Is that what you meant?


Thanks! Do you mean explorer-like folder browsing?
There’s an easy solution to that problem: grab a camera and get crackin’! 😁