Founder and System Administrator, Unix enthusiast (FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, DragonflyBSD, and Linux), with a keen eye for everything happening in this world and the fascinating beings that populate it. I enjoy music, photography, and, of course, technology.
Primarily at @stefano@bsd.cafe
thanks!
On https://brew.bsd.cafe, I’ve configured and running it. Just download the latest release, unpack it and run “TAGS=“bindata” make build” - It will compile and you’ll have a working binary file (still called “gitea”, but it’s forgejo). Then, you can expose it the way you like it. Yes, you can almost follow the gitea guides, it’s similar.
Thank YOU for your help!
I’ve converted it into png and replaced the banner. Could you please check if it’s ok?
I’ve just installed the banner you provided. It’s much better now. Thank you!!!
Thank you! I’ll have a look at it ASAP.
That’s the point. People feel safe when using those closed, expensive, proprietary solutions but all they have is losing control of their own data
I’m glad you like it. Sure, this setup can be used for a general Nextcloud installation as well
Of course, Darwin is more than welcome!
For server-to-server connection is great. For username/password authentication, it’s surely not the best tool
You can try this, it should be working for you. If you prefer, there’s also a FreeBSD version linked at the beginning of the blog post.
In 1996, with Linux. From 1998, I stopped using Windows. In 2002, I met the BSDs. After all these years, I am even more convinced that the only way to preserve data conservation, accessibility, and freedom is to manage and store them through open tools and protocols.
thank you!