Migrating to a Fedora CoreOS VPS
It seems like I was successfully able to migrate from my Alpine Linux VPS to a new VPS having Fedora CoreOS installed. π
Tech, life and everything else
Welcome to the Dev section of my blog with development related articles.
It seems like I was successfully able to migrate from my Alpine Linux VPS to a new VPS having Fedora CoreOS installed. π
Iβve been toying with my recently received GL.iNet Beryl AX (GL-MT3000) for some days and I have to say, itβs wonderful! It provides all the features I need in combination with my 5G router (like support for IPv6). I was also able to set up a VPN connection using Wireguard to the other home that will keep a wire-based internet connection with a public (but changing) IPv4 address. As it also works perfectly fine with an LTE stick or mobile tethering, Iβm quite tempted to buy a second one for travel purposes.
I used to use Postman for both personal and work projects. It was great for making HTTP requests without having to create curl commands. But now, Postman requires a login, which I hate. I donβt understand why a login is needed for such a simple tool.
For the past two years, Iβve been using Pocket to save links that I want to revisit later. However, as my yearly subscription is about to expire, Iβve started thinking about finding a free alternative that offers the features I actually use, without paying for unnecessary extras.
I recently passed my first AWS certification exam and am now an AWS Certified Developer Associate. I want to quickly share the resources I used to prepare.
Since GoBlog has an Auto-HTTPS feature that can automatically retrieve HTTPS certificates via ACME from e.g. Letβs Encrypt, I need a public IP address with which I can reach my test instance of GoBlog via port 80 and 443.