You can’t have TCP and UDP on the same port.
Why not? They are 2 completely separated set of ports. You can have a service listening on port 88 TCP while having another listening on port 88 UDP and they never know about each other.
You can’t have TCP and UDP on the same port.
Why not? They are 2 completely separated set of ports. You can have a service listening on port 88 TCP while having another listening on port 88 UDP and they never know about each other.
Good! What about feeding via HTTP?
This seems really cool! Right now I use GoxPod app in Nextcloud deeded by GPSLogger on my smartphone, but it uses GPX files and having hundreds of them it’s very slow. Is it possible to bulk import files on Wanderer? Can I feed it today directly from GOSLogger (by custom URL maybe)? Thanks!
IMHO some update is better than no update at all!
That and the shrinking ability to grant access to device storage.
Isn’t that helping the average users with security in a way that a scam app can’t see much else than itself?
But that is the original Syncthing app @fine_sandy_bottom was talking about the fork that is available in F-Droid
IMHO RAID6 is the only way.
Or SnapRaid
Daaaaamn, was that so easy to just disable “Syncthing active”?
Let’s try! Thanks
Are you sure that there are different type of notification for Syncthing? Have you disable the persistent one and still received a failed sync one (or something else)?
But in this way I don’t get any notification if something goes wrong
Have you found a way to get rid of the notification and keep Syncthing running in background?
Have you found a way to stream Netflix at 4K?
Chinese…I don’t know how, but they manage to always create the worst UI. Also, chinese…I will definitely block Internet access except sometimes just to check for updates. The 10/100 NIC is enough for KVM, not for transferring ISOs 🫤 By the way, keep me posted.
Wow, nice! At that price it’s way better than the PiKVM! Keep me posted on the resolution of your problem. Have you written to the support?
What’s there to laugh about? DNS protocol uses both ports: TCP for zone transfer and UDP for queries.