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There are a few ways to do it, but you don’t use caddy for SSH.
- host SSH on port 22, forgejo on a different port. Expose both ports to the internet
- host SSH on a different port, forgejo on port 22. Expose both ports to the internet
- host SSH on port 22. Forgejo on port 2222. Only 22 exposed to the internet. Change the authorized_keys user of the git user on host to automatically call the internal forgejo SSH app
Last option is how I run my Gitea instance, authorized keys is managed by gitea so you don’t really need to do anything high maintenance.
~git/.ssh/authorized_keys:
command="/usr/local/bin/gitea --config=/data/gitea/conf/app.ini serv key-9",no-port-forwarding,no-X11-forwarding,no-agent-forwarding,no-pty,no-user-rc,restrict ssh-rsa PUBLICKEYHASH
/usr/local/bin/gitea:
ssh -p 2222 -o StrictHostKeyChecking=no git@127.0.0.14 "SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND=\"$SSH_ORIGINAL_COMMAND\" $0 $@"
127.0.0.14 is the local git docker access where I expose the service, but you couldn’t different ports, IPS, etc.
That has not been my experience… amdgpindriver was crashing quite often, gfx ring 0 timeout. Tons of people with that problem forums. I managed to adjust some parameters and fix it eventually.
VRR doesn’t work properly, I can get it to work, burnout is a shore every time.
I have both and nvidia and an amd GPU, and with xwayland fixed, the nvidia one can run just as well.
That said, paying 2k for a GPU to have raytracing and 24gb of RAM isn’t that attractive.