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mykal.codes

mykalcodes@lemmy.ca
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1 posts • 4 comments

Systems Analyst in higher ed. Interested in software and systems management.

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… and I’m 75% of the way through Wool right now

I know this is off topic, but wool is a great book! If you haven’t watched the Apple TV show I’d recommend it as well; they definitely switch up the story a bit but I’ve enjoyed it so far.

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I run a web-dev consulting company on the side and I have a few apps that use Celery queues. The main reason you’d want to use celery is to handle more intensive tasks asynchronously in the background.

Some example from my apps:

  • user requests a report: celery task is enqueued to generate the report as a PDF/CSV and email it to them
  • admin adds a new user: celery task is enqueued to send an invite email out to the user, as well as some onboarding emails
  • user requests to modify a large amount of items: multiple tasks are enqueued to update the items in batches of x amount.
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If federation works the same on here as it does on Mastodon, then yes. When you defederate a server you can’t see their users, communities, posts, comments, etc and they can’t see yours 🙂

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I’ve got 3 “servers” at home right now.

  • Raspberry Pi 4B 8gb: “RPINode0”
  • Raspbery Pi 4B 8gb: “RPINode1”
    • hosts a few internal websites / APIs for staging (controlled via the docker API)
    • hosts Home Assistant for me
  • Unraid NAS: “Moonturtle”
    • NGINX Proxy Manager: for exposing stuff to the internet
    • Nextcloud: for file management and access. Most of my family uses this as opposed to Google Drive.
    • Umami: website analytics
    • Jellyfin: for watching movies and tv shows I’ve ripped
    • Uptime Kuma: uptime monitoring and reporting
    • DDNS updater: dynamic DNS updater so I can keep my DNS records up to date (don’t have a static IP)
    • Portainer: for managing docker instances on RPINode1
    • MySQL/PostgreSQL/Redis: provides database services to all the stuff listed above
    • Flower: for monitoring Celery queues used by a few of my applications.
    • WireGuard: VPN for remote management of the server and access to the services I don’t have exposed outside my network
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