Containerizing My Home Server

One of the best parts of maintaining a hobby server is setting it up. It’s fun to get everything working and figure out all of the quirks of the various pieces of software that have to work together on there. Once it’s working well, it’s a joy to let it sit, auto-update and handle its business for you. Conversely, the worst part of maintaining a hobby server is upgrading the underlying OS to a new release or migrating it to a new platform or machine.
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These Bars

It’s my belief that a country song is not good because it’s good. It’s good because it’s a good country song. There is a Platonic ideal for a country song, and like Plato, the definition alludes me. While Steve Goodman may be crowned as king of the “perfect country and western song,” I don’t think it’s right to bestow such an honored title in perpetuity. I also don’t think it’s right that See the Big Man Cry should even have to compete with a novelty song and He Stopped Loving Her Today.
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Simple repository caching on openSUSE

One of the things I missed the most from my Debian/Ubuntu days when I switched to openSUSE about a year ago was apt-cacher-ng with proxy autodiscovery. I had apt-cacher-ng running on one computer at home, and all of my containers, VMs, and laptops would use that proxy when they were on the home network. Even better, they’d seemlessly switch back to the default repos if the proxy was unavailable. To be clear, what I want is to have my computers use apt-cacher-ng as a proxy when available to download packages.
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