Audiobookshelf is by far my most used selfhosted app, mostly due to podcasts. It's awesome, really wish the dev would accept donations.
Couldn't you just create a compose file for a database separately?
You can set max matchmaking ping in the settings, this has been a thing for years.
I just use Powershell, much easier imo
Cowboy gets convinced to do one more job every time...
This is on the main tracker that I use
This is over 7 years though
That's not what calibre-web does. As per the GitHub page:
Calibre-Web is a web app that offers a clean and intuitive interface for browsing, reading, and downloading eBooks using a valid Calibre database.
There is no VNC involved.
If you really don't want people to know your home ip, then you can use cloudflare's proxying service for all you internet facing services.
What's the reasoning behind using docker compose on unraid, instead of the built in docker implementation?
You can send with calibre-web to kindle if you have an amazon account. You get a specific address for your kindle. They appear under documents in your library, legal or otherwise.
- Vaultwarden
- audiobookshelf (Best audiobook and podcast server)
- Teamspeak3
- Sinusbot (music bot for Ts3)
- SWAG (reverse proxy with built-in fail2ban)
- Plex
- Sonarr / Radarr / Overseerr / Jackett
- Lemmy
- Uptime-Kuma
- Nextcloud
- Bookstack
- LanguageTool (Grammar and spellcheck)
- Multiple game servers depending on what our group is playing. Currently, Minecraft with PaperMC
- calibre / calibre-web (calibre with guacamole to manage library and calibre-web to access it with a webpage and send to kindle)
- DailyTxT (Diary server)
- Libreddit (Alternative reddit front end that doesn't use the official API)
- Rallly (scheduling for groups)
- Tandoor (recipe manager and shopping list)
- Tautili
- Grafana
- Pihole
You can use calibre-web to send to your Kindle email. They will appear in the Kindle as "Documents"