did you succeed?
you could also see if you notice requests arriving in the navidrome logs somewhere…
well if navidrome doesn’t listen to it, then no. you can still use it on the Apache listening side: example.com/music/ redirecting to http://127.0.0.1:4533/ that is. Give it a try.
i think you should loose the path on the right side.
but your proxy config redirects to that path. That sounds wrong, then. unless I don’t get something here. (my reverse proxy is nginx, so …)
just to clarify: you can access navidrome under http://127.0.0.1:4533/music/? That part works?
yeah exactly, i’d like to put my kids music there, for example. But I don’t like to have it in my own library…
Yeah it’s great. it works so well, it’s almost boring! :) The only thing I’m really missing is multi library support. That would make a real difference for me.
i like fruit, so I have kiwi, mango, …
Thanks! I’m using Tempo regularly and really like it.
that’s a good idea. i have some of my configurations under version control, but mostly on codeberg. not sure how renovate integrates there…
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The bot consumes the atom feed of a repository, but I don’t use a feed reader. you could also just let Github notify you for new releases. But I don’t pay much attention to github notifications either. I’m a lot more likely to notice something like that if it’s integrated into my social media consumption.
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Sure you can do that. I’m just not paying much attention to Github notifications a lot in general and my chances of noticing a post on the fediverse are higher. The bot actually uses the github atom feed for releases, so it’s a glorified feed reader, anyway :) Anyway, it’s just a tool, if you find it useful, go for it, if not that’s fine, too…
Congratulations! Especially with zero experience, this is a big achievement, even with help! Thanks for giving the result back to the community!
I’m using NFS shares to mount remote directories. You’ll find plenty of tutorials, I guess, but the general approach will be to export folders on the remote machine (/etc/exports) and then mount them, either manually or in /etc/fstab. This assumes you are using Linux, other OSs will be different or will use different protocols (Samba?). What’s best is depending on your use case, but it’s not hard to automatically mount shares…
I think you need to mount the directory first. I’m not aware that docker can directly mount volumes from another server.
For eyeryone else interested in the solution to this issue: while the mentioned issue above is now closed, a corresponding PR on Github is still open, so the issue still persists: https://github.com/navidrome/navidrome/pull/2187
i respect it, but it has quite some way to go to be an alternative for me - as can be expected given the alpha status. I’ll keep an eye on it, though!