![](https://waveform.social/pictrs/image/57533398-70b8-485a-a7df-2e69193a3819.jpeg)
![](https://lemmy.world/pictrs/image/8286e071-7449-4413-a084-1eb5242e2cf4.png)
Username definitely matches!
And yes, I have several special characters, but the password is surrounded by single quotes in docker-compose.yml
, so that should not matter, right?
Username definitely matches!
And yes, I have several special characters, but the password is surrounded by single quotes in docker-compose.yml
, so that should not matter, right?
Do you mind sharing what exactly you changed in order to get it to work? I got nginx_internal.conf
installed, but did not make any changes to it. I’m not able to get the UI using http://<ipaddress>:1236
I’m not a complete newb when it comes to nginx, but I’m having a hard time understand what all the different parts are here. For instance, what is the lemmy-ui
container for? Is that what needs to be exposed for me to access the UI?
Any help you can provide is greatly appreciated!
If your router has NAT reflection, then the problem you describe is non existent. I use the same domain/protocol both inside and outside my network.
I like Photostructure as a way to browse my photos. It does logical deduping, and automatic organization of your photos (if you want it to). Like some others mentioned in this thread, it’s a very young software, but the developer is very active and transparent about the progress.
Edit to add link: photostructure.com
This makes sense, and I do have a dollar sign in my password…
However, I have confirmed that postgres does in fact parse the password correctly, as I can log in with the defined username/password combo directly using
psql
So I think that disproves this theory, doesn’t it?
edit: I tried getting rid of the dollar sign just in case… unfortunately I’m still getting the same error