-
SSH into proxmox node and become root user. Run the following commands to download extra software dependencies we'll need.
apt update apt install -y libsasl2-modules mailutils
-
Enable 2FA for the gmail account that will be used by going to security settings
// 3D Dom viewer, copy-paste this into your console to visualise the DOM as a stack of solid blocks. | |
// You can also minify and save it as a bookmarklet (https://www.freecodecamp.org/news/what-are-bookmarklets/) | |
(() => { | |
const SHOW_SIDES = false; // color sides of DOM nodes? | |
const COLOR_SURFACE = true; // color tops of DOM nodes? | |
const COLOR_RANDOM = false; // randomise color? | |
const COLOR_HUE = 190; // hue in HSL (https://hslpicker.com) | |
const MAX_ROTATION = 180; // set to 360 to rotate all the way round | |
const THICKNESS = 20; // thickness of layers | |
const DISTANCE = 10000; // ¯\\_(ツ)_/¯ |
/* | |
Copy this into the console of any web page that is interactive and doesn't | |
do hard reloads. You will hear your DOM changes as different pitches of | |
audio. | |
I have found this interesting for debugging, but also fun to hear web pages | |
render like UIs do in movies. | |
*/ | |
const audioCtx = new (window.AudioContext || window.webkitAudioContext)() |
So, with credit to the Factorio wiki and cbednarski's helpful gist, I managed to eventually setup a Factorio headless server. Although, I thought the process could be nailed down/simplified to be a bit more 'tutorialised' and also to document how I got it all working for my future records.
The specific distro/version I'm using for this guide being Ubuntu Server 16.04.1 LTS
. Although, that shouldn't matter, as long as your distro supports systemd
(just for this guide, not a Factorio headless requirement, although most distros use it as standard now).
The version of Factorio I shall be using is 0.14.20
, although should work for any version of Factorio 0.14.12
and higher.
Just a note to newcomers: If there are any issues with the installation steps, people in the comments are doing a good job
#!/bin/bash | |
####################################################################### | |
# This is a helper script that keeps snapraid parity info in sync with | |
# your data and optionally verifies the parity info. Here's how it works: | |
# 1) It first calls diff to figure out if the parity info is out of sync. | |
# 2) If parity info is out of sync, AND the number of deleted files exceed | |
# X (configurable), it triggers an alert email and stops. (In case of | |
# accidental deletions, you have the opportunity to recover them from | |
# the existing parity info) | |
# 3) If partiy info is out of sync, AND the number of deleted files exceed X |
Each of these commands will run an ad hoc http static server in your current (or specified) directory, available at http://localhost:8000. Use this power wisely.
$ python -m SimpleHTTPServer 8000