• doodledup@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      What’s bad about Docker? It’s secure and easy to setup.

      Your hate comment lacks vital information just like the docs shared by OP.

      • raspberriesareyummy@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        While security has nothing to do with my disgust for docker and people advocating its use, docker adds a layer of complexity, which means it is not necessarily more secure.

        What is extremely bad about docker:

        1. it enables extremely shitty configuration control on the side of a developer. There are way too many developers who have a chaotic approach to configurations, and instead of being forced to write a proper installation and configuration guide from scratch, and thereby making themselves(!) aware of active configuration changes they made to make their system work, they just roll out the docker container they develop in, without remembering most of the configurations they made. Which, naturally, means that they are unable to assist in troubleshooting problems or reproduce issues that users might have.

        In general, if you can’t write a good user manual, or at least clearly identify needed dependencies and configurations, you should not be developing software for other people.

        1. it combines the disadvantages of a VM (shitty performance) and running directly on the host OS (sandboxing is not nearly as good as on a VM)

        2. it creates insane bloat, by completely bypassing the concept of shared libraries and making people download copies of software they already have on their system

        3. it adds a lot of security risks because the user would have to not only review the source code they are compiling and installing, but also would have to scan all the dependencies and what-not, and would basically have to trust the developer and/or anyone distributing an image that they did not add any malware.

  • Mellow@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Old I.T. Proverb: Documentation is like sex. Even bad documentation is better than no documentation at all.

    • linearchaos@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      They’re not long about matrix docs though. I tried to set it up a few years ago and it was irritating enough that I never got through it.

      Most Dockers aren’t that bad though.

  • anamethatisnt@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    Alternatively, you can create new users from the command line.
    This can be done as follows:

    If synapse was installed via pip, activate the virtualenv as follows (if Synapse was installed via a prebuilt package, register_new_matrix_user should already be on the search path):

    cd ~/synapse
    source env/bin/activate
    synctl start # if not already running
    Run the following command:
    register_new_matrix_user -c homeserver.yaml
    This will prompt you to add details for the new user, and will then connect to the running Synapse to create the new user. For example:

    New user localpart: erikj
    Password:
    Confirm password:
    Make admin [no]:
    Success!

    This process uses a setting registration_shared_secret, which is shared between Synapse itself and the register_new_matrix_user script.
    It doesn’t matter what it is (a random value is generated by --generate-config), but it should be kept secret, as anyone with knowledge of it can register users, including admin accounts, on your server even if enable_registration is false.

    https://element-hq.github.io/synapse/latest/setup/installation.html

  • dantheclamman@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I have to set literally everything up again on a new microSD for my Pi because the apt-get repositories no longer support the Raspbian version I’m on. I’m not mad; good for security to update, but I don’t have half a day free anytime soon for it.

  • Justin@lemmy.jlh.name
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    1 month ago

    Being able to find and read software documentation and knowing how to use the tools that automate software deployment are why SRE/devops/cloud guys get paid the big bucks.

    I definitely recommend synapse over dendrite or conduit btw. dendrite and conduit have a bunch of missing features, and my first attempt at dendrite server shat the bed with its NATS store and died. I definitely recommend Synapse for all matrix servers going forward.

    The .well-known entries I found were the hardest to test, since synapse doesn’t provide a web server for them, and Element throws a fit if you don’t have CORS set up exactly in the way it wants you to.

    I mostly have my matrix server working now, with bridges even. However, Element randomly logs itself out on a daily basis which is really frustrating :/

    • milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee
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      1 month ago

      As an LLM, I don’t truly understand the notion of sharing, but I can point you to a few resources that may help you understand more. It’s important to remember that human interaction is complex and varied, and different people will have different opinions.

      Here are some ideas to get you started.

      1. “Sharing is Caring”. “Sharing is Caring” is a popular phrase to explain the meaning of sharing. If you really care about your secret, that way you are sharing it with the loved ones in your life.
      2. Valuable things, such as companies, are often divided into shares. If you divide your secret and sell parts of it to different people on the internet, it becomes a shared secret.
      3. “A problem shared is a problem halved.” This is another popular phrase, showing that if you halve your secret, i.e. make it smaller, or less secret, then you are sharing it.

      Overall, humans value both secrets and sharing as a way to build and strengthen community. A shared secret is the ultimate expression of humanity in community.

      I hope that answers your question. If there’s anything else I can help you with, please let me know.

  • jqubed@lemmy.world
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    1 month ago

    I haven’t done any programming in over 20 years, but I think I can make a contribution to projects by trying to improve documentation, once I start using some projects

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    1 month ago

    (It’s painful, please help 🥲)

    Yes, cause you’re using way too much Docker. lol

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        It took a little time to get the hang of it, but stick with it and it will get so much easier and it’ll make self-hosting anything you want less of a pain in the future.

  • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    this is just because it’s webhosted, anything that does anything on the web sucks and is terrible, everything else is actually so much better it’s fucking baffling to me.

    web 2.0 is dead to me. web 3.0 won’t get off of the ground, we need web 2 electric boogaloo

          • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            because there’s also a lot of good stuff on the internet. There was very little on the internet in 2002, and yet people still used it because it was cool. There is a shit ton of information on the internet now, most of which is garbage, and the rest is somewhere between mediocre, or decent, and some of it being genuinely good.

            If you hate living, why even bother living? It’s a question of the ages. What’s the point of living if there is no grander purpose? Surely it means nothing, right?

    • Swedneck@discuss.tchncs.de
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      it’s unclear what the shared secret is.

      it’s actually just literally any string you want, but they should tell you that fact in the same paragraph as when it’s relevant…

      • doodledup@lemmy.world
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        So why didn’t they write that? It’s a bad documentation if someone doesn’t understand it. If you’re not going to explain something, at least share a source to where it’s explained.

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    Yeah, I can’t fuck with Docker either. Check out Yunohost if you want something that is actually easy to get up and running.

  • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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    I write technical documentation and training materials as part of my job, and the state of most open source documentation makes me want to stab people with an ice pick.

    • Couldbealeotard@lemmy.world
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      Do you have any tips for writing professional documentation? I want to do some for my workplace but it’s hard to know where to start, how to arrange it, etc

    • Anonymouse@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      You’re doing God’s work!

      Over my career, it’s sad to see how the technical communications groups are the first to get cut because “developers should document their own code”. No, most can’t. Also, the lack of good documentation leads to churn in other areas. It’s difficult to measure it, but for those in the know, it’s painfully obvious.

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        1 month ago

        Jesus, technical people are some of the worst communicators I’ve ever worked with.

        It’s not necessarily their fault though. Y’know who goes into technical jobs? People who often prefer to work with machines, physical stuff, laws of nature, that’s who. And often because it’s MUCH easier than working with people, at least for them.

        On top of that, soft skills are HARD. Communication is HARD. It comes easier for some, but it’s a skill like any other. It’s the technical socialites, the diplomatic devs who become the best managers and leaders, due to the rarity of their hybrid skillsets.

        I’m in the middle. Just technical enough to mostly understand the devs and understand the implications of plans, and just enough soft skills to turn that into decent documentation, emails, and working with clients.

        SUCKS that I’ve gotten a taste of project management and hated the absolute fuck out of it. I probably would’ve been decent at it otherwise.

        • Entropywins@lemmy.world
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          1 month ago

          “Well–well look. I already told you: I deal with the god damn customers so the engineers don’t have to. I have people skills; I am good at dealing with people. Can’t you understand that? What the hell is wrong with you people?”

        • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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          SUCKS that I’ve gotten a taste of project management and hated the absolute fuck out of it. I probably would’ve been decent at it otherwise.

          Good PMs are rare, and precious. You could maybe give it another …

          emails

          oh, nevermind. :-P

    • pycorax@lemmy.world
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      1 month ago

      The worst is when it’s buried in Github issues or in a header file with thousands and thousands of lines of code. Yes I’m looking at you DearImGui, your documentation is awful and I’m already being generous.

      • ShortFuse@lemmy.world
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        1 month ago

        I just recently started working with ImGui. Rewrite compiled game engines to add support for HDR into games that never supported it? Sure, easy. I can mod most games in an hour if not minutes.

        Make the UI respond like any modern flexible-width UI in the past 15 years? It’s still taking me days. All of the ImGui documentation is hidden behind closed GitHub issues. Like, the expected user experience is to bash your head against something for hours, then submit your very specific issue and wait for the author to tell you what to do if you’re lucky, or link to another issue that vaguely resembles your issue.

        I know some projects, WhatWG for one, follow the convention of, if something is unclear in the documentation, the issue does not get closed until that documentation gets updated so there’s no longer any ambiguity or lack of clarity.

    • ByteOnBikes@slrpnk.net
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      I used to mock people who make YouTube videos that literally just walk through the documentation. Like bro, get some reading comprehension!

      But then when I fumbled with some self hosting tutorials, those YouTube videos were the only thing that made sense, because they’re explaining why and how.

      Sorry y’all.

    • matzler@lemmy.ml
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      1 month ago

      Do you have some reading recommendations on how to write good documentation, e.g. readmes for end users?

      • IronKrill@lemmy.ca
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        Well a good indicator is if I have to check the source code of a packaged program to understand what something does, the documentation is not good enough. And yes I’ve had to do this far too much.

        • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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          have to check the source code

          Use the source, Luke.

          But yeah: disappointing. I just swapped out my Chef ZFS module because, looking at the source, it was incomplete in ways I didn’t want to rat-hole and extend while this other two-piece kit was there.

          I should use the source earlier.

      • SynopsisTantilize@lemm.ee
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        Yes. Here: "1.You aren’t writing an SOP for smart or even capable people., every. Single. Person. Needs their hand held all the way through every step regardless of technical skill. "

        “2.if you didnt state it needed to be done in the SOP, it will not be done when the end user follows the SOP”

        “3.MAKE someone else run through your SOP without you being involved. If they can successfully achieve what they needed using your SOP > congrats. If not > fix the errors that brought you to this mess.”

        “4. Everyone is fucking stupid, be clear, and verbose.” We’re talking about where the start menu is, clicking on the “OK” for prompts, how to spell and type things out.

        Change my given values per SOP and what it’s for. But those are my main tenants.

        • sunstoned@lemmus.org
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          Excellent notes. If I could add anything it would be on number 4 – just. add. imagery. For the love of your chosen deity, learn the shortcut for a screenshot on your OS. Use it like it’s astro glide and you’re trying to get a Cadillac into a dog house.

          The little red circles or arrows you add in your chosen editing software will do more to convey a point than writing a paragraph on how to get to the right menu.

          • IronKrill@lemmy.ca
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            I agree, but I don’t think images should be relied on as the primary communicator. I have seen far too many forums/websites/docs with broken images because the host went down. That and archivers are more likely to fail at saving images. Explain it using text and give a reference image to further display the point.

          • funkless_eck@sh.itjust.works
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            I would also add that you need to explain out-of-home steps, too.

            I’m not an idiot but I didn’t go to school for compsci or similar and I don’t do it as a job. So frequently the instructions will go

            • Get your IP address by entering this command
            • Type your IP address in this line
            • Now forward any chosen port to your proxy of choice and don’t forget to check your firewall settings!

            My sibling in Eris, most people dont know any of those words.

          • SynopsisTantilize@lemm.ee
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            Absolutely! But I use markdown / Obsidian for my SOPs so images are kinda obnoxious to format. But yes!

        • brognak@lemm.ee
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          In elemental school we had to write instructions on how to make a pb&j sandwich. The teacher then acted out your instructions literally, without adding or removing a step. I don’t think there was a single sandwich made that day.

      • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 month ago

        as a chronic documentation reader, the best advice i can give is to document everything Anything that the user can and will potentially interact with, should be extensively documented, including syntax and behavior. Write it like you’re coming back to the project in 5 years after having done nothing and you want to be able to skip right to using it. When we build something ourselves, we often hold a bit of internal knowledge from the design process that never quite goes away, so it’s almost always a lot easier for us to reverse engineer something we’ve made, than it is for someone else with zero fore-knowledge to do it themselves.

        Generally this can be a bit of a nightmare, but if you minimize the user facing segment it’s not all that bad, because it’s usually pretty minimal, and what would otherwise be a handful of pages, turns into 10 or maybe 15.

        as for existing documentation, the i3wm user guide is really good, it’s pretty minimalist but it leaves you enough to be able to manage.

        • ByteOnBikes@slrpnk.net
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          as a chronic documentation reader, the best advice i can give is to document everything Anything that the user can and will potentially interact with, should be extensively documented, including syntax and behavior.

          I don’t know about that. I’ve read some terrible documentation that had everything under the sun. Right now in the library I’m using, the documentation has every available class, every single method, what it’s purpose.

          But how to actually use the damn thing? I have to look up blog posts and videos. I actually found someone’s website that had notes about various features that are better than the docs.

          There’s a delicate balance of signal vs noise.

          • KillingTimeItself@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            yeah, it also helps knowing how to use the thing, but i consider that to be “basic documentation” personally.

            Knowing how to set something up is nice, but knowing how to use it properly after setting it up is even nicer.

      • Voroxpete@sh.itjust.works
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        I’ll see about digging up recommendations if I can, but I’m on my phone right now.

        My biggest single piece of advice would be this: Understand that your reader does not share your context.

        What this means is that you have to question your assumptions. Ask yourself, is this something everyone knows, or something only I know? Is this something that’s an accepted standard, or is it simply my personal default? If it is an accepted standard, how widely can I assume that accepted standard is known?

        A really common example of this in self-hosting is poorly documented Docker instructions. A lot of projects suffer from either a lack of instructions for Docker deployment, because they assume that anyone deploying the project has spent 200 hours learning the specifics of chroot and namespaces and can build their own OCI runtime from scratch, or needlessly precise Docker instructions built around one hyper-specific deployment method that completely break when you try to use them in a slightly different context.

        A particularly important element of this is explaining the choices you’re making as you make them. For example a lot of self-hosted projects will include a compose file, but will refuse to in any way discuss what elements are required, and what elements are customisable. Someone who knows enough about Docker, and has lots of other detailed knowledge about the Linux file system, networking, etc, can generally puzzle it out for themselves, but most people aren’t going to be coming in with that kind of knowledge. The problem is that programmers do have that knowledge, and as the Xkcd comic says, even when they try to compensate for it they still vastly overestimate how much everyone else knows.

        OK, I said I’d try for examples later, but while writing this one did come to mind. Haugene’s transmission-openvpn container implementation has absolutely incredible documentation. Like, this is top tier, absolutely how to do it; https://haugene.github.io/docker-transmission-openvpn/

        Starts off with a section that every doc should include; what this does and how it does it. Then goes into specific steps, with, wonder of wonders, notes on what assumptions they’ve made and what things you might want to change. And then, most importantly, detailed instructions on every single configuration option, what it does, and how to set it correctly, including a written example for every single option. Absolutely beautiful. Making docs like this is more work, for sure, but it makes your project - even something like this that’s just implementing other people’s apps in a container - a thousand times more usable.

        (I’ve focused on docker in all my examples here, but all of this applies to non-containerized apps too)

    • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      I worked alongside some technical writers in the early post-y2k years at SCO. This was before they sued IBM for code misuse and died by a million legal and PR cuts, thanks to the ‘independent news’ site launched by a ‘recent ex-employee’ to reframe things then and rewrite history after.

      We had about 15 tech writers in the company, which when I first arrived seemed like a LOT. I’d never met one, and I’d taken a single tech writing course in college as a filler and found it unchallenging work; so I didn’t value them at the time aside from filling a necessary role that your average nerd could surely fill. Then I saw their work; and it was amazing. It’s one of the product’s strong points, and 20 years later it’s still so head-and-shoulders above the similar offerings by others and since, that it’s a joy to read when I come across it.

      Quite simply put, technical writers explain something in a logical, sensible way, where jargon doesn’t blind-side the reader and layout and language are consistent and easy. Hell, spelling is correct; which is a big win over 90% of the current stuff. Tech writers are writers as Lance L said, and thus know about adjective order, prepositional placement, the difference between ‘backup’ and ‘back up’ and all its similar terms; and of course know why e-mail and traffic do not get an S as nouns - ever - even if the popular kids make everyone say it without thinking.

      It’s all simple-sounding stuff, and I was fooled into believing it was mundane; but when put together and written with an eye toward a common style it takes a stressful reader looking for a process or a parameter and induces calm for that brief moment required to get into the doc and find the sought-after bit.

      Honestly, like the mentors we lost as a working society in the post-y2k bust when the c-suite cleared the ranks of things they didn’t understand, the loss of good technical documentation has a generational effect and will take a massive, sustained effort to reverse.

  • h4lf8yte@lemmy.ml
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    But this is some Docker shit. For myself Docker always feels a little corporate. It’s just not very conventional with these multiline commands just to run a command inside a container. Especially the obligatory “-it” to fucking see anything. It’s not really straight forward. But if you get used to it and you can make a lot of aliases to use it more easily.

    • corsicanguppy@lemmy.ca
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      Docker always feels a little corporate.

      I work in an ‘essential service’ environment for my main gig, where lots of checks and cross-checks need to exist. And it’s one that’s been under constant low-grade attack forever as it contains a LOT of tasty PII (personal info) and therefore has regs hammering it into shape. Docker cannot play here - and neither can Debian, actually, nor its derivatives - because it lacks the signed validation available in peer products sharing its space. As soon as the adults show up and notice a product with reduced validation is in place where a better one exists, the people owning that system have to write a life-cycle plan to upgrade, and it’s reviewed at an almost punitive frequency.

      So, if you’re saying it’s a little too Corporate, I’m thinking you mean ‘suits and power lunches’ and not ‘large scale management of crucial systems and essential data’. True?

      • h4lf8yte@lemmy.ml
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        Tbh, I’ve never worked in such an environment. I know somebody who told me similar things and I would love to hear more about this to form my own opinion on this. But it’s just not that deep. When I say corporate, I mean it’s full of GUIDs and only machine-readable names, commands and configs. It’s also most of the time not designed with the flexibility in mind and covers only the most commonly (used by the company supporting it) use cases. It just doesn’t have the free spirit which most of the open source tools, which are designed with humans in mind, have. If you need to supply a parameter to get output from a command that is often run manually while you could also have one to deactivate output for script usage. This seems like the wrong way to go.