Vexz

joined 1 year ago
[–] Vexz@feddit.de 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Do you understand how this is not helpful in any way now?

No, because you're just talking about how much RAM SearXNG consumes. In your original post you were complaining about a memory leak. I monitor the ressources of my NAS. Even after a restart of my NAS where every container was freshly started the RAM consumption wasn't higher than a month later after the restart (without restarting any of the docker containers). And that is why I can with full conviction tell that my SearXNG instance didn't leak memory.

This discussion is going nowhere from here so I'm gonna stop responding. I said everything to make my point as clear as possible. Have a nice day.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 6 points 1 year ago

It's just Mullvad and you have to pay 10€. If you buy Mullvad's VPN service directly from their website you only pay 5€ and you get much more with the client they offer. So if you ask me the better choice is obvious.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

Yes, because as I said it's not a memory leak. I would have noticed a memory leak because I keep an eye on the ressources of my NAS (on which my SearXNG instance was hosted) and I didn't notice an usual growing consumption of my RAM. I just didn't check the consumption of RAM on each individual container that was running. I would have done that if I would have noticed an unusual consumption of RAM.

Look, I can't give you more detailled information than this because it's all from my memories. All I wanted to do was to help as good as I can by answering from my experiences. If that doesn't help or is inappropriate to you I'm sorry. I didn't want to offend you or anything like that.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 0 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (3 children)

the issue with SearX is the search results can be irrelevent or something random.

Haha, oh, right! I just remembered that often times when I searched something completely harmless some weird porn sites would appear in the results which had clearly absolutely nothing to do with the things I've been searching for. It's one of the reasons why I stopped using SearX(NG).

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 4 points 1 year ago

Look at this thread to find some inspiration of what you can do to increase your online privacy.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 1 points 1 year ago

While it was obvious they'd do this at least they say it out loud now.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 5 points 1 year ago

I thought of a similar thread but I think the results would be pretty much the same. It's great to have some mutual inspiration here.

Anyway, there's tons of stuff I can list here. I'm gonna list some stuff but will probably forget 70% of the other stuff because it's become so common in my daily life.

  • Own NAS as private cloud
  • Self-host on my NAS to not use internet services that spy on me (like Bitwarden, Joplin server, cryptgeon, Syncthing, Nextcloud)
  • OPNsense as my router of choice
  • W10Privacy (because I still can't switch to Linux because of circumstances)
  • Firefox as my browser of choice with some extra settings to harden it (I tried something like LibreWolf in the past but I can't use Spotify without DRM)
  • uBlock Origin of course (and some other browser addons like LibRedirect, ClearURLs, Decentraleyes and so on)
  • Privacy respecting mail provider (mailbox.org)
  • Signal (instead of WhatsApp)
  • Thunderbird (instead of something like Outlook)
  • Piped (instead of YouTube)
  • Uninstalled/disabled all apps on my phone that I don't need (also saves battery)
  • Been using custom ROMs on my phone (but I made some bad experiences with stability so I stick with the stock ROM for now)
  • NextDNS (with encrypted DNS)
  • Whoogle (instead of Google)
  • Lemmy (instead of reddit, haha)

Gonna add some more to the list whenever something comes up in my mind. Like I said it's become so basic in my life that I don't always think about it anymore when I use it.

Btw things like 2FA only help with security, not privacy.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 5 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You don't need to do it with every version. I only patch a new version every 6 months. That's more than enough.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 1 points 1 year ago (3 children)

Agreed. Still feels like nobody knows about Vanced's successor.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 0 points 1 year ago (5 children)

No, I didn't check because it never got so big to the point where it would become suspicious to me that something might be wrong. Maybe it uses more RAM than other self-hosted search engines but it never leaked memory so it used more and more RAM the longer the instance ran. Just because it uses much RAM it doesn't mean it's leaking memory. It might just be developed badly, not very caring about your ressources.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 0 points 1 year ago (7 children)

None - I deleted it because I don't use it anymore. It wasn't much though and it never bloated, even when running for over a whole month.

[–] Vexz@feddit.de 1 points 1 year ago

Thanks for that hint. It might be possible to route all traffic of a docker container through a vpn connection. This way you could make SearXNG (or any other self hosted search engine in Docker) use a remote VPN server and make it prompt the searches. See here.

 

People always say it's the best in regards of privacy to self-host your own search engine. So I started doing that a while ago. But there's one thing I'm concerned about in regards of privacy when you self-host your own search engine.

Does it make any sense to self-host your search engine at home? See, I have a NAS with Docker. Inside Docker I ran instances of SearXNG and Whoogle. These search engines are just proxies for public search engines like Google. This means if I use my self-hosted search engine to search something, the search engine does the search and delivers the results to me. So for example SearXNG uses my public IP to search something on (for example) Google. That can't be better than using a public instance of SearXNG, Whoogle, LibreX and whatnot, right? So the best thing you can do is to rent a server in some cloud and host your private search engine there.

 

I'm currently using a self hosted instance of XWiki on my NAS to write down long term notes just for myself. But it runs very slow with the database and limited hardware ressources. And since I only access it from my Windows PC on my LAN I figured I'd just need an application that does the same job and save the files on my NAS.

So does anyboy know a good Open Source application for Windows that can be used like that? It needs features like these:

  • WYSIWYG editor
  • tables
  • font colors
  • font highlights
  • text code
  • headings
  • embed images
  • embed YouTube links
  • (un-)ordered lists
  • bold text
  • underlined text

Thanks in advance!

Edit: Added WYSIWYG editor to the list.

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