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Joined 11 months ago
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Cake day: December 22nd, 2023

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  • Oh man, I’ve managed to get far enough into all this that I have a few things working well but i went through so many periods exactly like that.

    The family nagging really hits home! “This should be working, I did everything it said” only goes so far haha.

    My latest one was that I was helping my neighbour with their internet setup so was on their WiFi. Of course I completely forgot so when I was home trying to SSH into my headless server, it just would not work but I knew my server was working because I was watching Plex on my TV. It took my way longer than it should’ve and I even restarted the server manually before realising I was just on the wrong network…


  • I found that it really depends on the app and how they’ve set it up. For the vast majority, the users in your SSO will be added to the other app when they first login. I use Authentik and Nextdoor, and the user is automatically created from details from Authentik. Generally you can enable multiple login types so can play with SSO whilst still enabling access until it works. You can usually switch off non-SSO access afterwards too.

    You set which field defines the user (e.g. username or email). If there is already a user then it’ll just login to that account you already created, so you can also create a user in both.

    You can limit access to certain groups of users in Authentik. You can also setup headers that get passed along to apps (e.g. in Nextcloud you can setup a size limit for each group that gets passed on to Nextcloud when they first register - the Authentik or Nextcloud documentation tells you how).

    I found quite a few apps don’t have SSO functionality, and I usually end up doing a reverse proxy pass through Authentik. Nginx Proxy Manager first goes to Authentik, you login then it’ll pass you to the app. If already logged into Authentik, NPM takes you directly to the app. I switched off login altogether on the apps, especially for tools where you don’t need users (e.g. Stirling PDF). Only logged users get to the app. Authentik can forward any headers you set so I have a feeling you can use it for the app’s own login (though not new users) but not managed to work it out.

    One app I tried recently had SSO but you couldn’t enable access to the main household for new SSO users so had to create an account in the app first, then SSO would let users login. I ended up not using that app for other reasons anyway.

    I do recommend Authentik and you can setup access one by one so definitely try it and see.


  • Cisco do free networking courses which teach the fundamentals. The one I did was more theoretical than practical but it really helped me think of what Im really trying to achieve and learning the terminology was really helpful, especially later when trying to troubleshoot and finding help online that was a struggle before the course.

    There are assessments as you progress and a certificate at the end.

    They also have virtual software you can play around with for different potential configurations. Thats much cheaper than buying lots of hardware!