this post was submitted on 15 Jul 2023
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Powered by mlmym.org, for anyone wondering.

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[–] nix@merv.news 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) (1 children)

Is there a guide to getting this installed on our server with our subdomain? Looks great

[–] eerongal@ttrpg.network 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

there's a docker image of it. Checkout the github page here: https://github.com/rystaf/mlmym

Alternatively, if you're lazy, you can use mlmym.org (the site) with a subdomain as a redirect, and just hide the redirect. So like, you'd set up old.mydomain.com to redirect to mlmym.org/mydomain.com, but opt to hide the redirect on subdomain setup, so the browser still just shows old.mydomain.com

[–] nix@merv.news 1 points 1 year ago (1 children)

The GitHub doesn’t seem to have a guide for setup though.

Wouldnt using their website with a redirect cause all user login to go through them?

[–] eerongal@ttrpg.network 3 points 1 year ago

I guess i'm not entirely sure what you're looking for, then.... Once the pod is up and running, directing traffic to it is the same as directing/forward traffic to any pod/service. And that's going to 100% depend on what/where/how you're hosting it. Could be through a different port on your host, could be through a different IP from your subdomain, could be through setting up httpd.conf on a webserver, could be through some kubernetes/load balancer magic, could be through simple configurations on your web hosting provider, etc.

And yeah, if you use the subdomain to hide the redirect, all traffic will go through it. This is a common technique used for 3rd party hosted things on your site, though, like helpdesk stuff. If your web server is correctly configured for HSTS, though, this shouldn't be any issue, since it all goes through https, and should be e2e encrypted.