[-] cx40@piefed.ca 38 points 5 days ago

It's always good practice to back up your data before doing an upgrade. But in case you need it, you can certainly do a minor version update through compose. If you already have that set up, it'll probably be the easier route.

Your compose file should have a line that looks like this:

image: jellyfin/jellyfin  

possibly with a version number. You can specify which version you want by changing that line. For example:

image: jellyfin/jellyfin:10.10.7  

You can check which versions are available here.

[-] cx40@piefed.ca 2 points 1 week ago

I've sort of always known. What I didn't know was how so many (all?) of my problems can be attributed to autism in some way. For the longest time, I thought it was just responsible for my difficulties in socializing.

[-] cx40@piefed.ca 2 points 1 week ago

Was this meant for a different thread?

[-] cx40@piefed.ca 2 points 1 week ago

I'm just playing around with Copier for now. An arbitrary choice since I have nothing to go on and it seems popular enough. It'll probably be a while before I develop my own opinions on it.

I agree with existing templates having too much boilerplate. I'm basically also just copying and modifying my previous projects, but automated with Copier so that I don't have to search and replace all the project/module names. For this particular task, I have no complaints so far.

4
submitted 1 week ago by cx40@piefed.ca to c/python@programming.dev

I've noticed that a lot of my projects follow the same basic architecture and I often like to write some simple tools for myself where it takes much longer to set up the project than it does to write the domain specific code. So I've been looking into scaffolding tools to help with this. I'm aware of Cookiecutter and Copier. Are there others? How do they compare? What are your preferences and why?

cx40

joined 1 month ago