I think for me, either would work but in different contexts: - as an npm package for convenience for a node project, so i can just add an npm script to launch it on a local db - for more general personal use, a…
Ok so it does work as I understood originally. If the CLI allows your domain to connect to it and do arbitrary DB queries, it's definitely not something I could trust. Even if I knew you to be perfectly respectable,…
Your instructions say to go to https://app.dataramen.xyz/, which definitely isn't the locally hosted server. You might want to change that (and disclose if the local server makes data available to websites outside…
So this uses the local cli tool to allow your hosted code to connect to the db? Sounds a bit sketchy to me
Well, I'll be happy enough with an rpm on fedora!
This looks pretty exciting, the documentation aspect of api-client-in-md has potential! When do you think you'll have a linux client available? I'm hoping it will be available via flatpak :)
I think for me, either would work but in different contexts: - as an npm package for convenience for a node project, so i can just add an npm script to launch it on a local db - for more general personal use, a…
Ok so it does work as I understood originally. If the CLI allows your domain to connect to it and do arbitrary DB queries, it's definitely not something I could trust. Even if I knew you to be perfectly respectable,…
Your instructions say to go to https://app.dataramen.xyz/, which definitely isn't the locally hosted server. You might want to change that (and disclose if the local server makes data available to websites outside…
So this uses the local cli tool to allow your hosted code to connect to the db? Sounds a bit sketchy to me
Well, I'll be happy enough with an rpm on fedora!
This looks pretty exciting, the documentation aspect of api-client-in-md has potential! When do you think you'll have a linux client available? I'm hoping it will be available via flatpak :)