

Have you tried deleting /etc/systemd/resolved.conf
and restarting the service with systemctl restart systemd-resolved
?
Have you tried deleting /etc/systemd/resolved.conf
and restarting the service with systemctl restart systemd-resolved
?
Did you undo the reverse path strict filtering your guide suggested?
net.ipv4.conf.default.rp_filter = 1
net.ipv4.conf.all.rp_filter = 1
Above is what the guide suggests to force reverse path strict filtering. Try setting as shown below:
net.ipv4.conf.default.rp_filter = 0
net.ipv4.conf.all.rp_filter = 0
According to the guide, “By default, these are set in /usr/lib/sysctl.d/50-default.conf
”
Fair points! I’ve been tinkering with Homeassistant for a while now. The community has come very far so I’m hopeful that more advanced features will be added as the user base grows.
Yes, the voice recognition is decent. I mainly wanted a way to control some smart light switches without using a Google device. If you’re looking for something more advanced I don’t have any experience using his tool in that use-case.
Have you heard of Ollama? It’s an LLM engine that you can run at home. The speed, model size, context length, etc. that you can achieve really depends on your hardware. I’m using a low-mid graphics card and 32GB of RAM and get decent performance. Not lightning quick like ChatGPT but fine for simple tasks.
Have you heard of Homeassistant? It’s a self-hosted smart home solution that fills a lot of the gaps left by the most smart home tech. They’ve recently added and refined support for various different voice assistants, some of which run completely on your hardware. I have found they have great community support for this project and you can also buy their hardware if you don’t feel like tinkering on a Raspberry Pi or VM. The best thing (IMHO) about Homeassistant is that it is FOSS.
Here’s an article with a bit more detail… but I’m still unclear whether these backdoor commands are hardware circuits or firmware logic.
Bleeping Computer: Undocumented “backdoor” found in Bluetooth chip used by a billion devices
I found an informative post about a related issue that might be of some use to you. Sounds like DHCP or Network Manager may be rewriting your systems-resolved.conf.
https://joshrnoll.com/my-tailscale-dns-woes/