NuxtJS wants to write into .nuxt. If the docker container writes into
.nuxt it will have the file permissions of the docker container user
even on the host system. So on the host system you cannot remove the
folder .nuxt anymore. This gets in the way of running NuxtJS on the host
system.
@appinteractive we have `yarn run lint` on our build server. I would say
this is enough to enforce linting. I get slowed down a little during
development. Instead of runing `yarn run lint --fix` every time I save, I
would like to `yarn run lint --fix` all in one before I commit.
`git diff b32c85b2de014770d07df8a642616b016cf69b50..46aecd612018db490fb3d6f91572be848371b32e -- webapp/nuxt.config.js`
showed me that I removed headers because I didn't thought they are
relevant. Now the proxy route `/activityPub` is not reachable anymore.
@Mastercuber I hope this does not interfere with anything that uses
`/.well-known`, too. Would you suggest to proxy everything related to
webfinger to the backend?
My motivation for proxying webfinger is that you can search for
`someuser@nitro-staging.human-connection.org` instead of `someuser@nitro-staging.human-connection.org/activityPub`. This is better user experience in my opinion.