Mail servers?
How are you finding that these days? I thought all the anti-spam stuff meant that self-hosted email was just not worth it these days?
Mail servers?
How are you finding that these days? I thought all the anti-spam stuff meant that self-hosted email was just not worth it these days?
So, if I’ve not had a UEFI update in <years> to update the Secureboot cert, wouldn’t this affect any OS? Ie Windows too?
There were a couple of distros that specialised in running MythTv, but AFAIK they’re unmaintained now.
My MythTv box is home built (on Arch btw), and is fine…
Most important point is to find how to enable Hotel Mode on a TV to get it to power up on the correct video input, rather than the local tuner, menu, etc
If you only have 2 laptops and they are both going to search externsl DNS, then there’s probably still no point in local DNS
To refer to each other - presuming they have static IPs - just update their /etc/hosts
with the other device’s IP address and that will speed things up
It’s worth putting a single caching DNS resolver in the network for everything to use, but I don’t see an advantage on a single device.
The first DNS query will take as long as it takes, then the tiny few mSec it saves on subsequent “1st” queries for everyone else makes the difference
Also, but blocklists in that DNS Resolver and you’ll improve your entire network from trying to lookup crazy sites.
Gparted (Live)
Hmm, I setup a Proxmox machine a while back because, well, all the cool kids seemed to do it - and plenty of “support” on youtube
I found Incus and it just seemed better, but it was harder to find info on (back then) and seemed a little unready
Now, I regret not sticking with my gut instinct as I’ve got to basically rip out Proxmox to get Incus in, which means all my VMs are prisoners (and us: 1 VM is Home Assistant!)
So, do you know if it’s possible to migrate my VMs across to Incus, or is it literally wipe drive, start again?
(Obviously the data in each VM can be backed up & restored into new VMs)
Ah, ok, good to know, thanks
I think you’ve misunderstood
Ok, OMV needs a separate (small) boot drive to install on (ie consider a M.2 / SSD on a USB adapter)
But, then all your (large) storage is used for the NAS.
OMV will run Docker containers, but their data would also be pointed to the large NAS storage.
| Small | Large |
|--------+-----------|
| OMV | Your Files|
| Docker | Data, etc |
Why the MTU change?
Hmm, interesting…
As you’re here (easier than raising a ticket on github 😉)…
At present, the daemon doesn’t strictly detect file creation events. Instead, it logs processes that access files
2 things come to mind…
noatime
in my fstab, does that nullify this?I always prefer bare metal for the core NAS functionality. There’s no benefit in adding a hypervisor layer just to create an NFS / SMB / iSCSI share
OMV comes with it’s own bare metal installer, based on Debian, so it’s as stable as a rock.
If you’ve used it before, you’re probably aware that it needs it’s own drive to install on, then everything else is the bulk storage pool… I’ve used various USB / mSATA / M.2 drives over the years and found it’s a really good way to segregate things.
I stopped using OMV when - IMO - “core” functions I was using (ie syncthing) became containers, because I have no use for that level of abstraction (but it’s less work for the OMV dev to maintain addons, so fair enough)
So, you don’t have to install docker, OMV automatically handles it for you.
How much OMV’s moved on, I don’t know, but I thought it would simplify your setup.
You should have all your data separately stored, it shouldn’t be locked inside containers, and using a VM hosted on a device to serve the data is a little convoluted
I personally don’t like TrueNAS - I’m not a hater, it just doesn’t float my boat (but I suspect someone will rage-downvote me 😉)
So, as an alternative approach, have a look at OpenMediaVault
It’s basically a Debian based NAS designed for DIY systems, which serves the local drives but it also has docker on, so feels like it might be a better fit for you.
Definitely suspect.
You should be able to let memtest run for days with no problems, so a reboot would either be a faulty stick or possibly a faulty motherboard slot.
Swap the RAM between slots to isolate the root cause
That’s an interesting point…
I’d like to share some (holiday) photos with my friends & family, so I can put those onto Pixelfed / Friendica / etc… I don’t necesarily want to share all the photos…
And that’s using the cloud.
Job Done. The self-hosting + federated cloud future is here!
Rejoice.
And now I have mangled lyrics from a Run DMC song in my head:
It’s like þat and þat’s þe way it is.