exu

joined 2 years ago
[–] exu@feditown.com 7 points 2 days ago (1 children)

I use Migadu, it's probably the closest you can come to fully managing email while not hosting your own server. All their plans are limited on inbound/outbound mails per day and storage used. Beyond that you add as many domains as you want (within reason on their cheapest plan) and create any number of separate mailboxes/users.

[–] exu@feditown.com 1 points 5 days ago

I just pull the latest container to update. Not sure if that's what you're referring to

[–] exu@feditown.com 8 points 6 days ago (2 children)

I use it in my homelab to host stuff. Everything is fully open source, so you can compile Xen Orchestra manually and get all the enterprise features for free. Or if you're lazy like me, use the installer script or container by ronivay. I've been using it for years and again, you get all the enterprise level features for free.

[–] exu@feditown.com 1 points 6 days ago

The problem is Russians are doing the same and they both have to somehow defend incomplete lines with gaps or risk getting fully surrounded and cut off fron support.

[–] exu@feditown.com 1 points 6 days ago

They have an Emacs client, heck yes!

[–] exu@feditown.com 1 points 1 week ago

s/but/at/ and it makes sense

[–] exu@feditown.com 4 points 2 weeks ago
  • how do you use ansible? Is there a good source for roles or playbooks to set up services? I feel like ansible is 30% more headache right now during config.

I write my own playbooks and roles, but often I can just copy paste an existing setup and use it for a new service. For example containers, you can probably write one role once, copy it and modify some variables to set up another container service.
For stuff where there are well maintained community roles (e.g. community.zabbix) just use those and configure with variables.

  • how do you deal with motivation loss?

I just don't work on a part I don't want to do atm. It's supposed to mostly be a hobby and as long as my services I care about are running it's fine.

  • how do you deal with the overwhelming amount of choices and information and disciplines (networking, storage, VMS, Linux..) that comes with selfhosting?

I'm on my 2.5th setup now, just choose something and see if it works. If not, see how much it bothers you and what parts you want to migrate.
I'm a big fan of VMs, so I'm using XCP-ng. IMO this makes testing and backups very easy, I just take a snapshot and figure stuff out, no big deal if it breaks.

  • how do you find the sweetspot between ease of use, ease of set up, security, redundancy? I feel like I am maybe too pranaoid to loose my data again (dropped a hard drive many years back, I lost all of my projects)

You're better than 95% of people just by thinking about this. For backups, identify which data you want to back up and do that. If you don't want to deal with Ansible right now, just set something up manually and automate it later (paste your commands into a readme for reference)
For me, I make sure to backup my Nextcloud data. That included personal photos, files and other hard to replace stuff. Other than that I have daily VM backups to a Hetzner storage box and my NAS. I don't backup my media on Jellyfin, that's just not as important.
VMs also make it easy to replace your host. Just install the hypervisor on a new server and restore VMs to it.

  • maybe overall, how do you manage your perfectionism?

I guess I'm not a perfectionist. It took me multiple months and monetary incentive (avoid renting two servers) to migrate from my Debian single host setup to VMs years ago.
Some of my Ansible playbooks are "version 1", where I didn't know what I was doing. I'm on version 3 now. They still work, I even use some of them occasionally, just haven't taken the time to migrate them yet.
Maybe you can take a similar approach with some of your services that aren't that essential and spread out the work more so you can enjoy it when you want to.

[–] exu@feditown.com 2 points 2 weeks ago

I think Memories schedules its scan with the normal cron job for Nextcloud

[–] exu@feditown.com 2 points 2 weeks ago (4 children)

I use FolderSync to push my photos to Nextcloud. Much more reliable than their app

[–] exu@feditown.com 14 points 2 weeks ago (2 children)

Sure, but that's only relevant once we have 100% clean energy

[–] exu@feditown.com 6 points 3 weeks ago (3 children)

Kidnapped would be the correct term, no?

 
 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.dbzer0.com/post/54086658

For the first time, US residents can now invest in memecoins through traditional brokerages. Trading will only get stranger from here.

 
 

I was kind of surprised to see this article on HackerNews, so I thought I'd ask here; how do you handle your dotfiles and do you share them publicly?

My own dotfiles started from those provided by ArcoLinux, with a bunch of changes over the years I had them. Currently installed using Ansible, because that's more sensible than Bash for this imo.

https://git.exu.li/exu/configs

 

I'm looking to buy an RX 9060 XT and was hoping to collect more sources comparing different models. I'm mainly looking for noise & temperature comparisons between the base models available.

So far the best source I found is Techpowerup. They have comparisons for stock behaviour and noise normalised between the 6 models they tested. Sapphire Radeon RX 9060 XT Pulse OC 16 GB Review
Unfortunately, they've mostly tested the huge triple fan designs until now. From the base models, the Reaper has terrible cooling and the Sapphire Pulse unfortunately only offers 1 DisplayPort connector.

Hardware Unboxed also only compares 3 higher end models in their review. AMD Radeon RX 9060 XT 16GB Review, Gaming Benchmarks!

Does anyone have reviews for the other base models, XFX Swift (dual fan) and ASRock Challenger?

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