theit8514

joined 2 years ago
[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 15 points 2 weeks ago (3 children)

I think NetworkChuck has a good set of tutorial videos about self hosting. For the most part you can search for what you want to find info on and he probably had a video on it. E.g. Nginx: https://m.youtube.com/@NetworkChuck/search?query=Nginx

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 7 points 2 months ago

I think if you didn't assign a tag on the Release Profile it applies to all series.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 5 points 3 months ago* (last edited 3 months ago)

I have never done RAID over USB, but have done various JBOD setups using SCSI. I think the general idea is that USB having such an easily disconnected connector plus the latency overhead on translating SATA to USB to SATA again means you have a higher chance of corruption. SCSI setups typically have connectors with locking mechanisms to prevent easy disconnection.

If eSATA is an option it might be better for the performance and it has a latching mechanism to prevent easy disconnection. You can get a 2-port eSATA PCI card for about 50 bucks.

Oh, and if you have a free PCI port, you could add internal SATA ports to mount the drives internally.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 6 points 3 months ago

I know tailscale prefers being installed on every machine but not all of my machines are even capable of running custom code. I use a single tailscale router that published my internal network to tailscale and if the internet is down everything still works fine internally.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 1 points 3 months ago

With TrueNas you can do it two ways: ISCSI disks that are mounted to the VMs or via NFS. With ISCSI you won't have access to the data from the TrueNas side as the data will be stored as a volume file. With NFS you get the best of both worlds as you'll be able to access the files via other TrueNas services like SMB/SFTP. I have my Jellyfin/Plex running via NFS and have few issues, though I've not tested it with large 4k/8k videos yet. I mostly run 1080p.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 14 points 4 months ago (3 children)

No wildcard support sigh

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 5 points 5 months ago

+1 for Backblaze. They have a convenient backup software too that works great. I backup my parents laptop using it, and use their S3 storage for my NAS backups.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 3 points 5 months ago

A popular EHR cloud service that we use has a developer portal where operations such as logging in or entering two-factor codes would take upwards of 2 minutes to process.

When I asked our rep about it they went "eh it's normal".

This same company designed a XML SOAP API where if you request too much data, it just returns a HTTP 200 with no content. No error message or formatted SOAP reply, just completely nonsensical response.

I hate this company but there's literally very few choices in this space.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 1 points 6 months ago

This would depend on whether the limit is defined as ingress or egress or both. For example AWS has free ingress traffic from the internet but there is a cost for egress traffic to the internet.

A better solution would be to find a unmetered service, which means that you have a fixed transfer speed (e.g. 500 Mbit) but have unlimited bandwidth. OVH offers this in their VPS products.

[–] theit8514@lemmy.world 15 points 7 months ago (3 children)

The fiber we use at our datacenter is quite flexible but still gets damaged if you bend it too far. To roll it like they describe you would still want to have a fairly large drum (probably like 3-4 inches in diameter) which would make it pretty bulky for a small drone.