trilobite

joined 2 years ago
[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 months ago

OK, so maybe I didn't explain myself. What I meant was that I would like resilience so that if one server goes down, I've got the other to quickly fireup. Only problem is that slave sever has a smaller pool, so I can't replicate the whole pool of master server.

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 months ago (2 children)

Well, its ticked but not working then because I found duplicate links. Maybe it only works if you try to store the same link twice but it doesn't work on the imported bookmarks

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 months ago

I was using floccus, but what is the point of saving bookmarks twice, once in linkwarden and once in browser

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 5 points 2 months ago

Looks very interesting. But as others noted, still too young, only two releases in 3 months and 1 person. Certainly to keep an eye out. The MIT licence worries me too. I always add the licence in the criteria ;-)

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 7 points 2 months ago

absolutely, none of that is going past my router.

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 months ago (1 children)

Documentation is impressive. I need to take a look. Thanks for sharing.

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 2 months ago

Yeah, seems like the registration to IPinfo is required so that you can download a token which then allow pfBlockerNG to download the ASN database. I've just registered to IPinfo and it seems like (unless its a false alarm) that it now works.

However, I've also learned that all the ARUB ASNs I had didn't include the SMPTS server I was using.

Basically, I did an nslookup smtps.aruba.it, got the IP and then did a search for the ASN using Team Cymru IP to ASN Lookup v1.0 here https://asn.cymru.com/cgi-bin/whois.cgi to find the ASN. I then copied the ASN in the WAN_EGRESS list and bingo its working.

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 6 points 2 months ago (4 children)

I agree. In principle Nextcloud is a great idea and project but it has a lot of issues that make maintaining a pain. I had it for over 2 years and at every update it was painfull. I gave up and moved to Syncthing+Radicale. Is there something I miss? Yes, the ability to share as Syncthing doesn't allow sharing.

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Looks interesting but I couldn't find anything on the android app. There isn't any "Monica" on f-droid either.

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 4 months ago (1 children)

You nave opened a new world vere. I had no idea that these no code solutions were not available. Sounds very interesting.

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 5 months ago (4 children)

They are mostly cash. On average 5-10/day over a 5 hrs day.

[–] trilobite@lemmy.ml 1 points 6 months ago (1 children)

Ah right. Docker seems to have gained more ground than LXC if its the first time I come across it. I hadn't realised they were similar, especially after I discovered that people are running docker in LXC ...

 

Hi, got Proxmox installed. Now want to install some VMs but would like to use a simple setup rather than painfully going trough an install. I've read I could accomplish this via ansible. Are there ready playbooks you can hack? Presumably I would need to have Proxmox understand playbooks?

 

Just got my first security camera, a Hikvision multi focal 4MP. I got Proxmox up and running and installed Frigate through the community LXC repository on github. Most of the documentation is to first install Docker as LXC and then Frigate as a normal docker compose yml, where all the configuration is done. Now that I've skipped the docker bit, how do i config my camera on frigate? From reading the frigate website, i need access to config file. I also need to tell frigate to save all streaming on my Truenas that I've shared with Proxmox via a NFS share. Anyone have a similar setup? These LXC containers seem pretty cool as concept, as from what I understand, they're similar to a bare metal install except the host shares its kernel and they bring the convienence of containerisation. Basically, LXC and Docker are similar in concept but with Docker you have the benefit of compose and portainer which are universal whereas LXC is part of Proxmox. Is that a fair summary?

 

Hi, I want to get Frigate installed on DELL Optiplex 3020. Given its a Intel Gen4 i5, I suspect I would be asking too much if I installed it on a VM that is running on Proxmox? From the Frigate website "Frigate runs best with Docker installed on bare metal Debian-based distributions. For ideal performance, Frigate needs low overhead access to underlying hardware for the Coral and GPU devices. Running Frigate in a VM on top of Proxmox, ESXi, Virtualbox, etc. is not recommended though some users have had success with Proxmox.". Anyone had any luck getting it up and running on a VM?

 

I've been noticing over la last few years that is is becoming more and more difficult to login to accounts, whether a bank account, a membership account, sometimes even browsing websites for shopping, through my VPN server. Is this just my impression or is there something going on now whereby there are services that keep list of VPN servers that are then sold to backs so that these parties can keep out anyone from trying to login via a VPN. It feels like the general consensus is VPN=malicious rather than "VPN="this guy is just trying to protect his privacy". I use AIRVPN but was wondering if there are VPN services that are more sophisticate and try to circumvent these VPN server blocks? It becoming a real pain to the point I'm wondering what it the point of paying fro a VPN is I'm finding myself having to login through my ISP IP rather than my VPN IP.

 

I've been running VMs on some old DELL T110ii but realise that I've loaded it a bit too much so want to leave it doing the job of NAS with Truenas Scale and move all my VMs to Proxmox. The idea is that I would have two optiplex that provide redundancy. Truenas Scale has got me used to ZFS but clear may not be an option with Optiplex 3020 as ZFS is pointless with one SSD. Has anyone got some similar arrangement and has their VMs and containers running on these simple desktop machines? How are you managing high availability and resilience?

 

Hi folks, I've got a VM that is running my Firefly iii instance and Paperless instance as containers. A lot of work and time goes into managing these tools and I want to make sure I don't lose them. This is my setup:

Turenas Scale machine 1 -> VM1 - Docker containers. The VM sits on its own dataset in Truenas.

I replicate the dataset to Truenas Scale 2 one a week and this machine only goes on on Sunday to save power.

I Rsync the dataset to a 3rd machine where there is a hard disk that I store offsite.

I recognize that I could lose up to one week of work but that is nothing compared to the human hrs spent building those databases from scratch.

Apart from snapshotting e rsyncing every day, what else could I do to make this more resilient without increasing CAPEX and OPEX costs?

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