What are the partitions you currently have on the disk now?
Type: Posts; User: kevdog; Keyword(s):
What are the partitions you currently have on the disk now?
@John Nagle
Not sure how to explain your problems however don't confuse decisions with how Ubuntu has implemented things with "Linux". You'll definitely have different experiences on other Linux...
Arch is really nice distro -- I'm using a bunch of Arch and Ubuntu LTS VMs for server management. I'm not sure if one distro is "better" than the other, however when things break or you need to do...
IDK @DuckHook. I greatly respect most of your opinions, but Snaps just suck. They are slow and take up a lot of room. I've moved some of servers to Debian and some actually over to Arch. I really...
@Darkod
So what you're saying makes sense since the connection on the other VLAN is usually the interface that looses the connection.
In terms of ssh listening on all interfaces -- yes it...
I'm not new to linux but I'm not well versed in networking.
I have one linux VM which uses systemd-networkd to assign interface names and static IP addresses.
Attached to the VM are two...
TrueNAS (whether CORE or scale) uses ZFS and hence requires a lot more RAM. You can virtualize this installation however I'd just recommend it's own separate machine. Huge learning curve here but...
Totally irrelevant to this thread but I've switched between a MBR and GPT partition setup without having to reinstall -- only reason was to see if I could, other than that, not too much purpose. For...
The Alpine Linux LXD container sounds like a fun project. I've used alpine as base images for docker containers but never in lxd.
I'd just consider using zfs and taking nightly snapshots (can do more or less frequently is inclined) and send the snapshots to another zfs device -- like a NAS or other Ubuntu system with zfs. ...
I'd only like to chime in here with just some other considerations about your file server -- If the server is serving 30 computers I'm guessing the files are likely pretty important so don't neglect...
@TheFu
Honestly hate the direction Ubuntu is going with the snap requirements. Not trying to beat a dead horse here but it seems like they are treading uphill alone on the snap implementation on...
Thanks @DuckHook and @TheFu. Still looking into exploring lxd/lxc. I just don't want to be stuck with a container or virtualization system that unfortunately is only applicable to Ubuntu.
Is lxd an Ubuntu thing or is this taken from Debian (as I'm aware Proxmox can run this type of containerization). Can I use this type of virtualization on Fedora?
@LHammonds -- so if I'm interpretting your post correctly -- are you saying 15Gb is the minimum HD space for an Ubuntu Server installation. I see you're using an LVM -- I'm using a zvol -- however...
I don't see any apt-auto-removal file in that directory after I upgraded. Do you have a copy of the file.
Kudos to you LHammond -- I just upgraded my existing 6 Virtualized Ubuntu Servers from 20.04 to 22.04. On one of the upgrades I found the netplan config file completely overwritted and blank. I'm...
@lister171254
I had to look at your compose file for awhile -- and then it dawned on me -- you are using the official bitwarden docker images. I'm using vaultwarden and the setup is a lot...
Could you post your compose file for Bitwarden? Or just the section used for the bitwarden service?
You have a few kernels right? dkms basically places a kernel module inside the selected when building the initramfs. I'm fairly certain if you keep a backup kernel with r8168 previously built in --...
@lister171254 -- Thanks for keeping the thread alive.
A couple of things. Is your https://bitwarden.mydomain.com URL the URL of the reverse proxy or the URL of the docker bitwarden installation? ...
You don't need a certificate per se to run Bitwarden on the backend. Right now you are just proxying a re-encrypted connection to a proxy on the backend that is verified. Usually reverse proxies by...
I think you apply the vlan tags to the bridges -- not the bonds.
@TheFu
As you probably know, rsync can keep versioned backups although they are rudimentary. There are probably better tools for the job.
I love ZFS -- however just a word of caution -- you are definitely opening up a rabbit hole. Read about ZFS prior to using it. As a backup file system you'll need zfs modules added to the kernel...