If you have a router, you already own one.
Pointing a hostname to your ip doesn’t do anything meaningful.
Infrastructure nerd, gamer, and Lemmy.ca maintainer
If you have a router, you already own one.
Pointing a hostname to your ip doesn’t do anything meaningful.
I’d recommend avoiding spinning disks and going all ssd if possible.
You can get 12v in atx power supplies.
You may want to consider something like a Lenovo tiny with a few large ssds.
Hmm, so sounds like they’re moving the kernel scheduler down to a hardware layer? Basically just better smp?
This hasn’t been possible for a long time. Mail servers do not typically reject a bad recipient immediately on the SMTP connection, they accept it and send a bounce email afterwards instead.
I spent a year tracking down random afci circuit breaker trips, until I realized it was my powerline Ethernet. Never again.
Also just to be clear, everything in the sata section of your motherboard bios is irrelevant unless you’re using onboard ports for something
If everything is in the hba, you could turn off sata on your mobo if you wanted.
Not necessarily spin up, no. My experience with lsi cards is they don’t spin up the disks until the card is initialized.
If your mobo bios isn’t loading the card bios right after post and before os loading, the disks might not spin up until a driver is loaded.
I always enable the bios on mine so I’m not 100% on this, but I think this is correct.
You won’t see Drives from an hba, in your bios. Those drives aren’t plugged into a controller managed by your bios.
Do you see them if you boot into Linux and run lshw, or if you go into the bios for the controller card?
If you don’t get prompted or see the controller bios loading, you may need to enable something like “option Rom” in your normal bios.
Lspci doesn’t care about drivers. What’s lshw say?
Sounds like maybe a fake card or something. Do you also have a 3060 in there?
If you need support outside of business hours, you’re fucked.
Friend had a network misconfig on their side take his server out on Friday night and they didn’t fix it until Monday.
Same for Samsung afaik. Pop into the bootloader and just wipe everything.
SMB.
The windows nfs implementation sucks, but everything talks SMB.
I have a sliding door that I want to toss a stepper motor on, so my dog can push a button and let himself in / out.
I share my jellyfin with my mom
Maybe it’s only got a bios and not uefi? That’s the only thing I can think of, but I can’t really imagine that’s the case on new hw.
I bet disks over 2tb would just work fine.
Yes it’s really that easy. Raid in Linux is usually at the partition level, not the whole device. The bootloader resides in the first few blocks of the disk before your partitions, and isn’t included in the raid.
Use grub-install on the new disk device, ie /dev/sda
Replace one disk, let the raid rebuild. Do the same with the other disk. Do an mdadm grow, then maybe fdisk / lvm / resize fs depending on your setup. Don’t forget to install a bootloader when you put a new disk in.
Making a new array and migrating data is for chumps.
Self hosting email is even more of a pain.
Ladybird is a fork of the serenity browser, no?
Does this 3 year old pr involve anyone from the ladybird project?