The explanation is that it’s random. Generate enough random strings and you’re bound to get everything.
The explanation is that it’s random. Generate enough random strings and you’re bound to get everything.
It’s not needed because it’s currently mostly working for them? You’re going to need to use full sentences if you want to communicate, I’m afraid.
They already have several VMs, containers, and want a full desktop on one. If it sounded like going down to one physical server would be appropriate, I would have recommended it. But condensing whatever they’ve got now would be a huge pain, especially if they find out it doesn’t work and they have to start over and go back to VMs and containers.
Why what?
You want KVM.
But I’d check the performance on the NAS first. They’re not really built for VMs so you might be missing hardware features, but I’d check resource usage to see if you’re maxing anything out. And try reducing resolution, color depth, etc. to make it easier.
Proxmox is just Debian. Use any partition-aware copy tool. If you have it set up for UEFI, just copy the EFI partition and all that stuff too and you should be set.
What advantage does it have over existing methods? It’s great that it’s cross-platform, but so are zip files. And the content inside isn’t cross-platform, so I don’t think that ultimately adds anything.
First, don’t use .local, as it’s used by mDNS. You should use .internal or a domain you own. I recommend changing before you get any more committed to your environment.
I’m not really following your post, because you’re not specifying whether each point is on the server or laptop.
Personally, I dislike Ubuntu on the server because of how it runs stuff like systemd-resolvd, which as you’ve experienced, gets in the way of standard operation.
If instances are unmaintained, losing them is probably a good thing.
Lemmy should do something like make captcha and email verification the default in the next version, and reject federation from anyone with a lower version. If we accept federation from any instance where this was never turned on, banning accounts one by one is worse than Sisyphean. They’ll just keep finding more vulnerable instances that are already trusted and abuse them to spam the rest of the fediverse.
If admins want to manually turn it off, then they should be prepared to manage that.
Does the error have any text that might be helpful?
Easier? Yes, definitely. Maybe work on the Vaultwarden stuff in parts, instead of all in one go.
Also, if you’re using Proxmox, you might just back up your whole VM to PBS. That’s how I do it. But that takes a bit of work to set up on its own.
It doesn’t need to exist at all. But being online and continuous obviously speeds communication.
All fields need an information sharing platform. Historically, it was in person at conferences or conventions and such. Now it’s online and continuous.
True, but that’s why I mentioned a cache or cooldown. Once every two minutes is plenty, unless Lemmy really blows up and we have hundreds of instances trying to fetch a very popular post.
You have a point about new sort, but you could approximate it by sorting what’s known to an instance. It’s not ideal, but it’s at least something. Maybe it would make sense to push just that feed, or to fetch a subset periodically.
I read that comment tree, but it doesn’t answer my question. If someone on Mastodon likes a post on feddit.dk, I don’t see any reason feddit.dk can’t communicate that to lemm.ee when I go look at it.
And disable ssh to root. Hell, just disable root login altogether and use sudo.
More or less. The biggest issue is if your or their IP address changes, it’ll stop working.
I don’t know what Minecraft’s track record is on security, but I assume it’s not great. Ideally, you’d also put public facing services in a DMZ, so that if they do get compromised, they can’t reach anything else.
Pulling the data when a user requests a post/comment (with a cooldown/cache for popular posts) isn’t any more or less scalable than feddit.de pushing the same data whether it’s been requested or not. If anything, I’d think pushing data when it’s not necessarily needed would be less scalable.
But if it has to be a push model, why doesn’t feddit.dk push the votes it knows about along with the rest of the data?
That’s kind of creepy. I just play nethack.