FYI: if you run freebsd you are not affected: https://lists.freebsd.org/archives/freebsd-security/2024-March/000248.html
Took me a while to find out so I thought I’d share.
FYI: if you run freebsd you are not affected: https://lists.freebsd.org/archives/freebsd-security/2024-March/000248.html
Took me a while to find out so I thought I’d share.
Afaik much smaller code base and as such easier to audit.
You can’t dedup/compress restic repos at fs level due to the encryption.
Nice thing is you get those even with „dumb“ targets that can‘t do those for you.
Restic is my tool of choice for deduplicated encrypted verifiable compressed incremental backups.
Oof yes, my Kia ev6 too. Down is next. In my BMW up was next.
Could be a Tld without a domain in front.
Bold coming from the top innovator of printer behavior that deserves hatred…
Deep Rock galactic. I played it very early, didn’t feel it and refunded it. A year or so later I stumbled upon it again and bought it again. I really like it now.
I mean, it really is the only client that makes sense when you get more serious. It can seed 1000+ torrents without problems.
Everfuel is quite the ironic name…
Yes, but the term radiation usually implies ionizing radiation.
No, the ports expire, but you can script the renewal / new port process via their API. I want to set up a job that gets a new port like 1x per week and tells it to the applicating using the port. Haven’t done that yet. So far my port stayed active for like a month.
Because they get subsidies from the govt bc they employ a whole region and are a super big energy company. They need to be dismantled.
Still, its lignite, they should cease all mining operations.
I like how they have an api for stuff like port forwarding etc (albeit with mediocre documentation), and how they use all their own servers.
So far I could always max out my connection, it is only 100Mbit/s tho.
I use azire now. Works well so far.
Usually variables like that can be avoided with itterators nowadays. If they can’t I like to use idx
, if they are nested I name them after what they index, like idx_rows, idx_cols
.
You can also feed database dumps directly into restic, like this:
mysqldump --defaults-file=/root/backup_scripts/.my.cnf --databases mydatabse | restic backup --stdin --stdin-filename mydatabase.sql
Daily backup using Restic to wasabi s3.
Restic already speaks s3 natively, no need to mount it or anything, just point it at a bucket and hand it an api key.
You can use an api key that’s only allowed to read and write, but not delete / modify, so you’ve got some protection from ransomware.
With restic you can pipe to stdin, so I use mysqldump and pipe it to restic:
mysqldump --defaults-file=/root/backup_scripts/.my.cnf --databases db-name | restic backup --stdin --stdin-filename db-name.sql
The .my.cnf looks like this:
[mysqldump] user=db-user password="databasepassword"