So, what did you do?
So, what did you do?
Just for drive redundancy it’s awesome. One drive fails you just pull it out, put in a new one and let the array rebuild. I guess the upside of hardware RAID is that some even allow you to swap a disk without powering down. Either way, you have minimal downtime.
I guess a better way would be to have multiple servers. Though with features like checksums in BTRFS I guess a RAID is still better because it can protect against bitrot. And with directly connected systems in a RAID it is generally easier to ensure consistency.
I’d stay away from hardware RAID controllers. If they fail you’re gonna have a hard time. Learned that the hard way. With a software RAID you can do what you proposed. Just put the disk in another system and use it there.
But what if the OOM notification daemon gets killed by the OOM killer?
Port forwarding is what you’re looking for. You almost certainly can configure that in your router. You tell it what the port in the outside should be and to what IP and port in your LAN it should go.
Edit: Just saw your other comments. I’m a bit at a loss.
NPM won’t help you here. As you said, it’s only for http. You will have to set up port forwarding in your router. But as far as I recall Minecraft changes its port with every game. So you could either change that in your router every time you start another game.
But it would be better (for security as well) to set up a VPN. Many routers actually have that built in.
That is, if your goal is to have your Minecraft server reachable through the internet.
For DNS you will need a Dynamic DNS service to let the name always point to your public IP. For this as well many routers have built-in functionality. Maybe even a preferred service.
Whoever can see through WordPress’s spaghetti code must be a genius.
Plus, OP delivered a text version.
The keyboard situation on Wayland and especially KDE is abysmal. Through a workaround I managed to get Onboard working. But it often crashes for me when using it with touch.
The keyboard from Steam actually works best for me. But I don’t know how to pull it up without a gamepad. I’ve got a post showing how to get it working outside of the Steam Deck. I’ll try to find it and edit my comment.
All in all I actually think that Gnome is better suited for touch devices. But I just don’t like how it works overall. But maybe your girlfriend likes it.
That is, if the laptop isn’t totally locked down by IT. But knowing school’s IT budget that probably isn’t the case.
Mass
Yeah. I didn’t dare giving 100 % RAM to zram.
For the web based services the best way would be to put a webserver in front of them to forward traffic to the Docker containers based on the domain. Nginx is popular for this. Personally I use Apache because I know it better.
So Nginx would listen on ports 443 and 80 and all the Docker ports should only be available internally. You can use Let’s Encrypt to get free SSL certificates for all your domains.
You have become the very thing you sought to destroy!
Yeah, with zram I was able to actually play Cities Skylines on my Steam Deck.
I activated it on my work laptop to benefit from a little more time to get bug reports upstream. OpenQA can’t catch everything. Even if I updated only once a month I’d still get up-to-date software at that time.
Sure, openQA and snapper make catastrophic failure very unlikely. But it’s still a small hassle.
But I can’t work anymore anyways so I might as well get all the good stuff as quickly as possible. Just gotta find the energy to switch the repos. By that time Plasma 6.2 has probably hit Slowroll. Let’s see.
Fuck Slowroll, I’m going back to Tumbleweed for this!
I guess Lutris downloads some updates by itself without updating the main app. So probably whoever caused the issue in the first place probably fixed it using the same mechanism.
Gimme a whole body suit to help with losing weight.