On Mon, Mar 2, 2020 at 12:22 AM William Kenworthy wrote:
>
> I thought lizardfs was much more community minded
> but you are characterising it as similar to moosefs - a taster offering
> by a commercial company holding back some of the non-essential but
> jucier features for the paid version - is
Sorry for the presumption.
On 2020-03-02 01:08, Daniel Frey wrote:
On 3/1/20 7:40 AM, n952162 wrote:
"within the country"? :-) You must be American?
No.
Dan
On 2/3/20 10:40 am, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Sun, Mar 1, 2020 at 8:52 PM William Kenworthy wrote:
For those wanting to run a lot of drives on a single host - that defeats
the main advantage of using a chunkserver based filesystem -
redundancy. Its far more common to have a host fail than a dis
On Sun, Mar 1, 2020 at 8:52 PM William Kenworthy wrote:
>
> For those wanting to run a lot of drives on a single host - that defeats
> the main advantage of using a chunkserver based filesystem -
> redundancy. Its far more common to have a host fail than a disk drive.
> Losing the major part of y
I am going to answer multiple points below:
On 1/3/20 11:36 pm, Daniel Frey wrote:
On 3/1/20 6:33 AM, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Sun, Mar 1, 2020 at 2:13 AM William Kenworthy
wrote:
Keep in mind that rpi are not the only cheap, capable arm hardware out
there.
I am in Oz, delivery from HardKe
On 3/1/20 7:40 AM, n952162 wrote:
"within the country"? :-) You must be American?
No.
Dan
"within the country"? :-) You must be American?
On 2020-03-01 16:38, Daniel Frey wrote:
On 2/29/20 11:13 PM, William Kenworthy wrote:
Keep in mind that rpi are not the only cheap, capable arm hardware out
there.
I am using a number of odroid devices, including an N2 with a gentoo
based ker
On 2/29/20 11:13 PM, William Kenworthy wrote:
Keep in mind that rpi are not the only cheap, capable arm hardware out
there.
I am using a number of odroid devices, including an N2 with a gentoo
based kernel and a gentoo aarch64 userland. Its used for lxc containers
for asterisk, dns, webdav, ma
On 3/1/20 6:33 AM, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Sun, Mar 1, 2020 at 2:13 AM William Kenworthy wrote:
Keep in mind that rpi are not the only cheap, capable arm hardware out
there.
I completely agree. Anytime I'm looking at an application I consider
the SBCs available as options. Certainly the od
On Sun, Mar 1, 2020 at 2:13 AM William Kenworthy wrote:
>
> Keep in mind that rpi are not the only cheap, capable arm hardware out
> there.
>
I completely agree. Anytime I'm looking at an application I consider
the SBCs available as options. Certainly the odroids are highly
spoken of.
Main adv
Michael wrote:
> On Sunday, 1 March 2020 10:46:17 GMT Dale wrote:
>>
>> Could you share some links to some of these things? As I mentioned
>> earlier, I'm thinking about building a NAS system. Later, I may build a
>> mythTV system. Then I can access the NAS from it or my desktop, or cell
>> phon
n952162 wrote:
>
> On 2020-03-01 11:46, Dale wrote:
>> ... now that I am somewhat more updated, past the Motorola Razr stage.
>> Thanks much.
>>
>> Dale
>>
>> :-) :-)
>>
>
> Which Razr do you mean?
>
> Are you 9 years (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droid_Razr) or 16 years
> out of date? (https://
On Sunday, 1 March 2020 10:46:17 GMT Dale wrote:
> William Kenworthy wrote:
> > On 29/2/20 11:31 pm, Rich Freeman wrote:
> >> On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 10:17 AM Daniel Frey wrote:
> >>> Yes, I'm aware linux does VLANs... I set up netifrc to do this (I
> >>> already have some "smart" switches set up
On 2020-03-01 11:46, Dale wrote:
... now that I am somewhat more updated, past the Motorola Razr stage.
Thanks much.
Dale
:-) :-)
Which Razr do you mean?
Are you 9 years (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Droid_Razr) or 16 years
out of date? (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Motorola_Razr)
;-
William Kenworthy wrote:
> On 29/2/20 11:31 pm, Rich Freeman wrote:
>> On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 10:17 AM Daniel Frey wrote:
>>> Yes, I'm aware linux does VLANs... I set up netifrc to do this (I
>>> already have some "smart" switches set up - not full layer 3.) I thought
>>> about running containers
On 29/2/20 11:31 pm, Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 10:17 AM Daniel Frey wrote:
>> Yes, I'm aware linux does VLANs... I set up netifrc to do this (I
>> already have some "smart" switches set up - not full layer 3.) I thought
>> about running containers but if I ever have to do som
On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 10:17 AM Daniel Frey wrote:
>
> Yes, I'm aware linux does VLANs... I set up netifrc to do this (I
> already have some "smart" switches set up - not full layer 3.) I thought
> about running containers but if I ever have to do something like
> emergency maintenance on my serv
On 2/28/20 5:38 PM, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Fri, Feb 28, 2020 at 8:11 PM Daniel Frey wrote:
Thanks for the detail, I've just ordered an RPi4B to mess around with.
It would be helpful to move DNS etc off my home server as I'm trying to
separate everything into VLANs.
Keep in mind that Linux s
On Fri, Feb 28, 2020 at 8:11 PM Daniel Frey wrote:
>
> Thanks for the detail, I've just ordered an RPi4B to mess around with.
> It would be helpful to move DNS etc off my home server as I'm trying to
> separate everything into VLANs.
>
Keep in mind that Linux supports VLAN tagging, so if you set
On 2/27/20 1:49 PM, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 4:25 PM james wrote:
Yea, I was not clear. I'd run the mail-server, on a 'cluster' (4 or
more), not an individual pi-board unless it was beef up, processor and
ram wise. Gig E would also be on my list.
Unless you have some nich
On Friday, 28 February 2020 13:28:53 GMT Wols Lists wrote:
> On 28/02/20 11:45, Michael wrote:
--->8
> > http://www.runmapglobal.com/blog/fault-tolerant-dedicated-servers/
>
> Noted. That link pre-dates me working on the site - I haven't checked
> all the old links - I guess I should ...
If you
On 28/02/20 11:45, Michael wrote:
> On Friday, 28 February 2020 11:04:43 GMT Wols Lists wrote:
>> On 28/02/20 05:07, james wrote:
>>> For data storage, long term important stuff, you should employ RAID
>>> (1-10). We can get into that later, duplication of important data, via
>>> backups or extra s
On Fri, Feb 28, 2020 at 6:09 AM Wols Lists wrote:
>
> On 27/02/20 21:49, Rich Freeman wrote:
> > A fairly cheap amd64 system can run a ton of services in containers
> > though, and it is way simpler to maintain that way. I still get quick
> > access to snapshots/etc, but now if I want to run a ge
On Friday, 28 February 2020 11:04:43 GMT Wols Lists wrote:
> On 28/02/20 05:07, james wrote:
> > For data storage, long term important stuff, you should employ RAID
> > (1-10). We can get into that later, duplication of important data, via
> > backups or extra storage is a good idea too. Backups ar
On 27/02/20 21:49, Rich Freeman wrote:
> A fairly cheap amd64 system can run a ton of services in containers
> though, and it is way simpler to maintain that way. I still get quick
> access to snapshots/etc, but now if I want to run a gentoo container
> it is no big deal if 99% of the time it uses
On 28/02/20 05:07, james wrote:
> For data storage, long term important stuff, you should employ RAID
> (1-10). We can get into that later, duplication of important data, via
> backups or extra storage is a good idea too. Backups are an old
> technology, but may help, but backups do can get old too
On Friday, 28 February 2020 05:07:07 GMT james wrote:
> On 2/27/20 9:53 PM, Dale wrote:
> > james wrote:
> >> 5G + gentoo + embedded toys, is going to be FUN FUN FUN.
> >>
> >>
> >> Then I'll be off to other states, via a hacked out Redneck
> >> camper.. and too many microProcessors
> >>
On 2/27/20 9:53 PM, Dale wrote:
james wrote:
5G + gentoo + embedded toys, is going to be FUN FUN FUN.
Then I'll be off to other states, via a hacked out Redneck
camper.. and too many microProcessors
Thanks Rich, your insights and comments are always most welcome.
James
Off topi
james wrote:
>
>
> 5G + gentoo + embedded toys, is going to be FUN FUN FUN.
>
>
> Then I'll be off to other states, via a hacked out Redneck
> camper.. and too many microProcessors
>
>
> Thanks Rich, your insights and comments are always most welcome.
>
>
> James
Off topic a bit but a ques
On 2/27/20 4:49 PM, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 4:25 PM james wrote:
Yea, I was not clear. I'd run the mail-server, on a 'cluster' (4 or
more), not an individual pi-board unless it was beef up, processor and
ram wise. Gig E would also be on my list.
Unless you have some nich
On Thu, Feb 27, 2020 at 4:25 PM james wrote:
>
> Yea, I was not clear. I'd run the mail-server, on a 'cluster' (4 or
> more), not an individual pi-board unless it was beef up, processor and
> ram wise. Gig E would also be on my list.
>
Unless you have some niche need I wouldn't generally run serv
On 2/27/20 2:51 PM, Ralph Seichter wrote:
* ai...@aisha.cc:
I'm not too sure that running it as a mail server is impossible.
I never wrote that it is impossible, only that "I would not use it as an
Internet-facing production Mailserver". That's a huge difference. You
are free to do as you wis
* ai...@aisha.cc:
> I'm not too sure that running it as a mail server is impossible.
I never wrote that it is impossible, only that "I would not use it as an
Internet-facing production Mailserver". That's a huge difference. You
are free to do as you wish, but I still consider it an unsuitable rol
I'm not too sure that running it as a mail server is impossible.
Depending on your expected traffic level, it should be more than capable
enough to do it.
My current server is only a 1 core + 1 GB VPS, which is much more lax
than a pi-4.
Depending on what guides you follow you can definitely s
* james:
> I'm thinking about setting up a pair of Rasp-Pi-4 as DNS servers with
> 4GB of ram. Is that enough ram for a DNS server?
For running the Nameservers, yes. Compiling Gentoo packages will likely
put your SD-Card under stress, but that's just how it goes. My Model B
Rev 2 of 2015 runs dns
I'm thinking about setting up a pair of Rasp-Pi-4 as DNS servers with
4GB of ram. Is that enough ram for a DNS server?
https://www.amazon.com/CanaKit-Raspberry-4GB-Starter-MAX/dp/B07XPHWPRB
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Embedded_systems/ARM_hardware_list
If 4GB is not enough, there are some bo
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