Not for PostgreSQL, but for MariaDB we run replicas in FreeBSD jails on a server with lots of ZFS space. The jailed Maria instances just stop every hour (so the DB flushes everything to disk), the host snapshots all of…
Yes, this really is an example of someone who "made it" and made a large amount of money that has allowed them to turn around and choose a simpler life. "Oh, I just moved myself and my family off to a little Greek…
It's not like VMFS (not a cluster filesystem), for Proxmox+iSCSI you get a large LVM PV that gets sliced up into volumes for your VMs. All of your Proxmox nodes are connected to that same LVM PV and you can live migrate…
Yes, when dementia has you terrified of, or raging at, your closest loved ones (who you don't remember at all so you think they're demons or strangers) all day every day to the point where they all can't stand you and…
Yeah, kinda have to agree. I like traefik fine but getting mTLS working with it was a serious pain and the docs for doing so were _terrible_, had to keep searching around and piecing together bits from various third…
Anecdotal but btrfs is the only filesystem I've lost data with (and it wasn't in a RAID configuration). That combined with the btrfs tools being the most aggressively bad management utilities out there* ensure that I'm…
Yeah, if your device is lost or destroyed and you rely on passkeys, you are well and truly f**ed. Your only hope is if you have recovery passwords stored in a password safe or manager. If you already have that safe or…
Same boat, the attempt at bot detection prevents the page from working at all for me.
Hit the same issue, but it goes fine if you just clone the repo, cd down into the cmd directory and 'go build -o doggo'.
I'm with you, I need to read up more on where timeseries could benefit, at work we have a PostgreSQL instance with around 27 billion rows in a single partitioned table, partitioned by week. Goes back to January of 2017…
I got a Latitude 9430 on eBay for $520. This thing is an amazing laptop and I'd put it right there with the Macs I have to work with at dayjob, as far as build quality/feel.
Anyone who has owned a Mini would probably question whether their QA even gets that far.
Maybe it depends on the McDonald's franchisee in your area, I never see free fries in the app but it's always "any size fries for $1.29" (which is still massively cheaper than their normal price).
> If you have a whole database of them, the trick is to try one code with a thousand cards That still sounds like a crapshoot... Of those 1,000 cards, there might be 14 that have 982 as CSV, 9 that have 307, and none…
Same, in years and years of use, never a single spam message.
> yes, it adds a forwarding rule. Which skips over the rest of my firewall rules. ... which you explicitly asked it to do by using the -p option.
Works well to just spin up a python:3.11 container via Docker or Podman and do the pipx + reddit-user-to-sqlite installations, then run the utility in there. You can mount some folder as part of starting the container…
1. Install regular old Docker 2. Type 'docker swarm init' 3. There is no 3, you're literally finished and now have a full-on Swarm node w/ all features.
Great question, and yes, some of the better devices implement a small buffer so may be able to keep a day or even two in memory while they're out of cell coverage. If you activate the SIM you might get a small data…
> Is the sky-link GPS device still sending location data back to a Sky Link server? As someone who used to work in that industry, no, it's not sending location data. You don't activate the SIM until you have someone who…
Heh, can you imagine having to take over the systems managed by that poster? You'd have to rip and replace everything.
What about it isn't idempotent for you? Are you falling into the anti-pattern of using shell/command all over the place instead of real modules? We have playbooks installing and managing our databases, web servers, VoIP…
My friends and I all own/owned it legitimately (we had LAN parties nearly every weekend), but over time we'd lose the key. Just entering all 3s has always worked and it accepts it as a valid key.
We run it (Docker Swarm) extensively inhouse at $dayjob, it runs loads of core services that are critical to operations. It's never given us any grief and is very easy to manage and maintain. If the complexity ever gets…
Have you finally stopped buying Intel? Current Ryzens are a much better CPU anyhow, just dump Intel and be happy with your ECC and everything else.
Not for PostgreSQL, but for MariaDB we run replicas in FreeBSD jails on a server with lots of ZFS space. The jailed Maria instances just stop every hour (so the DB flushes everything to disk), the host snapshots all of…
Yes, this really is an example of someone who "made it" and made a large amount of money that has allowed them to turn around and choose a simpler life. "Oh, I just moved myself and my family off to a little Greek…
It's not like VMFS (not a cluster filesystem), for Proxmox+iSCSI you get a large LVM PV that gets sliced up into volumes for your VMs. All of your Proxmox nodes are connected to that same LVM PV and you can live migrate…
Yes, when dementia has you terrified of, or raging at, your closest loved ones (who you don't remember at all so you think they're demons or strangers) all day every day to the point where they all can't stand you and…
Yeah, kinda have to agree. I like traefik fine but getting mTLS working with it was a serious pain and the docs for doing so were _terrible_, had to keep searching around and piecing together bits from various third…
Anecdotal but btrfs is the only filesystem I've lost data with (and it wasn't in a RAID configuration). That combined with the btrfs tools being the most aggressively bad management utilities out there* ensure that I'm…
Yeah, if your device is lost or destroyed and you rely on passkeys, you are well and truly f**ed. Your only hope is if you have recovery passwords stored in a password safe or manager. If you already have that safe or…
Same boat, the attempt at bot detection prevents the page from working at all for me.
Hit the same issue, but it goes fine if you just clone the repo, cd down into the cmd directory and 'go build -o doggo'.
I'm with you, I need to read up more on where timeseries could benefit, at work we have a PostgreSQL instance with around 27 billion rows in a single partitioned table, partitioned by week. Goes back to January of 2017…
I got a Latitude 9430 on eBay for $520. This thing is an amazing laptop and I'd put it right there with the Macs I have to work with at dayjob, as far as build quality/feel.
Anyone who has owned a Mini would probably question whether their QA even gets that far.
Maybe it depends on the McDonald's franchisee in your area, I never see free fries in the app but it's always "any size fries for $1.29" (which is still massively cheaper than their normal price).
> If you have a whole database of them, the trick is to try one code with a thousand cards That still sounds like a crapshoot... Of those 1,000 cards, there might be 14 that have 982 as CSV, 9 that have 307, and none…
Same, in years and years of use, never a single spam message.
> yes, it adds a forwarding rule. Which skips over the rest of my firewall rules. ... which you explicitly asked it to do by using the -p option.
Works well to just spin up a python:3.11 container via Docker or Podman and do the pipx + reddit-user-to-sqlite installations, then run the utility in there. You can mount some folder as part of starting the container…
1. Install regular old Docker 2. Type 'docker swarm init' 3. There is no 3, you're literally finished and now have a full-on Swarm node w/ all features.
Great question, and yes, some of the better devices implement a small buffer so may be able to keep a day or even two in memory while they're out of cell coverage. If you activate the SIM you might get a small data…
> Is the sky-link GPS device still sending location data back to a Sky Link server? As someone who used to work in that industry, no, it's not sending location data. You don't activate the SIM until you have someone who…
Heh, can you imagine having to take over the systems managed by that poster? You'd have to rip and replace everything.
What about it isn't idempotent for you? Are you falling into the anti-pattern of using shell/command all over the place instead of real modules? We have playbooks installing and managing our databases, web servers, VoIP…
My friends and I all own/owned it legitimately (we had LAN parties nearly every weekend), but over time we'd lose the key. Just entering all 3s has always worked and it accepts it as a valid key.
We run it (Docker Swarm) extensively inhouse at $dayjob, it runs loads of core services that are critical to operations. It's never given us any grief and is very easy to manage and maintain. If the complexity ever gets…
Have you finally stopped buying Intel? Current Ryzens are a much better CPU anyhow, just dump Intel and be happy with your ECC and everything else.