Mailcow allows users to setup their own aliases similar to gmail with a “+” delimiter. E.g. username+randomalias@domain.com.
Mailcow allows users to setup their own aliases similar to gmail with a “+” delimiter. E.g. username+randomalias@domain.com.
There is also the Hurd kernel, which has been in development for aeons.
Mislabeled files, not so much. Since there isn’t really a way to verify the content until it’s downloaded. You can adjust things like which file sizes are considered a certain quality, e.g. HD or 4k. But one approach could be that you define tags for release groups which you know and trust. And give those tags a higher score. This should lead to releases by those groups being preferred.
You can of course add multiple tags with positive and negative scores. For example I use tags to give a higher score to releases that have 5.1 audio, or which are non-hdr.
You can try to faff around with keywords and tags, e.g. give x264 or x265 a higher score rating, etc… As a failsafe you can configure a trashcan location and specify that all deleted files go there first and don’t get emptied for X amount of days.
Around 2003-2004. I was still a bit of a Linux noob, just getting to grips with Gentoo.
Had two no-name WiFi adapters that weren’t directly supported under Linux. Found some obscure forum thread that mentioned them, along with which lines in which source code driver to change to make these adapters work.
As a seasoned sysadmin, I approve.
UPS with usb allows you to configure a script to properly shutdown your server when a power outage happens and the UPS battery is about to run out.
Do you have a NAS at home with enough storage? You could use wireguard to setup a vpn tunnel, then mount your NAS’s storage on your vps via nfs and using cachefilesd. If your upload speed is sufficient, this can work pretty well without too much waiting for a stream to start.
Proton works on any Linux distro, it comes with steam. As long as you can install steam, you should be golden.
Short answer, no. Nobody knows. At least not unless you can accurately predict exactly how many API calls and how much data you will transfer.
Qownnotes with nextcloud.
I use mailcow for self hosting.
I usually shy away from VMs because I have to dedicate a fixed amount of resources, e.g. ram.
I tend to rely on docker or bare metal services on a server. But I don’t use a server for gaming.
Am I missing something here? Why use a VM for gaming?
I’ll take Linux with proton any day over all that faffing with windows and a GPU pass through.
I self host using mailcow. Easy setup. Prevents most of the beginner pitfalls via exemplary documentation.
With nextcloud you can create shared folders. You can give him access to the shared folder via his own account. Anything put inside the shared folder is available to you both. He won’t be able to access the rest of your stuff.
Unless he has admin access to the server itself. But you can also enable encryption.
Containers, unless you have a specific need for a VM.
With a VM you have to reserve resources exclusively. If you give a VM 2gb of ram, then that’s 2gb of ram that you can’t use for other things, even if the guest OS is using less.
With Containers, you only need as many resources as the process inside the container requires at the time.
Sorry didn’t read your post entirely before I answered. Are you trying to have a second separate site, or just an alternative domain pointing to the same site?
Run the certbot client again and this time specify all the domains you want to be part of one certificate.
Not really with mdadm raid5. But it sounds like you like to live dangerously. You could always go the BTRFS route. Yeah, I know BTRFS Raid56 “will eat your data”, but you said it’s nothing that important anyways. There are some things to keep in mind when running BTRFS in Raid5, e.g. scrub each disk individually, use Raid1c3 for metadata for example.
But basically, BTRFS is one of the only filesystems that allows you to add disks of any size or number, and you can convert the profile on the fly, while in use. So in this case, you could format the new disk with BTRFS as a single disk. Copy over stuff from one of your other disks, then once that disk is empty, add it as a additional device to your existing BTRFS volume. Then do the same with the last disk. Once that is done, you can run a balance convert to convert the single profile into a raid5 data profile.
That being said, there are quite a few caveats to be aware of. Even though it’s improved a lot, BTRFS’s Raid56 implementation is still not recommended for production use. https://lore.kernel.org/linux-btrfs/20200627032414.GX10769@hungrycats.org/
Also, I would STRONGLY recommend against connecting disks via USB. USB HD adapters are notorious for causing all kinds of issues when used in any sort of advanced setup, apart from temporary single disk usage.