Looks like Three doesn’t block it…
Looks like Three doesn’t block it…
Statping-ng has had some updates beyond the base.
Snorkeling is probably your best choice as it did show latency overall and not just up/down.
Write your own selinux module with audit2allow.
I’m not at work so I can’t find the guides I use but this looks similar https://danwalsh.livejournal.com/24750.html
Myself over NFS can have serious latency issues. Some software can’t correctly file lock over NFS too which will cause write latency or just full blown errors.
iSCSI drops however can be really really bad and cause full filesystem corruption. Also backing up iSCSI volumes can be tricky. Software will likely work better and feel happy however and underlying issues may be masked until they’re unfixable. (I had an iSCSI volume attached to vmware silently corrupt for months before it failed and lost the data even though all scrubs/checksums were good until the very least moment).
You can make your situations with with either technology, both are just as correct. Would get a touch more throughput on iSCSI simply down to the write confirmation being drive based and not filesystem locks / os based.
YMMV
I’ve had issues with this too and reverted back to rooted docker. I even tried podman and system NFS mounts that it binds too with varying issues.
It looks like you can’t actually do this with podman for varying reasons.
Power line adaptors
T1 sites typically have replicas which usually get backed up on the experiment data to work with, T2 and T3 sites then get more local working copies that dont backup and are only kept as long as they need (as long as the delete cycle works).
A small T3 is likely around 1PB of storage.
DL380 G9. Those bioses don’t support booting from PCIe at all.
They actually do but it can only be a HPE supported BootROM… anything non-HPE is ignored (weirdly, some Intel and Broadcom cards PXE boot without the HPE firmware but not all).
Most of these boards have internal USB and internal SD slots which you can boot from with any media, intact HPE sell a USB SD card raid adaptor for the usb slot. So I would recommend using SD card for this…
Ports 80 and 443.
The cli is easy and you could just Cron (scheduled task) a bunch of commands to open the firewall, renew cert and close the firewall. It’s how I do it for some internal systems.
I’m not sure about anything you’re running but I would look into certbot.
Either using the basic web plugin or DNS plugin. Nginx would be simpler, you’d just have to open your web ports on certificate generation to pass the challenge.
I know some proxy tools have let’s encrypt support, such as traefik.
Surely a 1:1 emulator would just run DRM as expected and it would never know… Feels like it may stop day1 piracy via emulators but anything beyond I’m sure would be patched.
You also have Teams for Linux which is compatible with Microsoft Teams (Work)but no longer supported. It however isn’t compatible with Microsoft Teams (Personal) but if you try to use Microsoft Teams on Linux for personal use, it tells you to install the now non-existant Teams for Linux that only works with Microsoft Teams (Work).
There’s also two different versions of logging out in Teams for Linux, Logout and Log Out. Both of which log you out but only one lets you log in as a different user.
Don’t get me started with the Microsoft Teams PWA that is now the “way to use Teams on Linux” but isn’t the Teams PWA that installs if you try the normal way…
All hail Microsoft Teams! At least I can stream the games I’m playing to my work meetings so people know I’m skiving.
It’s for work and that’s all…
Technically it is, as someone else mentioned, text is copied on federation, this means is you as an admin need to actively moderate instances you federate with that may cause you issues in a legal standpoint whether correct or not. Facebook etc have rights that means you’re not liable for user content, you as an individual instance admin however would need to fight for those rights.
Sure it’s a rubbish thing they did but I also understand it completely.
SQLite doesn’t like NFS, the file locking isn’t stable/fast enough so any latency in the storage can cause data loss, corruption or just slow things down.
However SQLite to MySQL is relatively peanuts, Postgres less so…
Still it’s a nice move for those that don’t run containers on a single host with local filesystems.
Try shifting/cashing legitimate XMR is very hard now.
Federation more or less means the info is copied, so from a dcma standpoint the instance is still liable. If content is deleted from the main instance, it doesn’t always delet from a federated one.
This would de different if you could proxy instead of copy the data on federation.
This is the best answer.
Use the Lutris website to find the game and install script, that should bypass the login check and let you bring your own exe.
Importantly and how it’s different to FF is that it boots the content without calling the disk reset and if you keep the disk button wedged then that reset never triggers, so that copy protection isn’t called, where as FF basically triggers a drive reset which is why you couldn’t use that.