I know that separate switch manufactures have different control programs/automation for their own devices. Cisco has catalyst center, HP has Aruba Central.
If the switch has SSH access, Ansible maybe?
I know that separate switch manufactures have different control programs/automation for their own devices. Cisco has catalyst center, HP has Aruba Central.
If the switch has SSH access, Ansible maybe?
I don’t think that the P420 is supported on the newer microservers, I remember from HPs manual, the only listed raid controller was the p408i-p. Doesn’t mean that the older ones aren’t supported, but HP doesn’t officially support them
A lot of people like the unix layout, as well.
As a Linux admin, I appearance that alot
It was originally based on the Sun 5 keyboard layout and now, I can barely function on any other keyboard
How TF are y’all getting 25Gbps when we can barely get 1Gbps symetrical in the UK
Better to have it and not need it, than need it and not have it
I’d rather have power in case of an emergency than be in the dark
Don’t backup the actual container, backup the volumes and the docker-compose file
I’m going to catch some heat for this, but I personally can’t stand Ubuntu. I don’t know what is it about the system or envrionment but it just rubs me the wrong way. Fine with Debian but Ubuntu just sits wrong with me
I’m sure everything I am currently running is safe, but I have that fear also, ever since one of the PSUs in one of my R320’s died and smoke started poring out the back (blown cap I think) - hasn’t happened since, but it’s one of the things I worry about
no, they burned the briges with removing the home/lab licence (for no reason other than fuck you), plus the way they’ve been treating the community and the shitty excuse they gave in the first place is frankly, not good enough.
I’ll keep using CE and see what happens there, but hopefully someone can make a pfsense to opnsense converter and I can move over to opnsense if CE dies
in my docker setup, I have everything under /home/docker/ and have all those volumes shared to their specific container - that way, when you’re backing up, you only need to backup the volume and docker-compose file
As for git, I’d keep your docker-compose files in git and have your volumes in storage as the compose files are the most likely to be modified and it’s good to have version control
yea, just ignore them, no one major uses them & even if you do everything right, they still blacklist you, it’s such a scam and the guy running it is a major dick nozzle
https://uceprotect.wtf/