Well I learned something new today… maybe its time to plan a migration
Well I learned something new today… maybe its time to plan a migration
I recently start using Observium for some basic monitoring. I’m happy so far.
I let my production systems (1x NAS/1x Proxmox Host) on 24/7 and shut down test systems or my onside backup. I do it mainly to save some power and also noise, because all servers are in my office room. I would prefere some low power/noise machines that can keep running 24/7 and if you really need some horse power because you would want to test something or play around, you can power it on and shut down whenever you want.
But I dont use any UPS, because the power grid is very stable where I live but I have snapshots every hour or so. I can live with an hour of data loss if shit hits the fan.
Gaming is not the main priority on a laptop but I keep it in mind, thanks!
True! I’m currently on Mint but want to try out KDE. So I probably will have a look at Fedora when I have the free time to do so.
Inside the bottom tray you have two cutouts in order to put two 2.5" HDDs/SSDs in
I’ve had the same question when I wanted to seperate my homelab network from my normal network that is also used by my girlfriend.
I tested a MikroTik router from a friend, but it was too deep for me. Ubiquity was too expensive since I was on a budget, so I got a TP-Link Omada Router and PoE Switch, which has a more user friendly UI than MikroTik. Maybe not as nice as Ubiquity but good enough for my needs and some more features than my ISP router.
Around 100 Watts for
But everything with gigabit speed. Doesnt need more at home
From what I have read on the FAQ they already did a hard fork from Gitea version 1.21.11 on, which was earlier this year
https://forgejo.org/faq/#im-sold-are-migrations-from-gitea-to-forgejo-possible