NetApp makes storage devices, just like Dell’s DataDomain.
Looks like the ad is referring to a ST6000NM0034, a drive from Seagate. Personally, I like to stay away from that brand as far as possible.
Have had good experiences with WD.
NetApp makes storage devices, just like Dell’s DataDomain.
Looks like the ad is referring to a ST6000NM0034, a drive from Seagate. Personally, I like to stay away from that brand as far as possible.
Have had good experiences with WD.
Vlans firewall rules and something to route between the different networks.
This can all be achieved with pretty much every Linux installation.
Easydns.ca, no privacy issues. Nothing about me personally in the who’s db (.net tld)
Still testing and fiddling, but I’m using the forgejo-runner. Renovate is just another repository, with a workflow to get it started:
on:
schedule:
- cron: '5 2 * * *'
- cron: '5 14 * * *'
jobs:
build:
runs-on: docker
container:
image: renovate/renovate:37.140-full
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Run renovate
env:
PAT: ${{ secrets.PAT }}
GITHUB_COM_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.GITHUB }}
run: |
echo "Running renovate"
cd ${GITHUB_WORKSPACE}
renovate --token ${PAT}
The renovate image has been pulled by hand and the forgejo-runner will happily start the image. Both PAT and GITHUB secrets are configured as ‘action secrets’ within the renovate repository.
Besides the workflow, the repository contains renovate.json and config.js, so renovate has the correct configuration.
Absolutely!
Running local, self hosted forgejo with a few runners.
Now my code is neatly checked with pre-commit and linters, build when new tags are pushed, renovate is scheduled every 24 hours to check for new releases of stuff etc.
Just a few containers and a happy user :-)
In run a personal instance of forgejo, love it.
Everything I want regarding version control and workers. And more lightweight on the frontend side.
No HACS support out of the box. (HA as docker)
The only use for RPI is kodi and Mainsail for the printer. All of them boot from NFS, so no storage issues. Everything else is x86-64 or docker containers on those Intel/amd machines.
Thanks for this. Finamp looks really nice.