It’s just what it means in this specific context.
They’re not running directly on the host, with directly meaning directly.
If you go by definition, I agree with you, but the definition is not always the thing to go off of.
It’s just what it means in this specific context.
They’re not running directly on the host, with directly meaning directly.
If you go by definition, I agree with you, but the definition is not always the thing to go off of.
Have you read my comment? It’s about where the packages and services are installed.
In this case, they’re installed in the container, not on the host
Not in this context. Bare metal means all packages and services installed and running directly on the host, not through docker/lxc/vms
Yarr!
They literally say “it doesn’t matter” if you leave it open, but that you might come across issues if you don’t
It’s not.
If you want to learn zfs a bit better though, you can just stick with Proxmox. It supports it, you just don’t get the nice UI that TrueNAS provides, meaning you’ve got to configure everything manually, through config files and the terminal.
Just fyi - running TrueNAS with zfs as a VM under Proxmox is a recipe for disaster, as me how I know.
Zfs needs direct drive access, with VMs, the hypervisor virtualizes the adapter which is then passed through, which can mess things up.
What you’d need to do is buy a sata/sas card and pass the whole card through, then you can use a vm.
Haven’t come across any xml during my deployment so far
Yeah, whoever thought that sd cards were a good idea for anything even resembling operating systems is a dum dum
Oh for sure, it’s just a loot more expensive
They’re taking about a NAS though?
The issue is, you can optimize a software encoders continually, you can use tricks for better quality etc.
A hardware encoder is just that - hardware. As soon as it’s burned to the silicon, you’re not making any (at least substantial) changes to it. You might also be limited by what you can actually do directly in hardware without using too much die space.
Tldr.: no, you won’t get the same result
The R5 is amazing, though yeah the 5.25" bays are kinda a waste.
I found a thingy though that fits into the bay and houses 6 2.5" SSDs, it’s pretty cool!
One thing I haven’t seen mentioned here, zfs can be quite finicky with some sata cards, especially raid cards.
I suggest you connect the hard drives to the motherboard directly and test again.
I noticed it tries to start listening on 192.168.1.100, don’t see a “network: host” in the compose file, don’t think it should have access to that IP address.
Not sure how to explore that further but might put you on the right path
Have you tried turning the server off and then on again?
HDDs have a longer lifespan?
Words evolve, and sometimes, they gain new meanings. “Bare metal” is not a scientific terms, and so it can be bent depending on the context.
You can either accept that or not, it doesn’t change the fact that that’s what it now can mean.