bennysp

joined 1 year ago
[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 4 points 10 months ago

I came to get away from the main stream socials.

You still can. Just block threads.net instance in things like Mastodon and Lemmy.

I came to minimise my farmed data footprint.

Your data is public in fediverse. They can scrape even right as we speak.

I would need someone to confirm this, but I have heard that if you block, then it prevents their instance from scraping your data because they shouldn't receive your content if they are blocked, but it doesn't change the public data being available by other means anyways.

I came to find other like minded people.

Follow hashtags and communities that are your interest. Block users and/or instances you would rather not see or be part of. Also, you can find an instance that fits your values that is already blocking instances you disagree with.

I am mostly indifferent of Threads joining at this time, but those that are not in favor, there are options.

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 1 points 10 months ago

I don't have experience with the NUC for my own homelab and kubernetes, but the main things I will say with any kubernetes is the RAM. I have 4 servers on VMware (just to get experience there) and then have Rancher (like Openshift) across them (both a management server and then a 3 VM cluster). Every resource is important, but the RAM is what was eaten up before anything else for me. I have Lenovo Tiny m910q (x 4) with 64GB and that allows me a full on cluster and then some with other VMs too.

Sounds like you made a good choice going with a NUC and 64GB ram. You just may find you want to add another or two depending how much you go beyond just experimenting with k8s and using it to host most of your homelab services.

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 2 points 11 months ago

Got it. I know people have used the USB SSD for rpi4 too, which is probably fine, but if you want the new quicker route. pcie might be worth getting into... https://www.tomshardware.com/news/hatdrive-m2-hat-for-raspberry-pi-5

A lot of NAS that you buy now have "containers" where you can side load apps like plex or jellyfin for your you videos vs just installing on the main rpi OS.

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 2 points 11 months ago (2 children)

Do you plan on doing anything special with the NAS (like containers) or just straight up NAS storage services?

If you are doing containers, I would probably say get the 8GB and get the 5 and use for NAS.

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 1 points 11 months ago

Actually, it looks like there is a setting to avoid the warning all together: https://www.raspberrypi.com/documentation/computers/raspberry-pi-5.html#usb-boot-and-power-supplies

 

If you are like me and are currently waiting for your 5V 5A power supply and you have no display, you can still boot to USB by pushing the power button when the Raspberry Pi goes "solid green". What you are not seeing without a display is the warning about your power.

This allowed me to boot up to Raspberry OS Lite (64 bit) with no issues.

The referenced link does a good job showing you how to boot.

 

OpenTF fork (prepare for alpha) is now available at the GH Repository here:

https://github.com/opentffoundation/opentf

Take a look at the issues tab to see some of the live RFCs and discussions happening. Lots of things like the use of tf in the binary/name and bring their own registry.

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Thanks for that feedback. I also understand and have read that you are basically taking a bunch of tech that is it’s own tech in it’s own and then openstack glued it together (like you are stating).

I also see that there are many different projects in how you can deploy this too. Some say “don’t use ____ if you want multi node” and some are like “this _____ is the easiest to run”. Did you just use whatever Openstack suggested to install or did you use one of these other wrapper projects that helped too? I understand that some of this may have changed from 6 years ago though.

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

Don't "need" to, no. I can put it on top, so that is what I planned to do to POC, but if I like it, I would rather not have software/resources taken up on top of resources. But I am asking if anyone has already done this either direction and their experience.

 

Currently, I am have a VMware vCenter 7 4 node cluster. These are the Lenovo m920q machines with 64GB RAM each. I also have a Synology 4 Disk NAS too.

I deploy standard VMs and Rancher k8s clusters and use full automation (mainly Terraform) to build everything.

Why VMware? Mainly to get experience on it.

Why am I interested in OpenStack? Mainly because I have used it before and really enjoyed that experience as it feels more like a true cloud environment.

So, my question is this.... Has anyone switched one way or the other? Were you glad at switching or do you regret it?

If you did switch, what is a good way to setup multi node OpenStack? I see people recommend at least one separate controller vs the compute nodes?

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Yeah, but also remember that if there is one thing history taught us, it is that a non popular voted president can win still. Many of us were in disbelief when it happened with this guy.

Also, don’t underestimate the fact that people may disagree with Trump, but they only have to disagree/hate Biden more in order to vote for this guy.

So yes, I do agree that his polls may be increasing or rather, I never underestimate that they could be.

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 1 points 1 year ago

This is great. Then all the people complaining that lemmy.world is "too big" can now be appeased with others leaving lemmy.world. Glad to see the community solve each other's problems organically! :)

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 42 points 1 year ago

Thank you for the update. Good work.

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

So, I did this by booting to USB. Obviously I cannot just performance really, but I did even manage to install Valheim and run it from the USB.Some things worked out of box and some did not. I have and Asus Zephyr 15” dual screen and there seems to be a set of drivers and interface for that, but I didn’t go that far. Screen seemed to work, sound wouldn’t adjust , got keyboard lights working and etc.

Overall, it is better than what I remember. I think with more effort, might be able to get it all working but I am not currently patient enough to really see it through. We will see!

[–] bennysp@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

Not a bad idea. I might do this on my laptop (I have a desktop too for main gaming). My laptop has a dual screen too, so if I try this, I will report back on the experience.

 

Hi all,

I am trying to create a simple RSS-to-post bot. I am using IFTTT to do this. Anyways, I have had only mild success with the existing documentation and I am hoping you can help.

I am able to successfully login via Postman app with below URL and supplied JSON:

https://lemmy.world/api/v3/user/login

{
    "username_or_email": "bennysp",
    "password": "[REDACTED]",
    "totp_2fa_token": "[REDACTED]"
}

The problem is that I cannot find api documentation that seems to match curl/url responses using the auth token. I have stumbled my way through finding things like community and supplying an id via param, but I am simply guessing.

Example: (assumes you have jq installed)
curl -k -X GET https://lemmy.world/api/v3/community?id=23677 | jq .

I have done something like this on Mastodon pretty easily because I can get a token and just pass that as a header to the Webhook/curl.

Any help is appreciated.

 

This is homemade biryani that uses Bombay Biryani mix with ground turkey and many other spices too. It has a nice spice kick to it. I don't have the recipe handy right now, as I had to combine 2-3 recipes to make this version.

1
Bombay Biryani (i.imgur.com)
submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by bennysp@lemmy.world to c/foodporn@lemmy.ml
 

This is homemade biryani that uses ground turkey using Bombay Biryani mix (along with many other spices). It has a nice spicy kick to it. I don't have the recipe handy, because I need to remake this and combine 2-3 recipes to make this version.

 

Is there anyway to have R2modman run along side a Valheim docker container? Trying to find a way to make it easier for folks that are not as technical to run their mods on a server.
The situation currently is running docker on Windows and I have them running R2modman on windows and exporting/copying the r2modman profile data directory to the data directory used in the docker container and then restarting the docker container.
I had the user try to change the profile directory over to the docker data directory to directly write to it, but it gave an error that there was data already there, so I thought that might be a bad idea.

 
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