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Joined 2 years ago
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Cake day: June 14th, 2023

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  • That would be painful for GNU (GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for GNU’s Not Unix, where the first part stands for…



  • It’s probably still IPv6 related. If you use something like Network Analyzer on your phone while only connected to the mobile network you may find that it only shows an IPv6 address and DNS server, no IPv4 config. That could explain the difference. Particularly if you were using the maximum typically permissible MTU. Your provider might also be doing some 6to4 tunneling somewhere that adds overhead and causes size problems.





  • To start - moving services from bare metal to rootless Podman containers running via quadlets. It’s something I have had in mind for a while but keep second guessing the distro choice. Long-ish release cadence, systemd-networkd and a recent Podman version in the native repos, well supported, and not Ubuntu.

    So far openSUSE Leap seems like the winner. A testing machine is up to install everything, write some deployment scripts, and decide on a storage layout and partitioning scheme.

    If anyone has another distro to recommend that checks these boxes let me know!

    I like rolling release for the desktop, but only want critical patches in any given month for this server, and a major upgrade no more than every 3-4 years. Or an immutable server distro. But it doesn’t seem like networkd is an option for the ones I’ve looked at (Fedora CoreOS, openSUSE MicroOS), and I am not sure if I want to figure out Ignition/Combustion right now.

    Next project - VLANs on Mikrotik.

    OP - Navepoint makes good racks for reasonable money. I have a Pro series 9u from them and it went together without any problems. It’s on the wall with a pretty big ups in it.