Honestly, unless you can spend more $, one or two USB disks for the mini pc is probably your only choice.
Honestly, unless you can spend more $, one or two USB disks for the mini pc is probably your only choice.
I’m surprised no one mentioned ansible yet. It’s meant for this (and more).
By ssh keys I assume you’re talking about authorized_keys, not private keys. I agree with other posters that private keys should not be synced, just generate new ones and add them to the relevant servers authorized_keys with ansible.
no, its personal preference
I’m using organizr, it embeds your apps in tabs/iframes and allows you to configure them in the UI.
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It would not be for me, but they just sent me this chat message which is concerning:
We are currently seeing unexpected growth across Dropbox Advanced, and as a result are currently only able to grant 1 TB per month per team. We understand this may be frustrating and are working to resolve this for our customers.
thank you, just subsribed
you need to improve your search skills:
It matters only if “the docker hosts external IP” your dns resolves is a public IP. In that case packets travel to the router which needs to map/send them back to the docker hosts LAN IP (NAT-Reflection). With cgnat this would need to be enabled on the carrier side, where you set up the port forwarding. If that’s not possible, split-DNS may be an alternative.
If “the docker hosts external IP” is actually your docker hosts LAN IP, all of that is irrelevant. Split-DNS would accomplish that.
Are you hosting behind NAT / at home? If so, you may need to enable NAT reflection on your router.
If this fits your budget (you still need the actuals disks…) it’s not a bad choice. Speed should be sufficient for HDDs, as it’s USB 3.
As the other poster suggested, don’t use its hardware raid. Use it as a JBOD and configure the raid in Linux with ZFS or similar.
And never forget: RAID is not a backup! You still need to do regular backups, at least for important data.