Today I’ve migrated my data from my old zfs pool to a new bigger one, the rsync of 13.5TiB took roughly 18 hours. It’s slow spinning disks storage so that’s fine.
The second and third runs of the same rsync took like 5 seconds, blazing fast.
Today I’ve migrated my data from my old zfs pool to a new bigger one, the rsync of 13.5TiB took roughly 18 hours. It’s slow spinning disks storage so that’s fine.
The second and third runs of the same rsync took like 5 seconds, blazing fast.
Now the dev doesn’t need to comment this part of the code, saves him time.
Yes, e.g. outlook replaces links in mails so they can scan the site first. Also some virusscanners offer nail protection, checking the site that’s linked to first, before allowing the mail to end up in the user’s mail client.
Thats why you never take actions on a GET request, but require a form with button for the user to do a POST.
Why then not just use ZFS or BTRFS? Way less overhead.
Ceph’s main advantage is the distribution of storage over multiple nodes, which you’re not planning on doing?
How do you know this?
Besides that, this is just a list providing burner email addresses. Adding Outlook to this list makes sense. If sites are using this list as a blocklist that would cause issues, forcing them to not use this as blocklist anymore.
Yes, that’s why I proposed to add Outlook to the list too?
Mozilla provides a similar service I believe?
I don’t think removing protonmail is the correct solution.
This is a list of email providers that facilitate temporary email addresses. So adding outlook and Apple to that list makea more sense to me?
Hmm couldn’t get past the second round… Not that lucky.
I think your idea is pretty much correct. One step that might be missing is updating your boot loader to boot into the correct partition, depending on your configuration.
That’s probably the issue, crontab has another workdir, so calling the script with a relative path won’t work.
Just use the full path to the script, something like /home/username/folder/directory/backup.sh
and it’ll probably just work.
This is so cool! Especially for reviving old Mini’s.
Why do you still want to extract the encrypted data? Do you still have the encryption key somehow? Else even if you desolder the storage, manage to dump the raw bits, you won’t be able to get anything useful from it.