On 03/15/18 12:24, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Le 15/03/2018 à 06:01, David Christensen a écrit :
2. Instead of RAID1, use a checksumming file system (btrfs), take
images periodically, put key configuration files into a version
control system, and backup data daily. This is what I do for all my
s
Le 15/03/2018 à 06:01, David Christensen a écrit :
I also thought about two USB flash drives and RAID:
1. Instead of RAID0, get a PATA or SATA SSD (or DOM). Used drives can
be found on eBay for cheap, especially SATA I or II.
RAID 0 with USB flash drives ? You like to live dangerously.
2.
On Thu, 2018-03-15 at 19:33 +1300, Richard Hector wrote:
> On 15/03/18 18:01, David Christensen wrote:
> > That said, why do you have storage in a thin client? I thought the idea
> > is to boot the clients over the network, run from RAM, and have the
> > server do most of the work (?).
>
> They w
On 15/03/18 18:01, David Christensen wrote:
> That said, why do you have storage in a thin client? I thought the idea
> is to boot the clients over the network, run from RAM, and have the
> server do most of the work (?).
They were intended as thin clients - I'm not using them as such. I just
use
On 03/14/18 20:17, Richard Hector wrote:
On 15/03/18 13:11, David Christensen wrote:
On 03/14/18 00:28, Richard Hector wrote:
On 14/03/18 15:35, David Christensen wrote:
On 03/13/18 17:00, Richard Hector wrote:
Apologies for the diversion - does anyone know if there are USB flash
drives that
On 15/03/18 13:11, David Christensen wrote:
> On 03/14/18 00:28, Richard Hector wrote:
>> On 14/03/18 15:35, David Christensen wrote:
>>> On 03/13/18 17:00, Richard Hector wrote:
Apologies for the diversion - does anyone know if there are USB flash
drives that _are_ built for full-time us
On 03/14/18 00:28, Richard Hector wrote:
On 14/03/18 15:35, David Christensen wrote:
On 03/13/18 17:00, Richard Hector wrote:
Apologies for the diversion - does anyone know if there are USB flash
drives that _are_ built for full-time use, as a system disk?
I've got some old thin clients that c
On 14/03/18 15:35, David Christensen wrote:
> On 03/13/18 17:00, Richard Hector wrote:
>> Apologies for the diversion - does anyone know if there are USB flash
>> drives that _are_ built for full-time use, as a system disk?
>>
>> I've got some old thin clients that could do with storage upgrades th
I've found debian to be quit handy on flash store.
On Tue, Mar 13, 2018 at 10:35 PM, David Christensen <
dpchr...@holgerdanske.com> wrote:
> On 03/13/18 17:00, Richard Hector wrote:
>
>> Apologies for the diversion - does anyone know if there are USB flash
>> drives that _are_ built for full-tim
On 03/13/18 17:00, Richard Hector wrote:
Apologies for the diversion - does anyone know if there are USB flash
drives that _are_ built for full-time use, as a system disk?
I've got some old thin clients that could do with storage upgrades that
are a bit easier to come by than the weird (PATA?) f
On 14/03/18 09:58, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> USB drives and SD cards are very different from SSDs. You cannot use
> them in the same way. AFAIK, USB drives and SD cards do not support
> TRIM/discard.
Apologies for the diversion - does anyone know if there are USB flash
drives that _are_ built for f
Le 13/03/2018 à 18:26, pe...@easthope.ca a écrit :
https://wiki.debian.org/RunningOnFlash has some discussion and tips
about basing the system in a flash store.
USB drives and SD cards are very different from SSDs. You cannot use
them in the same way. AFAIK, USB drives and SD cards do not sup
Hi,
https://wiki.debian.org/RunningOnFlash has some discussion and tips
about basing the system in a flash store. Also the introduction of
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ext2 states "ext2 is still the
filesystem of choice for flash-based storage media ... because its
lack of a journal increase
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