On 29/2/20 11:31 pm, Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 10:17 AM Daniel Frey wrote:
>> Yes, I'm aware linux does VLANs... I set up netifrc to do this (I
>> already have some "smart" switches set up - not full layer 3.) I thought
>> about running containers but if I ever have to do som
On 29/02/2020 17:40, james wrote:
is if the US government returns to the fundamental christian value
system, that made our country great. Greed, un-bridled, is changing
the quality of our lives, regardless of your personal belief systems.
Our country? I think you mean YOUR country. And seen f
On 2/29/20 4:44 AM, Wols Lists wrote:
On 26/02/20 03:10, james wrote:
I'm just not convinced that our USA government continuing to "sell
bandwidth rights", is constitutional?
Problem is, if bandwidth is "opened to all" the reality in the past
would have been a free-for-all leading to a major t
--
Josh
randomendu...@fastmail.com
On Sat, Feb 29, 2020, at 19:52, gentoo-user+h...@lists.gentoo.org wrote:
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--
Josh
randomendu...@fastmail.com
On Sat, Feb 29, 2020, at 19:41, gentoo-user+h...@lists.gentoo.org wrote:
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Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 9:49 AM Dale wrote:
>> I have noticed the OOM killing the wrong thing as well. In a way, how
>> does it know what it should kill really??? After all, the process using
>> the most memory may not be the problem but another one, or more, could.
>> I gu
On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 9:49 AM Dale wrote:
>
> I have noticed the OOM killing the wrong thing as well. In a way, how
> does it know what it should kill really??? After all, the process using
> the most memory may not be the problem but another one, or more, could.
> I guess in most cases the on
On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 10:17 AM Daniel Frey wrote:
>
> Yes, I'm aware linux does VLANs... I set up netifrc to do this (I
> already have some "smart" switches set up - not full layer 3.) I thought
> about running containers but if I ever have to do something like
> emergency maintenance on my serv
On 2/28/20 5:38 PM, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Fri, Feb 28, 2020 at 8:11 PM Daniel Frey wrote:
Thanks for the detail, I've just ordered an RPi4B to mess around with.
It would be helpful to move DNS etc off my home server as I'm trying to
separate everything into VLANs.
Keep in mind that Linux s
Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 9:13 AM Dale wrote:
>> Runaway processes is one reason I expanded my memory to 32GBs. It gives
>> me more wiggle room for portage to be on tmpfs.
>>
> That is my other issue. 99% of the time the OOM killer is preferred
> when this happens versus havin
On Saturday, 29 February 2020 14:30:26 GMT Robert Bridge wrote:
> > On 29 Feb 2020, at 13:57, Rich Freeman wrote:
> >
> > Maybe something has changed in the last few years and swap is actually
> > useful, but I'm skeptical. I always tend to end up with GB of free
> > RAM and a churning hard dri
> On 29 Feb 2020, at 13:57, Rich Freeman wrote:
>
> Maybe something has changed in the last few years and swap is actually
> useful, but I'm skeptical. I always tend to end up with GB of free
> RAM and a churning hard drive when I enable it. On SSD I'm sure it
> will perform better, but then
On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 9:13 AM Dale wrote:
>
> Runaway processes is one reason I expanded my memory to 32GBs. It gives
> me more wiggle room for portage to be on tmpfs.
>
That is my other issue. 99% of the time the OOM killer is preferred
when this happens versus having the system just grind to
Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 4:33 AM Wols Lists wrote:
>> I just have a massive swap space, and /var/tmp/portage is a tmpfs. So
>> everything gets a fast tmpfs build, and it spills into swap as required
>> (hopefully almost never).
>>
> I can articulate a bunch of reasons that on
On Sat, Feb 29, 2020 at 4:33 AM Wols Lists wrote:
>
> I just have a massive swap space, and /var/tmp/portage is a tmpfs. So
> everything gets a fast tmpfs build, and it spills into swap as required
> (hopefully almost never).
>
I can articulate a bunch of reasons that on paper say that this is th
On 26/02/20 03:10, james wrote:
> I'm just not convinced that our USA government continuing to "sell
> bandwidth rights", is constitutional?
Problem is, if bandwidth is "opened to all" the reality in the past
would have been a free-for-all leading to a major tragedy of the
commons. Much like we're
On 24/02/20 08:30, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Sun, 23 Feb 2020 18:59:27 -0800, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
>
>> In a desperate act to satisfy the ever increasing build space
>> requirements for firefox and its kin, I'd symlinked /var/tmp/portage to
>> a subdirectory of /usr/portage. And webrsync does "rs
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