On Thu, 11 Dec 2014 19:33:03 -0500, Owen DeLong wrote:
In short, the only thing really truly wrong with this scenario is that
Comcast is using equipment that the subscriber should have exclusive
control over (they are renting it, so while Comcast retains ownership,
they have relinquished m
As for conversion between RAID levels; usually dump and restore are
your best bet.
Even if your controller HBA supports a RAID level migration; for a
small array hosted in
a server, dump and restore is your least risky bet for successful
execution; you
really need to dump anyways, even on a co
Disk space by uid (by group is a plus but not critical), like BSD and
EXTn. And the reason I put "inode" in quotes was to indicate that they
may not (certainly not) be called inodes but an upper limit to the
total number of files and directories, typically to stop a runaway
script or certain malic
On Thu, Dec 11, 2014 at 9:05 PM, Barry Shein wrote:
[snip]
> From my reading the closest you can get to disk space quotas in ZFS is
> by limiting on a per directory (dataset, mount) basis which is similar
> but different.
This is the normal type of quota within ZFS. it is applied to a
dataset a
Seriously, I mean the availability of WiFi coming from your house clearly
trumps trespassing laws.
On Dec 11, 2014 8:16 PM, "Matthew Kaufman" wrote:
> Lots of other good reasons to oppose this (Comcast customers parking in
> your driveway to get the service, etc.)
>
> What would you tell AT&T if
In this case, they do own the modems. I am not aware of any case where
they do this to customer owned gear.
On Dec 11, 2014 8:41 PM, "Ricky Beam" wrote:
> On Thu, 11 Dec 2014 19:33:03 -0500, Owen DeLong wrote:
>
> In short, the only thing really truly wrong with this scenario is that
>> Comcas
On Thu, 11 Dec 2014, Jimmy Hess wrote:
I am not 100% certain that this is available under the BSD implementations,
even if QUOTA is enabled in your kernel config.
In the past the BSD implementation of ZFS never seemed to be as
stable, functional, or performant as the OpenSolaris/Illumos ver
Hey guys, I am running it on freeBSD. (nas4free)
It's my understanding that when a resilver happens in a zpool, only the
data that has actually been written to the disks gets used, not the whole
array like traditional raid5 does, reading even empty blocks. I know I
should be using RAIDZ2 for this
Jason, I hope you are Livin' Good.
On a serious note.
What stops someone from going down to the center of town, launching a
little wifi SSID named xfinitywifi and collecting your customers usernames
and passwords?
Also, don't you think there is something just morally wrong with the fact
that your
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