spaghetti_carbanana

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[–] [email protected] 3 points 4 months ago

This is the method I use in your scenario, OP. You can use Folder2iso to get the files in that you need. If the OS has official VMware tools, you can also mount the VMware Tools ISO straight from workstation into the VM and this will give you the clipboard service so you can copy and paste files between the host and VM, if this scenario is permitted within your isolation needs.

Otherwise, go the ISO route. You just can't bring stuff out of the VM back to the host is all.

[–] [email protected] 5 points 4 months ago (2 children)

The two aren't even in the same league. I'm a big open source advocate don't get me wrong, but VirtualBox is horrible to use and its not what OP asked.

[–] [email protected] 11 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Its very much still needed and heavily utilised in the enterprise world. Volume size is usually the lowest priority when it comes to arrays, redundancy and IOPS (the amount of concurrent transactions to the storage) is typically the priority. The exception here would be backup and archive storage, where IOPS is less important and volume size is more important.

As far as replacing sectors goes, I've never heard of this and I might just be ignorant on the subject but as far as I know you can't "replace" a bad sector. Only mark it as bad and not use it, and whatever was there before is gone. This has existed since HDD days. This is also why we use RAID - parity across disks to protect data.

Generally production storage will be in RAID-10, and backup/archive storage in RAID-6 or in some cases RAID-60 but I'm personally not a fan.

You also would consider how many disks are in the volume because there is a sweet spot. Too many disks = higher likelihood of total array failure due to simultaneous disk failures and more data loss in the event it does, but too few disks and you won't have good redundancy, capacity or performance either (depending on RAID level).

The biggest change I see in RAID these days is moving away from hardware RAID cards and into software-based solutions like Microsoft Storage Spaces, md, ZFS and similar. These all have their own way of doing things and some can even synchronise the data with other hosts.

Hope this helps!

[–] [email protected] 5 points 5 months ago (1 children)

What sort of fish?

[–] [email protected] 16 points 5 months ago

Where my download accelerator plus gang at

[–] [email protected] 17 points 5 months ago

Corporate offices might make good housing, malls could be useful for community services. Medical centres, libraries, hackerspaces, community courses (volunteer led), open up skylights in some of the old stores and build greenhouses for community gardens, temporary accommodation, kitchens for homeless people (and other services), market stall spaces and short term storefronts for small businesses so people can have a fair go at selling their stuff without being locked into years-long contracts. So many good ideas in this thread!

[–] [email protected] 19 points 5 months ago

What did they just fucking say

(Jk ofc)

[–] [email protected] 5 points 5 months ago (5 children)

Is there a faster way to switch profile than going into the settings? Sounds like you've got a much better way than what I've been doing

[–] [email protected] 1 points 5 months ago

There are restaurants that sell green ant ice cream as well, I'm told it's quite nice.

[–] [email protected] 3 points 5 months ago

Putting his whole Sisyphussy into it

 

How do you folks prefer to consume how-to’s and walkthroughs?

I’m starting to document how-to guides for people passionate about IT (who maybe are a little bit too into it) that like to run enterprise-grade systems at home.

Basically, I’m publicising my documentation for setting up systems and the weird problems I hit that may have taken me days or weeks to solve. Often this information isn’t able to be searched online or has little to no vendor documentation on how to solve it. Basically, I’m hoping my suffering means someone else might not have to if I share this stuff.

At this stage I’m putting everything into a blog, but I know how annoying it is to see posts on platforms like Lemmy that are a hyperlink and a bare post. So how would you prefer to see it?

I’ve considered a few options, each with negatives and positives but largely it distils to:

  1. Don’t overthink it, just post the link and if people don’t want to click it they won’t
  2. Duplicate the content of the blog post to the lemmy post (means double-handling the edits when the post has to be updated but preserves the info in the event the blog dies)
  3. Post the link and put a high level breakdown of the guide in the lemmy post, just enough that people get the main idea and they can follow the link for more details if they choose (more work as it means writing the post essentially twice, just more condensed)

What do you folks think?

 

I’ve inherited some Xirrus XD2-240 access points and would like to use them for a lab.

They were previously enrolled in XMS Cloud but this has long since expired, though I was wondering if there’s an on-premise option that I can run? I found XMS Enterprise but it appears to require a license.

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