Is it https://tosdr.org/ ?
There’s also https://privacyspy.org/
Is it https://tosdr.org/ ?
There’s also https://privacyspy.org/
I just checked myself and it’s card1 too, now I am curious why it’s not card0. 🤷
I believe it’s cat /sys/class/drm/card0/device/pp_power_profile_mode
.
There’s also the power_dpm_force_performance_level
.
As a small homelabber I agree with this. I started with a baremetal and using Docker, and switched to Proxmox, and now over to Incus, actually currently I am using Debian with cockpit + cockpit-machines. I do like Incus, I keep hopping back and forth between cockpit, I need to settle on one.
Yeah, Debian has older firmware found in the firmware-amd-graphics
package which doesn’t include the firmware. You’ll need to download it from https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/firmware/linux-firmware.git/ I believe anything from linux-firmware-20231030 and newer should work.
20231030 tag: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/firmware/linux-firmware.git/tree/amdgpu?h=20231030 or newest(20240410) tag: https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/firmware/linux-firmware.git/tree/amdgpu?h=20240410
These files need to be placed in /lib/firmware/amdgpu/
It’s a relatively low performance hit and it benefits me when having to replace a failing/old disk. I can just toss the drive without having to erase the data first, that is as long as the key is a secure length.
Quickly skimming the readme, it states:
- OAuth token spoofing: To circumvent rate limits imposed by Reddit, OAuth token spoofing is used to mimick the most common iOS and Android clients. While spoofing both iOS and Android clients was explored, only the Android client was chosen due to content restrictions when using an anonymous iOS client.
- Token refreshing: The authentication token is refreshed every 24 hours, emulating the behavior of the official Android app.
- HTTP header mimicking: Efforts are made to send along as many of the official app’s headers as possible to reduce the likelihood of Reddit’s crackdown on Redlib’s requests.
Quad9 doesn’t report it as being blocked. https://quad9.net/result?url=catbox.moe
You can block instances. Go to settings, blocks, in block instance section search for the instance that you want to block.
grass
is on the AUR… https://aur.archlinux.org/packages/grass
Not that it helps but the CEO claims they forgive for this type of attack/event. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39521986
Netlify CEO here.
Our support team has reached out to the user from the thread to let them know they’re not getting charged for this.
It’s currently our policy to not shut down free sites during traffic spikes that doesn’t match attack patterns, but instead forgiving any bills from legitimate mistakes after the fact.
Apologies that this didn’t come through in the initial support reply.
And later they were asked if they would have responded if it didn’t go viral. https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=39522029
Question:
There are only two questions everyone have:
Would Netlify forgive the bill if this didn’t go viral?
How do you plan to address this issue so that it never happens again?
Everyone here knew someone from Netlify would come and say OP wouldn’t have to pay. That was a given. Now we want to know the important answers.
Answer by CEO:
Yes. We’ve forgiven lots and lots of bills over the last 9 years and they haven’t gone viral
While I’ve always favored erring towards keeping people’s sites up we are currently working on changing the default behavior to never let free sites incur overages
~53 W
Server:
Mini PC: Beelink S12 N95
8 port unmanaged TP Link switch
I would like to expand my storage, however I don’t have any available SATA ports and I believe adding an HBA would increase the idle draw about 8 W. I might just upgrade the SSDs and split the storage between the HDDs and SSDs.
I recently switched from Proxmox to Debian Bookworm with Incus(LXD fork) as my primary setup, it’s been a pleasant experience. I also like the idea of using something like Cockpit to manage VMs though haven’t come to a need yet for a VM over a container. I’ll also point out that Incus can handle VMs as well.
Stéphane Graber, Project leader of Linux Containers is also on the fediverse and responds to questions often.
That’s a good recommendation, thanks!
There’s even an RSS feed for that page: https://openwrt.org/feed.php?mode=list&ns=advisory
You’re welcome! Also thanks for asking this question, I hadn’t seen ShotShare before, it looks useful.
No, since you are using the bind mount, you do not need to use the volume.
I just did another test.
You should be able to create the directories manually. I cheated by simply cloning the repo and copying them to the bind mount location like so. You can use the bind mount method like you wanted.
git clone https://github.com/mdshack/shotshare
cp -r shotshare/storage/* /srv/dev-disk-by-uuid-7fe66601-5ca0-4c09-bc13-a015025fe53a/Files/Shotshare/shotshare_data/
chown 82:82 -R /srv/dev-disk-by-uuid-7fe66601-5ca0-4c09-bc13-a015025fe53a/Files/Shotshare/shotshare_data
It will be stored in /var/lib/docker/volumes
, you can find the exact location by inspecting the volume. Use docker volume ls
to list the volumes, and do docker volume inspect <volume_name>
replacing <volume_name> with the one from the list. Look for “Mountpoint”, that is the exact location. You could try copying that to bind mount location, though I can’t be sure if it will continue to work.
It looks like they are working on fixing that with this pull request.