mlfh
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mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Self-hosted Image/Video Gallery Options?English
8·15 days agoI run the immich container stack on a vm with 4GiB memory and 2 cores, with db on local disk and external libraries over smb, and it runs perfectly fine. I offload the machine learning jobs to another sometimes-on machine, sometimes, but don’t really need to unless I’m dumping thousands of new images into the external library at a time and want it all to process quickly.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Selfhosted@lemmy.world•Why are my VMs ignoring my DHCP server?English
7·16 days agoLooks like both of your vms probably have the same mac address - the 172 ip address is likely a self-assigned fallback when the dhcp server replies to the second vm that it can’t give it an address. Double-check and make sure the mac address in each vm’s proxmox network adapter settings match your pfsense dhcp reservations, and let me know if that resolves it.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
You Should Know@lemmy.world•YSK: Flo period tracking app is proven spyware! Here is what you should use instead.English
181·16 days agoPrivate until apple gets a subpoena from a prosecutor in some medieval christo-fascist red state trying to turn a miscarriage into a murder charge.
The grub command line options at the beginning of this article might help get your system booted without the memory deadlock, and then you can make further adjustments as needed: https://tierhive.com/blog/tierhive-howto/debian-13-minimal-guide-reduce-ram-to-38mb-and-disk-to-275mb
Alpine is great for exactly this kind of thing, though, and I use it often in embedded environments where resources are at a premium. Just do some good reading up on it beforehand, since can be very different if you’re used to debian and systemd.
The ongoing maintenance for this would be a bit of a pain, since you’d need to recompile every update on a separate machine with enough memory to do so, package it up into a .deb, and distribute and install it everywhere.
I do this on a little raspberry pi cluster and it works, but it’s work.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Linux@lemmy.world•Systemd v261-rc1 is out with the 'birth date field'English
45·22 days agoToo true. And good on you.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Linux@lemmy.world•Systemd v261-rc1 is out with the 'birth date field'English
154·22 days agoI mean, it’s basically an optional gecos field. That feels a bit like writing off *nix as a whole because /etc/passwd has a place to put your phone number.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Linux@lemmy.world•Systemd v261-rc1 is out with the 'birth date field'English
47·22 days agoGovernment thugs interrogating me in a Project 2027 concentration camp cell: “we know you gave someone named ‘homeassistant’, born on 1970-01-01, access to your server, now tell use where they are!”
But root can scrape that password as soon as you enter it, and has access to that encrypted data as soon as you decrypt it. That’s what I’m saying.
If you think anything on a *nix system is “safe” from root or a user that can elevate to root, you’re deluding yourself with wishful thinking.
Nothing at all is safe from the root account, or from any user that can elevate to root. Think of the root account as the system itself - the thing you’re trying to protect may be encrypted and safe at rest if you’ve brought it in from elsewhere, but as soon as you enter a password and decrypt it, you’re handing that password and decrypted data over to a system fully controlled by that root account.
According to a study published in 2018, not only the Sunland Baobab, but “the majority of the oldest and largest African baobabs [have died] over the past 12 years”.
Trees that have survived for over a thousand years, all dying together within the span of 12.
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Linux@lemmy.ml•Looking for a tool to auto-sort files using INDEX.md as a mapEnglish
6·24 days agoUnless there’s more information on what kind of files and what kind or sorting needs to be done, this sounds like something that could be done with a simple shell script.
(I wouldn’t trust an ai agent to do it with accuracy, but I’m the kind of luddite that doesn’t trust an ai agent at all.)
Sabrina Carpenter 💅
mlfh@lm.mlfh.orgto
Linux@lemmy.world•The Islamic Cyber Resistance in Iraq – 313 Team is currently DDoSing Ubuntu and archivesEnglish
1·1 month agoIslamic cyber resistance to what, snaps?



The demo video is the most ridiculous thing I’ve ever seen, I love it