intelpentium
intelpentium
Comments
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KVM of course! bench.sh will still be able to access the network, but at least it won't steal my cookies! As for usability, I find Windows and Mac UI just plain weird.
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Have you tried running it without tuning anything? Doesn't lighttpd has FastCGI memory leakage issues? nginx and lighttpd are both lightweight event-based web servers, I doubt you need to change the default config. Try using static process manager with max_children = 2 (constantly keep 2 PHP workers running), max_requests…
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Yes, have been running it for months. Default settings. RAM usage is less than 3 MB, that's including web server and SQLite DB. I've only used HTTPS functionality, and it works fine for several websites. There was a minor glitch in admin UI, but it got fixed.
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These CPUs don't go above their TDP limit (though for extreme overclocking users can disable it). No matter what voltage/frequency you specify, under Prime95 they always hit their TDP, even when overclocking performance gain is linear (e.g. no throttling). The problem was that they were trying to push server CPUs (FX…
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That's quite interesting. What tools are you using to read TDP? I know that Intel never lists TDP of their CPUs anywhere, but it's the first time I hear that about AMD. All AMD CPUs I owned never went beyond their listed TDP, even when heavily overclocked. https://youtu.be/stM2CPF9YAY?t=400…
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These video previews are so funny!
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I think it's just they are more often being targeted and are easier to detect. Small plugins might not even show up in the HTML code, or they might not interact with the user, so the attack surface is low. If there is so much to exploit in the popular big plugins, why bother with niche plugins?
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I've always wanted to try CentOS/RHEL, but their package system is too confusing for me. Every guide for installing software tells you to add some repositories, and each blog lists different ones! Coming from Debian I instinctively think it poses a security risk and is a maintenance hassle (what if some repository goes…
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I like openresolv solution. It's 100 KB package and then client config is simply: [Interface] DNS = 192.168.0.2,192.168.0.3
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You also need DNS for a "proxy" VPN. It's very important, but not obvious at first. If you don't put DNS settings into your client configuration, wireguard will use your ISP DNS server. Websites can see it and use this information to identify you.
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If you compile wireguard-go, I'd recommend also compiling wireguard-tools. I've compiled both on Debian 11, and they work just fine on Debian 9 VPS. Linked guide will show you how to setup basic VPN, but you won't be able to access outside internet. If you intend to use VPN as a proxy to outside internet, you also need to…
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When installing Debian, installing "standard" task from tasksel is not necessary. As of Debian 10 there are 72 base packages, and "standard" task has 38 more (perl, python, wget). That's not including their own dependencies. I wonder if these images have "standard" enabled. Also by default apt-get installs "recommended"…