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nullnothere

nullnothere

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nullnothere
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  • Hetrix Tools should fit the bill nicely. Tagging @Andrei as well. I think the SMS part is kind of price sensitive. The rest is all standard stuff that you will be very happy about. There's a free tier that you can checkout as well.
  • And just to add, EU is going to be much cheaper in the sense that you are likely to get much better resources/bandwidth/quality for a given price. SG is expensive due to bandwidth costs (and India is even worse on that scale). So I strongly recommend trying to find a good provider/service in the EU to get started. You can…
  • For a typical forum site (like LES for e.g.) this shouldn't matter at all. It will ideally be content driven, where the human content processing time should be far greater than internet content delivery time (otherwise you have bigger issues to worry about!). Putting it behind Cloudflare will give you some latency/caching…
  • @debaser - I think @dosai meant which website/tool did you use to produce the nameserver historical data/screenshot. I'm curious too...
  • I guess that explains it then. You should check if there is a IPv4 NAT for the LXC box which will allow you to use a custom port to SSH via IPv4. Otherwise, if you want to reach the IPv6 only box you should look at a ProxyCommand and/or ProxyJump options for SSH (assuming a recent enough version of SSH).
  • @anteck - I'm all confused here. Do you have IPv6 connectivity? Otherwise I'm not surprised that you're unable to SSH to the IPv6 box. That also explains why once you enable OpenVPN things work (likely you have all external connectivity routed via the OpenVPN tunnel).
  • Agreed, but depending on the density and (assuming) always-on equipment without any particularly special cooling... kind of keeps me on edge. For desktops/laptops, I assume that they're powered-off/suspended when not actively used but not for rack-mount server class type hardware.
  • Curious - what about a fire hazard to the rest of the house? Any special precautions?
  • Here are a few ( not all of them satisfy all your constraints though @FAT32 ). https://dianne.skoll.ca/projects/remind/ https://taskwarrior.org/ Some others that are useful though to look at and compare: https://trello.com/ https://clickup.com/ https://www.notion.so/ From my personal experience, the tool doesn't really…
  • Wouldn't it make sense to try to use Stripe and just integrate via some API calls to sort of get a decent billing setup (without having to rebuild everything)?
  • Best wishes for a speedy recovery. We hope to see you very soon even as you are convalescing - I'm sure you'll need a bit of geeky chit chat to keep that mind well occupied and away from other stressful health conditions.
  • @AnthonySmith + @vimalware : yes to the above points from me as well. Gives folks the freedom to mostly continue their existing habits with a periodic (quarterly?) cleanup. The in betweeners (like myself, who rarely if at all have anything worthy of a separate topic of its own) will add stuff to the "good" pit (or whatever…
  • If you have any options try to guide/force to look for an EXT4 FS (and related metadata). Depending on how much got written by the mkfs.fat, you still have the data blocks and possibly a fair number of the super blocks from which you can try to recover the data. And of course you're working with a disposable image - so…
  • Is this a total limit (i.e. at a time no more than 5 per account)? Can we keep taking snapshots of a VM (deleting/overwriting the old) so that we're below this limit? I was thinking more along the lines of a primary VM whose snapshot is updated periodically and which can be used to instantiate additional VMs based on that…
  • Depending on how quickly you killed the mkfs.fat you may still be able to use some of the (hopefully) not-overwritten superblocks of the (original) ext4 FS and recover your files metadata. See: https://help.ubuntu.com/community/DataRecovery (look at TestDisk and see if you can quickly undo some of the damage). Specifically…
  • I have one of their Singapore storage KVMs (200GB storage/1TB Gbit BW/Xeon(R) CPU E5-2670 v2 @ 2.50GHz). Works as expected, support is quite fast/prompt and for a storage KVM it works well within my expectations and I can recommend them. Here's a quick benchmark: CPU Single Threaded Bash Arithmetic (add 1 Million) : 4.95…
  • Thank you for holding your ground. I'm really quite puzzled that they even have the right to do this - I am not aware of the contractual fine print but my assumption has always been that all traffic should be unfettered (at the server/hardware level, not at the VPS level). I've not heard of this being done anywhere else…

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