

-Sy is recommended against. -Sy or -Syu, but not -Sy
-Sy is recommended against. -Sy or -Syu, but not -Sy
That was indeed the case. I suppose the comment didn’t contribute much.
Just tired of seeing perfectly solid comments being downvoted with no reason provided 🤷
Downvote without explanation. Nice!
TBF, that’s pretty much how mystical it is: https://www.geeksforgeeks.org/how-to-clear-ram-memory-cache-buffer-and-swap-space-on-linux/
…What are you talking about?
Manjaro might be good, but you’ll have to adjust the vacuum’s clock every time you want to clean
Ah yeah, fair enough.
@piotrkulpinski@lemmy.world you might want to look into disabling error reporting in production 👍
There’s a submission link on the top of the page
Search seems broken. The following gives me a “Something went wrong” page
While I don’t disagree with your sentiment, it seems like this list is just “self hosted open source alternatives”. Even if there are better options, Gitea still falls under that definition, no?
deleted by creator
People in this thread have very interesting ideas of what “shit hardware” is
You son of a bitch, I’m in.
I’ve become a big fan of mini PC’s for home server use these days (with NAS systems for storage duties). Low power, low heat, low noise, and very affordable.
Beelink on Amazon makes a good selection of them. Always watch for sales. I have several of their machines and have been pleasantly surprised by all of them. The latest addition was one of their N95 systems with 8GB of memory. It hosts Jellyfin, Deluge, Wireguard (client and server), dns, forgejo, etc.
90% sure wireguard (the VPN server) is going to need an open port if you want to connect from the outside.
FWIW: I’m running jellyfin and a whole host of other services on a Beelink with an Intel n95 and 8gb of ram. Runs like a champ.
Using Firefox mobile, everything works and is mostly performance 🤷♂️
im a big fan of the nas device being single purpose. its life should only exist in fileserving. i have several redundant nas devices and then a big ol app server.
This is the way. Except my “big ol’ app server” is an n95 mini pc that sips power.
Because even if an attacker could gain access even as root he cannot modify system files.
Your comment was already from the position of if an attacker could gain root access. My responses were to that directly, and nothing else.
Plus one to this. It’s super nice separating concerns in this way.