What error do you get in the system log when the transfer fails?
What error do you get in the system log when the transfer fails?
I don’t use it for the optimisations, I just prefer its package manager and ecosystem.
That’s still true, dozens of us still use it!
Yes, but for developers it’s good to not have to program for each CPU architecture/OS.
I can write some C, C++ or Rust code and compile it for loads of platforms and have it do the same thing (simplified).
What’s your point?
I just started using OpenSMTPD as a backup relay and it seems to work for that. Very lightweight and easy to set up.
Ah, right you are! Didn’t spot that
What results do you get from hdparm
’s speed tests?
What filesystem is on the disk?
Costs 20 cents per what? That’s about 0.7kWh per month so I’m guessing it’s per month?
They’re saying they’ve moved away from running things on bare metal and onto using them inside Docker instead.
So does Hyper-V, what’s your point?
You can set the metadata and data independently as RAID0, RAID1 or other levels depending on the number of disks and your desired level of data loss risk.
You need to point it at a directory that has the btrfs root subvolume mounted on it (subvolid=5) although I thought it gave a different error if that was your problem.
Penalty because of the random hash signs in the comment. It looks like someone trying to tag words but failing.
What does “rsync triggered” mean? Rsync isn’t anything to do with btrfs.
There’s not one built in but it’ll work with any that connects to IMAP or JMAP servers.
Try lshw
on the laptop when it’s connected, it should tell you the module it’s using.
Why bother what?
Kinda looks like an embryo to me.
Is that bad?