@a2_4am little known fact, O'Keeffe was a vintage computer graphics illustrator.
(Not actually a fact)
My colo provider has planned maintenance tonight, so I took the opportunity to do what I have been meaning to do for forever; setup DNS at home as a primary for my domains with proper secondary mirroring.
Judging by the fediverse still working.. I seem to have been successful.
I did DNS (with DNSSEC, glue records, name server registration) right the first try? No. I messed something up.. I just don't know what it is yet.
@chuck 1450 active calories. nice. I also bike a lot. Been stuck inside so far on the trainer, but have been looking to get back outside
@a2_4am No words... they should have sent a poet.
@a2_4am you're going to share a video with the answer, right?
@onekopaka @phessler @mwl Yes, I was going to comment on this. Every time I come up with a reason this makes sense... I realize it is pointless. The only thing I can think is that they've totally overlayed a bunch of logical IPv6 subnets on a larger physical network, but without isolation this is a security nightmare.. but it then begs the question, what would do the isolation like this?
Also, I cannot help but think this is a direct consequence of how BADLY designed IPv6 is.
@mwl At the very least there is some information missing here; I suspect they have delegated "0001:005f" to you off of their "0001:0000/48", but they would need to have assigned you a host on the 0001:0000/64 to rout to you, or you would need to tell them your EUI64.
@alfonsosiciliano You need SOME swap, the memory management algorithms get cranky without ~2x swap as memory; at least with default tuning parameters.
Laptop: 16G RAM/ 32G swap
Server: 64G RAM/ 128G swap
@phen314 possession arrow?
Ugh, my Apple IIgs died today.. looks like PSU, fuse blown (it is an old AE enhanced PSU) opened it up (obviously, if I could tell it was the fuse), none of the components look bad. Good news is this is the part of the system I am the most capable of working on, also tons of community support out there for drop in replacements
@textfiles @a2_4am @burgerbecky Don't mean to place this on blast, but I saw this and thought it might be of interest to all 3 of you:
FreeBSD 13.3-RELEASE has been released
From the official announcement by Colin Percival:
The FreeBSD Release Engineering Team is pleased to announce the
availability of FreeBSD 13.3-RELEASE. This is the fourth release of the
stable/13 branch.
Some of the highlights:
* LLVM and the clang compiler have been updated to version 17.0.6.
* OpenSSH has been updated to version 9.6p1.
* Sendmail has been updated to version 8.18.1.
* ZFS has been updated to OpenZFS 2.1.14.
* There have been many stability fixes to native and LinuxKPI-based
WiFi drivers.
* The NFS server can now run in an appropriately configured vnet jail.
* And much more…
For a complete list of new features and known problems, please see the
online release notes and errata list, available at:
* https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/13.3R/relnotes/
* https://www.FreeBSD.org/releases/13.3R/errata/
For more information about FreeBSD release engineering activities, please
see:
* https://www.FreeBSD.org/releng/
Dedication
The FreeBSD Project dedicates the FreeBSD 13.3-RELEASE to Glen Barber,
with thanks for his many years of contributions as Release Engineer.
@phen314 wait, where are you seeing this?
@jwz I have 6.5.22f media, including a custom hack of the bootable media that has the http modules inserted into the rootimage to allow it to use HTTP services, AND a full inst install script for an Indy (SGI Indy running 6.5.22f USED to be my mail server). If you need, I can hook you up. It would be an honor and a privilege!
@jkbecker @Quinnypig I had wondered if that might be the case, but I don't have dentures! :)
@Quinnypig Baking soda also works *AMAZING*
@a2_4am isn't that just an array? 😆
FreeBSD enthusiast and regular contributor. I have opinions!