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It’ll cost you more storing it in cloud than just buying more drives. If you’re already in a spot where that’s a problem, this is not a solution for you.
It’ll cost you more storing it in cloud than just buying more drives. If you’re already in a spot where that’s a problem, this is not a solution for you.
Well what’s the delta between the two? Just searching adding the “-R” seems to be a lesser version with things like missing ports. Logic says if you’re using NUT that it would at least have network or serial to communicate with something, and it would work just fine, but look for reviews and figure out what the difference is since it’s not listed as a defined product model on the Cyberpower pages.
Sort of, but not really. It’s a pub/sub ecosystem, so if your services are offline, they aren’t going to be pulling the delta of missed data beyond a threshold. That’s why clients are clients, because they are built to do this for this purpose.
It wouldn’t make sense for a deployment acting as an active instance to act like a client in the way you’re describing, because the services are configured and tuned to NOT act that way, but ingest data available at time of publish to the endpoints they are subscribed to.
You’re talking about syncing and downloading content from external services, which makes me think you’re just imagining these as being a client versus an “instance”. In that case, just use a client because neither of these services inherently do what you’re asking, that’s what a client of these services does.
I think they are asking about a personal instance, not something federated necessarily. A lag server.
You’re asking a very general question, and will get a lot of general answers.
Figure out what you want to run first, get it running on what you have available, then adapt if you run into issues.
I wouldn’t be asking just what other people think you should do because you’re going to get a lot of noise.
Anything. You don’t need any services to be public unless you choose for them to be.
Okay…back up a bit.
You have a VPS server hosted somewhere…so which IP are you trying to obfuscate with a VPN?
Why don’t you just host your public services on the VPS, and whatever else private on your home equipment.
Unless your VPN provider supports static port mapping, this is not going to work.
Ask HOW they are “refurbished”. If they’re swapping controller boards or wiping SMART status, pass.
Read your own screenshot
If you want to simplify things, do this:
Then just keep adding things back and find where it’s breaking. I’m positive you have a hostname mismatch, or a messed up DNS record if you’re using multiple proxies. Curl output would be helpful. Also check dig (hostname)
to see what your DNS is responding with.
If it’s 192.168.1.1, then your DNS has the wrong address somewhere. It’s looking for 35.242
You have a loopback. Says it right there.
From your diagram it looks like you’re have two reverse proxies chained together…why?
Just GTFO if you don’t want help. Later.
Like everyone else is saying. POST CONFIGS.
I don’t think you changed them in the right way, or didn’t restart. Post configs.
Details please.
I’m assuming you forced a port conflict somehow.
SD cards get thrashed pretty quickly from high I/O usage. Install and setup log2ram to mitigate some of that issue, and put any heavy logging to wherever you set the log2ram mount (/var/log by default). Note this will extend the life of the SD card, but reduce your available RAM while running. Another option is getting an NVME hat or USB adapter to not run on off of SD.
I’d calculate your total cost then, and figure out ingress and egress costs depending on the provider. Cloudflare with R2 is the only “cloud” storage service I’m aware of that doesn’t charge for either right now. They may in the future so check out your costs.