There’s not much cost with S3 object. It’s just a file system in Linux, and replication is a protocol standard.
Use object storage for media and backups, then use s3 replication to put a copy somewhere else.
Can I just rub some Asian people on me?
Remind me: who provides most of the funding that FF has?
I can’t believe their strategy of showing nothing but Bar Rescue and Ink Master ads didn’t work!
If you have enough users and systems that this is a problem then you should be centrally managing it. I get that you want to inventory what you have, but I’m saying that you’re probably doing it wrong right now, and your ask is solved by using a central IAM system.
It sounds like you’re probably looking for some kind of SAML compliant IAM system, where credentials and access can be centrally managed. Active Directory and LDAP are examples of that.
I used to watch Astroboy in the 80s on TV in Canada lol. It had to be one of the earliest shows that talked about rights for artificial intelligence.
Well, 1ms of latency is 300km of distance, so unless you have something really misconfigured or overloaded, or you’re across the country, latency shouldn’t be an issue. 10-20ms is normally the high water mark for most synchronous replication, so you can go a long way before a protocol like DNS becomes an issue.
I find a lot of stuff is using docker compose, which works with Podman, but using straight docker is easier, especially if it’s nothing web-facing
Sorry! We ended that service, your forever mouse has morphed into a forever brick!
Yes, but you don’t need Kubernetes from the start.
Use object storage and enable immutability for the backups. If they compromise your site they shouldn’t be able to delete your backups unless they have the NAS password too.
Script that checks your external IP and updates your DNS provider via API.
Not big, but I have a few degenerate hoarding friends I mooch off of
Debug
Degug
Debugging
Itdiydigxigxjxutxu
Debug
As an ancient ops person, I was unfamiliar with version control before git. So git has really changed how I look at look at version control!
I thought it was an inverse tachyon beam from the main deflector array