

I’m sorry, I’m not that familiar with LXC.
Erwan will make binaries available ASAP, would that help you?


I’m sorry, I’m not that familiar with LXC.
Erwan will make binaries available ASAP, would that help you?
Well, at least when someone says TiB, you don’t need to wonder if they actually mean something that is 10% more or not. Because quite often, TB (Terabyte) is written/said when the actual measurement was in TiB (Tebibyte)


Haha don’t worry, Erwan is already thinking about high availability and edge nodes closer to clients!
Maybe a Cloudflare competitor like Bunny CDN could use this to build their own tunnel service?


Very similar.
The main differences are that those projects are highly configurable and can do a lot of things, while towonel is simpler: opinionated/streamlined for use as a shared Cloudflare tunnel alternative. I also think towonel may be the only one to use QUIC for the tunnel, just like Cloudflare.
Besides that, towonel is very new and still in alpha. Rathole does not seem to be actively developed anymore, which can be a good or bad thing.


I know, the naming isn’t ideal.
On the bright side, you can now expose multiple tuwunel instances via a single towonel and federate with other tuwunels on other towonels for maximum uwu owo
Which is almost what my friends and I are doing, except we’re running continuwuity instead of tuwunel.


For those who block Lemmy.world :
Towonel: Open Source drop-in Cloudflare Tunnel alternative
So you don’t want to port-forward on your home router or have Cloudflare decrypt all your traffic? Check out Towonel.
Most open source Cloudflare Tunnel alternatives involve setting up a VPS, terminating TLS there on a reverse proxy, then setting up a Wireguard tunnel to your server at home.
Towonel is different: it does not decrypt your traffic on the VPS and you can easily share one, so not every self-hoster has to buy and maintain a VPS.
Check it out!
Mastodon link: https://gts.erwanleboucher.dev/@eleboucher/statuses/01KS4YNA2SYMSP0FSKJVNJA155
Thank you! I really recommend looking at RK3588 chips when upgrading from Raspberries, it’s a very capable chip with good mainline kernel support!
I recommend Talos even more though!


Renovate + GitOps. Check out https://github.com/onedr0p/cluster-template
If you don’t like Kubernetes, you can get a similar setup with doco-CD. Only limitation is that dococd can’t update itself, but you can use SOPS and Renovate all the same for the other services.


ASUS Linux is a community effort, not part of ASUS the company.
I’d love to be wrong, but I can’t find any sources on significant contributions from ASUS.


My ASUS laptop special buttons above the normal keyboard are registered as a separate device to the kernel, so this does not impact them. They are far enough out of the way to not get pressed by my ergo split though.


My laptop didn’t have a key for that, so I ended up gluing together this universal Linux solution.
I just wrote a post on how to use this to automatically disable/enable your laptop keyboard on plugging/unplugging your custom keyboard. Just one example.
In general, it allows you to set rules and automation about handling devices on the kernel level and comes with systemd (so most modern Linux distros have it by default, even Arch Linux)
https://fhoekstra.eu/posts/linux-disable-internal-laptop-keyboard-when-external-keyboard-plugged-in/


“My browser is slow because Venus is in Taurus now”
This joke is taken insanely far


Thank you for the feedback, could you be more specific?
Is it crossposting? Or Kubernetes-specific content in /c/programming?
Or giving tips on how to practice for specific certification exams?
Or do you dislike the prose format? Too much context? Do you prefer bullet points?
Or is it that I put an image while the link should be the focus? I see now that in my client I have to click through to the original post first to see and visit the URL


Impressive!


I don’t believe you, but I’d like to be proven wrong.
I expect you have a UPS that feeds your hosts and networking equipment and something like ZFS for disk redundancy. This protects against the most common failures and is usually enough, but there are still single points of failure in such a setup, that are not as common, not as hard to deal with through manual intervention, and quite difficult to protect with redundancy.
I would be surprised if you are protected against the following single points of failure without manual intervention:


Bitnami Helm charts are not maintained anymore. There are no updates for the charts and images in the legacy repository. Try to find a different chart for harbor registry and any other bitnami images and charts you use ASAP
That is indeed a difficult problem. Integration testing and contract testing can help to avoid this, but one can never be 100% sure.
Or LazyVim
Here they are: https://codeberg.org/towonel/towonel/releases