Post AmjmiBUPs4BSN6kdSC by phnt@fluffytail.org
(DIR) More posts by phnt@fluffytail.org
(DIR) Post #Amjdfj57cZIU6DfmnQ by 0@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T16:30:10.310254Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
Worse than Newt, who shills for Redmond. Do you realize how annoying you need to be to outrank Microsoft?
(DIR) Post #Amjfe6R61Dw9rRIxt2 by pwm@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T16:52:16.782114Z
2 likes, 0 repeats
@0 The best reason to be all in on musl is gnutards
(DIR) Post #AmjgL2hnlT0uk7atVI by 0@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T17:00:02.412294Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@pwm My next Linux install will be GNU free.
(DIR) Post #AmjgmuPSCb5J7cIdoO by phnt@fluffytail.org
2024-10-06T17:05:04.256221Z
1 likes, 1 repeats
@0 @pwm I'm getting annoyed with Linux distros (especially on servers) to the point that some day I'll probably partially switch to BSDs as source-based distros and Alpine are becoming the only sane ones to use.
(DIR) Post #Amjh4PH8hG7bm1kozI by pwm@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T17:08:14.395765Z
1 likes, 0 repeats
@phnt @0 I :trans: Alpine.I have been quite happy with it on my little laptop.Runs ssh and vim and hexchat and firefox and thunderbird and that pretty much covers my needs.Servers it also has me covered. Though running glibc binaries has decreased in feasibility as of late. I haven't had much luck even with debian chroots on the linker path.
(DIR) Post #AmjhJrD17g3EkfC3ZA by 0@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T17:11:01.828187Z
3 likes, 0 repeats
@phnt @pwm Deploying any more Linux is already "when demanded by service." I'm 100% sold on some mutation of 9 for daily use personally.
(DIR) Post #AmjhcVezStInQBAif2 by dcc@annihilation.social
2024-10-06T17:14:24.462127Z
3 likes, 1 repeats
@0 @phnt @pwm Just install :slackware:
(DIR) Post #AmjiKymmXOhCUj1N4a by 0@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T17:22:26.393785Z
2 likes, 0 repeats
@dcc @phnt @pwm I like slackware, but the point is to drop gnu when I'm resigned to Linux. If I was sticking with it I'd probably still be on Arch.
(DIR) Post #AmjiYOCNMfvz4kO2q0 by PurpCat@clubcyberia.co
2024-10-06T17:24:48.786733Z
4 likes, 3 repeats
@phnt @0 @pwm >when you find out that nothing supports BSD and requires hacks to work
(DIR) Post #Amjif6OpwJ57trPs12 by 0@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T17:26:04.481378Z
2 likes, 0 repeats
@PurpCat @phnt @pwm SysD Fans when a blob stops working and it won't post.
(DIR) Post #AmjiiqiiB2pWQgV1Ci by PurpCat@clubcyberia.co
2024-10-06T17:26:42.132275Z
4 likes, 3 repeats
@0 @phnt @pwm illumos users trying to run pleroma after finding out that the version of erlang it has is incomplete
(DIR) Post #Amjiplm4xnQb7MNGVs by 0@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T17:28:00.200981Z
2 likes, 1 repeats
@PurpCat @phnt @pwm Pleroma "developers" releasing a broken 2.7.0 even if you have the right elixir:
(DIR) Post #Amjj0GN63jG0uOh0SG by PurpCat@clubcyberia.co
2024-10-06T17:29:51.384332Z
4 likes, 6 repeats
@0 @phnt @pwm fediverse developers have this in their room
(DIR) Post #Amjj6nkqr1u2BLvCD2 by 0@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T17:31:04.300138Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@PurpCat @phnt @pwm I'll be honest, if you made it one of those retro push-arm style ones, I'm in.
(DIR) Post #AmjjnWUSuzmj5dd0wS by nyanide@lab.nyanide.com
2024-10-06T17:38:47.535853Z
2 likes, 1 repeats
@PurpCat @phnt @0 @pwm All of my infrastructure is hosted on Windows CE servers.
(DIR) Post #Amjm07IE737ucA2K9o by 0@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T18:03:29.355977Z
1 likes, 1 repeats
@nyanide @PurpCat @phnt @pwm Hello Andrew Torba.
(DIR) Post #AmjmiBUPs4BSN6kdSC by phnt@fluffytail.org
2024-10-06T18:11:26.975276Z
1 likes, 1 repeats
@0 @pwm I was pleasantly surprised when all my services are packaged and working on OpenBSD. For daily desktop use, I'm stuck with Linux, because I need a performant hypervisor and Docker.
(DIR) Post #AmjqdqQscOfbisHcoq by pernia@cum.salon
2024-10-06T18:55:28.154466Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
@phnt @0 @pwm have u tries pleroma on openbsd? back when salon was on the cheapest vps from frantec we used that, but ive been told the config instructions provided on the pleroma page are now out of date
(DIR) Post #Amjr3cjaAf8MldK7pQ by mint@ryona.agency
2024-10-06T19:00:08.557618Z
3 likes, 4 repeats
@PurpCat @phnt @0 @pwm Hurd users patching Erlang to compile on it:1402928455847.webm
(DIR) Post #AmjrSNMGTZYIJpDg5w by phnt@fluffytail.org
2024-10-06T19:04:37.234226Z
1 likes, 3 repeats
@pernia @0 @pwm oban.borked.technology is running on it. The installation instructions are outdated, but still mostly apply. The rc script requires a small change and media proxy can't work with relayd/httpd as they don't have any caching capability.For more up to date documentation, you can check out the MR I created, which isn't fully done yet as the relayd/httpd config needs some more polish.The nginx part is untested, but it should work. relayd/httpd configuration currently ignores serving on subdomains and TLS uses a tls config declaration instead of the IP symlink.https://git.pleroma.social/pleroma/pleroma/-/merge_requests/4258
(DIR) Post #Amjre8EgWfeEtQHPzU by mint@ryona.agency
2024-10-06T19:06:44.169402Z
1 likes, 1 repeats
@PurpCat @0 @phnt @pwm I'll get it running on AIX once I figure out how to run modern versions of it in QEMU without them instantly crashing.
(DIR) Post #AmjsEvwrApJNUxUP1U by pernia@cum.salon
2024-10-06T19:13:19.596566Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
@phnt @0 @pwm based man, thanks. >TLS uses a tls config declaration instead of the IP symlink.Pardon my ignorance, what does this mean? What i know about tls is setting up acme-client and httpd and whabam
(DIR) Post #AmjtHlTmeYfZqunwp6 by 0@pl.absolutelyproprietary.org
2024-10-06T19:25:06.811435Z
4 likes, 0 repeats
@Lyx @PurpCat @phnt @pwm I wish I had as nice a setup as Graf. The CDN especially, just great work.
(DIR) Post #AmjtgaF7ZEO6F6mT8S by phnt@fluffytail.org
2024-10-06T19:29:35.670433Z
2 likes, 1 repeats
@pernia @0 @pwm relayd is a bit retarded, that it by default looks for TLS certs/keys with the same IP the relay listens on. Because I wanted to support serving on subdomains with a different cert than the main domain, I would have to use the alternative way of using an IP and appending the port to name of the cert/key. I tried to make it work for 2 hours and failed.Now for what I meant. There's a config option in relayd, that allows it to search for certs/keys with a name instead of the IP. You just have to use a somewhat non-standard file extension for the fullchain certificate (something.crt instead of something.pem). It specifically has to be the fullchain certificate, otherwise any client won't be able to verify the CA that signed your certificate as it is not included.To simplify it even more, setup acme-client like the screenshot and then tell relayd to use that name you chose in that config with this option in the protocol declaration. File extension must not be included.Or alternatively wait a week and I'll commit the updated relayd/httpd config along with the updated docs on how to set it up. I just have to write a redirect for serving media on a subdomain and a forward based on HTTP headers. It's nearly done.
(DIR) Post #AmjuV7TeHEa9nQfoFU by mint@ryona.agency
2024-10-06T19:38:43.301127Z
1 likes, 1 repeats
@0 @PurpCat @phnt @pwm Pic related, looks like it's a bug/regression in recent QEMU. I have a built copy of 8.2.0 laying around (since I was experimenting with qemu-3dfx) and that one appears to be partitionling the disk and copying files just fine.Screenshot_20241006_222014.png
(DIR) Post #AmjufyqGirYqCTQsRU by phnt@fluffytail.org
2024-10-06T19:40:41.671691Z
1 likes, 1 repeats
@pernia @0 @pwm Also your instance might not be reachable from the Tor browser for whatever reason. A normal Tor daemon shouldn't have a problem with it, but the browser will just sometimes return NS_CONNECTION_REFUSED for some unknown reason I did not yet figure out. Sometimes a relayd restart will fix it, sometimes it won't. It currently works on oban.borked.technology only because I restarted the VPS yesterday.
(DIR) Post #AmjvWv1ldSrjiY3P1M by mint@ryona.agency
2024-10-06T19:50:15.136541Z
1 likes, 1 repeats
@0 @PurpCat @phnt @pwm :clueless:image.png
(DIR) Post #AmkI5Y8QwHjXqR5eyG by pernia@cum.salon
2024-10-07T00:02:58.029471Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
@phnt @0 @pwm wtfrick. zesty ass torbrowser bundle not respecting my hecking relayderino
(DIR) Post #Amm6MAecgPh4oFE3Pc by Tadano@amala.schwartzwelt.xyz
2024-10-07T21:00:58.119033Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@phnt @0 @pwm Debian is good and sane on server in my experience
(DIR) Post #Amm9NGm9i0EhwlxrdY by phnt@fluffytail.org
2024-10-07T21:34:48.242999Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
@Tadano @0 @pwm I hate Debian with a passion. It broke on me multiple times while updating only with official repos enabled, dpkg/apt is braindead while masquerading as something smart and the amount of non-upstream custom configuration/automation is too much for me.Currently AlmaLinux manages to annoy me the least from the more popular server distros.
(DIR) Post #Amm9YHdwp6Utp6NSAS by DarrellPark@eientei.org
2024-10-07T21:36:47.684266Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@phnt @Tadano @0 @pwm my debian server ate its network drivers 🖥️ 🔫
(DIR) Post #AmmJBeM9D5zp9Bthwm by Tadano@amala.schwartzwelt.xyz
2024-10-07T23:24:43.207182Z
0 likes, 0 repeats
@phnt @0 @pwm how the fuck did debian manage to break on update? In my experience of upgrading from 10 to 12 nothing broke and it was piss easy and predictable. Also could you elaborate on apt+dpkg?t. Never used RHEL-based distro for server (closest I have is OpenSUSE Tumbleweed on desktop which I dislike)
(DIR) Post #AmmnWAeXq3ddjLCheK by pomstan@xn--p1abe3d.xn--80asehdb
2024-10-08T05:04:30.999891Z
2 likes, 0 repeats
@mint @PurpCat @phnt @0 @pwm ibm used to have a free trial aix server in their developer program but it looks like there's no such offer nowadays
(DIR) Post #Amn8d7oUtNTpzL14ng by phnt@fluffytail.org
2024-10-08T09:01:10.690919Z
0 likes, 1 repeats
@Tadano @0 @pwm >how the fuck did debian manage to break on update?There are three ways I've seen Debian break on updates:1. apt's notoriously bad dependency resolution failed to find a replacement package or it's dependencies or the new dependencies somehow conflicted with the installed ones2. dpkg's automation scripts made assumptions about the system that weren't true (non-default installs made by the installer or installation via debootstrap)3. Unbootable kernels (a speciality of Ubuntu that sometimes also gets into Debian)>Also could you elaborate on apt+dpkg?Including the above:1. Inability to fully disable apt's (and maybe dpkg's) safeguards when it comes to dependency uninstallation and custom replacement. When you try to convince apt to uninstall a dependency and leave the packages downstream of it alone and without it's dependency, it simply refuses to do so, because it thinks it's smarter than the user. You can't simply force apt to uninstall a dependency and then place a custom built one into the same location without writing a package for it.2. dpkg's package syntax is really bad even compared to rpm.3. To somewhat fix apt's dependency resolution, Debian developers create split packages for almost anything. Something that gets annoying really fast when you install something and half of it's modules are missing.(4.) (Not really a dpkg/apt problem, but a Debian mentality one) Substantial changes to upstream behavior and configuration. I've seen a lot of sysadmins that come from the Debian world and get immediately confused when they touch something that isn't Debian. Where are the a2* scripts, where do you put nginx/httpd vhost configuration if there's no sites-*, where's postgresql even installed and where it stores its data. And similar.