oranki

joined 1 year ago
[–] oranki@sopuli.xyz 7 points 10 months ago

Portability is the key for me, because I tend to switch things around a lot. Containers generally isolate the persistent data from the runtime really well.

Docker is not the only, or even the best way IMO to run containers. If I was providing services for customers, I would definetly build most container images daily in some automated way. Well, I do it already for quite a few.

The mess is only a mess if you don't really understand what you're doing, same goes for traditional services.

[–] oranki@sopuli.xyz 11 points 10 months ago (2 children)

Most likely, a Hetzner storage box is going to be so slow you will regret it. I would just bite the bullet and upgrade the storage on Contabo.

Storage in the cloud is expensive, there's just no way around it.

[–] oranki@sopuli.xyz 4 points 10 months ago

There was a good blog post about the real cost of storage, but I can't find it now.

The gist was that to store 1TB of data somewhat reliably, you probably need at least:

  • mirrored main storage 2TB
  • frequent/local backup space, also at least mirrored disks 2TB + more if using a versioned backup system
  • remote / cold storage backup space about the same as the frequent backups

Which amounts to something like 6TB of disk for 1TB of actual data. In real life you'd probably use some other level of RAID, at least for larger amounts so it's perhaps not as harsh, and compression can reduce the required backup space too.

I have around 130G of data in Nextcloud, and the off-site borg repo for it is about 180G. Then there's local backups on a mirrored HDD, with the ZFS snapshots that are not yet pruned that's maybe 200G of raw disk space. So 130G becomes 510G in my setup.

[–] oranki@sopuli.xyz 13 points 10 months ago (4 children)

Imagine if all the people who prefer systemd would write posts like this as often as the opposition. Just use what you like, there are plenty of distros to choose from.

[–] oranki@sopuli.xyz 0 points 1 year ago (3 children)

I recently put the nvidia variant of ublue-os on my work laptop, which has Optimus graphics. Couldn't be happier.

It's great to see these variants popping up! I really think ostree may be the future for desktop Linux, and not even very far away.