I mean yes… but realistically no. Also the risk of data loss at that point is high. you will miss things. the best approach would be to make a proper backup reinstall and put the data back.
I mean yes… but realistically no. Also the risk of data loss at that point is high. you will miss things. the best approach would be to make a proper backup reinstall and put the data back.
I dont believe it is possible to do after install
Yes but be aware it is not simple to manage properly and probably requires a team to manage it well.
I personally use Borg to do automatic backups.
Tick a box when installing some distros. Like OoenSUSE.
I can go weeks without rebooting if I want to Using a gtx 1080Ti with it. No idea why so many folks still have these big issues. Some minor issues sure.
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To simply running Kubernetes at least at home. Take a look at Talos OS. It is build for Kubernetes. But I totally agree it still isn’t for the faint of hard.
Kubernetes comes to mind for that
For me it is just trying different flavors. They are all unique in their own right. I have not used Slackware yet. Might give it a go though.
I mean I love OpenSUSE TW. Been using it for well over 2 years. One of the best distros I used. But I am slowly looking to try something new. Its all fun and games 😄
For devices like laptops and PCs. I use Urbackup to make backups.
For all the apps I host on Kubernetes I setup S3 backups to self hosted Minio.
If i remember correctly after the downfall of reddit and the mass migration to Lemmy happened, A big issue was CSAM spreading across the Lemmy servers. Wouldn’t surprise me that that is the cause that images are no longer stored across servers.
In such a way that it checks the integrity of the files. Which a normal copy paste does not do. Rsync does this as well bdw.
I actually installed the app on top of a Eversolo DMP-A6 Works fairly well. although the UI is a bit small on it.
Yeah which frankly gets annoying fast when dealing with multiple users. As you need to remember the UIDs of all the users and match them potentially on all systems.
A solution to this problem is using active directory or if it is only for Linux devices FreeIPA. Which isn’t as bad as it sounds. It even simplifies it if you ask me. More centralized management. It is a onetime effort to setup correctly then just keeping it in check.
None I use kubernetes with pods instead 😁
Your data is safe. Worst case is that you need to do some reconfiguration of the system after you reinstalled it. You can import your existing data drives.
He’s evolving guys! Just backwards… And even choosing a OS that is reaching EOL.