Luckyfriend222

joined 2 years ago
[–] Luckyfriend222@lemmy.world 1 points 2 days ago

First Friday of the month. Easy to remember.

[–] Luckyfriend222@lemmy.world 4 points 1 week ago

Thank you for all the information. I have had servers now for 7 years already, and honestly I still love them. I run a bit more than just seflhosting home-based applications, but I totally get your point. I am a bit older, and therefor a bit more old-school :) I sleep safely to the hum of redundant PSUs and Hardware RAID SSDs, haha.

Especially thank you for PiKVM and NanoKVM. I am looking into that a bit.

I am fully off-grid, so power cost is not that big of a deal, and the servers are far enough away for the noise not to bother me.

I am not against anything you said, honestly. And I got a lot of new info. I am going to say this though: I am still not too convinced on the software RAID thing though. Maybe I am just too stupid, but I have not been able to get this going with the same ease, and have it recover as easily as proper hardware RAID. One day I will take the leap again and try to "get with the times".

Thanks again for all the info! Honestly appreciate it.

[–] Luckyfriend222@lemmy.world 8 points 1 week ago (6 children)

This is an interesting take. I prefer the other way around, because of redundancy in things like PSU and raid etc. So your take is really interesting to me. I am rethinking my setups for sure.

[–] Luckyfriend222@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

Some NVIDIA licenses will prohibit assigning it to more than one VM.

[–] Luckyfriend222@lemmy.world 3 points 2 months ago

Based on OPs requirements, this is the answer

[–] Luckyfriend222@lemmy.world 4 points 7 months ago

I misunderstood your comment. Thank you for the clarification.

[–] Luckyfriend222@lemmy.world 8 points 7 months ago (5 children)

What am I missing from your comment? iOs can be found here: https://apps.apple.com/fr/app/peertube/id6737834858

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/26112762

Hi all

I have been searching high and low but I think my search game is too weak. I am looking for a tool (similar to Uptime Kuma) that can monitor multiple systems via their own APIs, to centralise the status of these devices. Ex:

a) I have a sensor system that monitors a whole bunch of sensors across multiple locations. This system has an API that uses a secret key + api key for auth, and I can get the status of the sensor via the api. The idea is that the central dashboard shows the status, if offline, the control room personnel can log into the sensors system itself and determine root cause.

b) I also have a system to which a whole bunch of A/V equipment is connected, and via it's API I am able to view the status of multiple devices on the A/V equipment network. I want to also see on the status of these devices on my central monitoring system.

I don't care about doing root cause analysis via the central monitoring system, I just want the statuses which can action a person to check via the control system of that particular service.

All my searches come back with hits of systems that can monitor whether my APIs are up and running, but that is not what I want. Does anyone have any ideas? Preferably opensource, but definitely self-hosted/on-prem hosting. TIA

Edit: I solved it using Uptime Kuma, and the HTTP(s) JSON Query monitor. Thanks all for the inputs.

 

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/23009603

This is horrifying. But, also sort of expected it. Link to the full research paper:

Full pdf