XFS does not do snapshots, replicas, and all the other myriad of things that ZFS does.
XFS does not do snapshots, replicas, and all the other myriad of things that ZFS does.
ZFS for nearly everything plus ZFSBootMenu EFI on root data pools. Get a bad upgrade? No problem, boot a previous snapshot (auto created with a pacman hook), which I had to do recently when 6.6.39 LTS kernel had a bug. Snapshots are also great when doing things such as upgrading postgres, hass, Plex, etc.
Don’t know why you are being voted down, you are 100% correct. RTLAAU.
Nope, it doesn’t work that way. You have to umount it. You could reboot after removing it from fstab, but that’s a bigger hammer than necessary.
You need to move the service file to the right directory, for starters.
Nope, they should not be executable.
Heh, typing YAML anywhere is squinty business. :-)
I use syncthing all over the place for this sort of thing. I have some sync directories that are multi way synced across multiple devices, others that are one-way drop targets to a specific device, others that are for operations like backing up photos. It’s quite excellent with a good sync algorithm that rarely results in conflicts.
Another suggestion for Darktable. It handles this case of mixed types transparently. It’s a big thing to learn, but extremely powerful and capable, and you don’t have to know all the corners of it, just enough for your workflow.
ESPHome is amazing - there’s so much you can do without writing a single line of code.
I have built a few projects around the platform - a boiler monitor that tells me temperatures and state of zone valves, an energy monitoring system tracking electricity usage and solar export, and a hot tub mod that inhibits the heater to reduce grid import and maximize self consumption of solar. They have all been rock-solid stable.
ZHA here. I picked it since it’s a bit easier to set up with less bits. It works for me, so I didn’t see a reason to change it. I have done channel changes a couple of times with no issue - maybe I just got lucky!
FreeCAD. It’s fantastic but takes some getting used to. I recommend the Ondsel fork - it’s still free and open source except for the cloud storage which you can ignore. Ondsel includes some newer features and some interface changes.
When I’m forced to, and not before then. X works perfectly well so there’s no reason for me to switch to something else with less features.
Reboot to the snapshot you took of the root fs before starting the update, then just rerun the upgrade. If you are using btrfs (or ZFS) make use of its features so you never have this sort of problem.
ESP boards are so cheap that in my opinion this doesn’t make a whole lot of sense - it’s probably going to be more expensive than distributing ESPs around due to the wiring, and I guess I’d argue the distributed nature of HA/ESPHome is one of the best things about it, versus centralized alarm panels, for example, that used to be common decades ago, bringing all wiring back to a single location. Optimizing for unused GPIO pins isn’t really something that bothers me, personally. What I like about my ESP projects is just the opposite - that I can sprinkle them around the house close to the things they measure and control.
I don’t mean to be super negative - of course you should do it however you want to, but that’s my opinion - for what it’s worth (i.e. nothing).
I have not encountered this with my Sonoff Zigbee plugs, for whatever that is worth (US split phase). I also haven’t put large appliance loads on them.
I 3D print up a custom one, sized for each project.
So what do I have wrong here?
Nothing, as far as I’m concerned. I guess DEs have to constantly change or they become stale to some people. I’m an older guy than the normal demographic here too and stale is exactly what I want. I run i3 with a bunch of terminals, a browser, and sublime text when vi in a terminal isn’t enough (yes, it’s really vim, but it’ll always be vi to me), and I xsetroot the classic weave pattern for my background. That’s it. I don’t need or want menus, widgets, themes, file managers or anything else. I guess someday Wayland will win, and I’ll be forced to do something different, but until then, not changing this extremely productive and efficient environment.
I don’t use Fedora, but I have ZFS on all my Arch systems for everything (including root fs). So, I’ll make a guess - is the package you installed for ZFS a DKMS kernel module, or a binary one? That’s the first thing. If it’s a DKMS module, I don’t see anything on your output showing it was compiled, which would explain the module not loading. If it’s a binary module in that package, it must be for the exact same version of the kernel that is installed - exact same. If it mismatches then you need either a different kennel or different ZFS package. In either case, you’ll probably need to wire in a hook for your initramfs, but it looks that part might be ok from your output. Hope that helps, good luck. ZFS is incredibly good.
Actually native encryption has been a feature of ZFS for a few years now. It’s nice not having to have an extra LUKS layer.