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  • Been using metalvps as a build machine for the multiple VPSs running NixOS. Compiling software from source on this thing is fast!

    It usually take my own PC 20 minutes to finish compiling Zerotier (NixOS doesn't keep its binary on their repo for licensing reasons) but just couple minutes on metalvps!

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles

    The all seeing eye sees everything...

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer
    edited January 2023

    Okay, here are the /etc/sub*id files.

    fmt:/etc# cat subgid
    root:100000:65536
    notoles:1000000000:65536
    localhost:1002000000:65536
    Fritz:1005000000:65536
    yoursunny:1018000000:65536
    subenhon:1022000000:65536
    fmt:/etc# cat subuid
    root:100000:65536
    notoles:1000000000:65536
    localhost:1002000000:65536
    Fritz:1005000000:65536
    yoursunny:1018000000:65536
    subenhon:1022000000:65536
    fmt:/etc# 
    

    @yoursunny said: Address assignment is the next step: network bridge and lxc-usernet file.

    ​👨‍💻​

    Thanked by (1)localhost
  • @yoursunny said:

    @drunekndog said:
    Why not LXD? It's a lot more usable than plain LXC.

    Why not LXC?
    It's a lot more efficient than fancy LXD.

    I don't buy this; it seems a lot like complaints about ipv6 using more resources than ipv4: it may exist in theory, but it's unlikely to make a big impact in practice.

    An important technical limitation of LXD is the lack of isolation between host machine users authorized to create containers.

    From LXD installation:

    Access control for LXD is based on group membership.
    The root user and all members of the lxd group can interact with the local daemon.

    Anyone with access to the LXD socket can fully control LXD, which includes the ability to attach host devices and file systems.

    In contrast, LXC doesn't have a local daemon.
    Each user can launch their own unprivileged containers, without being able to access other users' containers.

    Ooh, completely missed this. Thanks for the info!

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles
  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    Today's updates; add bridge-utils-doc

    fmt:~# which brctl
    /usr/sbin/brctl
    fmt:~# man brctl
    man: No entry for brctl in the manual.
    fmt:~# apk update
    fetch http://mirror.fcix.net/alpine/edge/main/x86_64/APKINDEX.tar.gz
    fetch http://mirror.fcix.net/alpine/edge/community/x86_64/APKINDEX.tar.gz
    fetch http://mirror.fcix.net/alpine/edge/testing/x86_64/APKINDEX.tar.gz
    v3.17.0-2709-g997896f6cd [http://mirror.fcix.net/alpine/edge/main]
    v3.17.0-2722-gc84305397f [http://mirror.fcix.net/alpine/edge/community]
    v3.17.0-2718-g6580083d27 [http://mirror.fcix.net/alpine/edge/testing]
    OK: 24082 distinct packages available
    fmt:~# apk upgrade
    (1/15) Upgrading ncurses-terminfo-base (6.3_p20221224-r0 -> 6.4_p20221231-r0)
    (2/15) Upgrading ncurses-libs (6.3_p20221224-r0 -> 6.4_p20221231-r0)
    (3/15) Upgrading xz-libs (5.4.0-r0 -> 5.4.0-r1)
    (4/15) Upgrading libpcap (1.10.1-r1 -> 1.10.2-r0)
    (5/15) Upgrading libpcap-doc (1.10.1-r1 -> 1.10.2-r0)
    (6/15) Upgrading linux-firmware-isci (20221214-r0 -> 20221214-r1)
    (7/15) Upgrading zstd-libs (1.5.2-r9 -> 1.5.2-r10)
    (8/15) Upgrading linux-lts (6.1.1-r1 -> 6.1.2-r0)
    (9/15) Upgrading linux-lts-doc (6.1.1-r1 -> 6.1.2-r0)
    (10/15) Upgrading xxd (9.0.1093-r0 -> 9.0.1128-r0)
    (11/15) Upgrading vim (9.0.1093-r0 -> 9.0.1128-r0)
    (12/15) Upgrading vim-doc (9.0.1107-r0 -> 9.0.1128-r0)
    (13/15) Upgrading libx11 (1.8.2-r1 -> 1.8.2-r2)
    (14/15) Upgrading xz (5.4.0-r0 -> 5.4.0-r1)
    (15/15) Upgrading xz-doc (5.4.0-r0 -> 5.4.0-r1)
    Executing busybox-1.35.0-r29.trigger
    Executing kmod-30-r1.trigger
    Executing mkinitfs-3.7.0-r0.trigger
    ==> initramfs: creating /boot/initramfs-lts
    Executing mandoc-apropos-1.14.6-r6.trigger
    Executing syslinux-6.04_pre1-r11.trigger
    /boot is device /dev/sdc1
    OK: 1423 MiB in 337 packages
    fmt:~# fmt:~# apk info brctl-doc
    fmt:~# apk info brctl
    fmt:~# apk search brctl
    bridge-utils-1.7.1-r1
    fmt:~# apk info bridge-utils-doc
    bridge-utils-doc-1.7.1-r1 description:
    Tools for configuring the Linux kernel 802.1d Ethernet Bridge (documentation)
    
    bridge-utils-doc-1.7.1-r1 webpage:
    https://wiki.linuxfoundation.org/networking/bridge/
    
    bridge-utils-doc-1.7.1-r1 installed size:
    24 KiB
    
    fmt:~# apk add bridge-utils-doc
    (1/1) Installing bridge-utils-doc (1.7.1-r1)
    Executing mandoc-apropos-1.14.6-r6.trigger
    OK: 1423 MiB in 338 packages
    fmt:~# 
    
  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    New /etc/network/interfaces ?

    Currently installed:

    fmt:~# cat /etc/network/interfaces
    auto lo
    iface lo inet loopback
    
    auto eth1
    iface eth1 inet static
            address 23.134.88.226
            netmask 255.255.255.240
            gateway 23.134.88.225
    
    iface eth1 inet6 static
            address 2602:fba1:999::2
            netmask 48
            gateway 2602:fba1:999::1
    fmt:~# 
    

    Is it too crazy just to give each container its own static WAN IPv4 and IPv6/64 ?

    Does the following look right for a first pass at the new /etc/network/interfaces?

    chronos@penguin:~$ cat interfaces-fmt-alpine-new
    auto lo
    iface lo inet loopback
    
    auto lxcbr0
    iface lxcbr0 inet static
      address 23.134.88.226
      netmask 255.255.255.240
      gateway 23.134.88.225
      bridge-ports eth1
      bridge-stp off
      bridge-fd 0
      pre-up brctl addbr vmbr0
        post-up ip route add 23.134.88.225/28  dev lxcbr0
        pre-down ip route del 23.134.88.225/28 dev lxcbr0
    
    iface lxcbr0 inet6 static
      address 2602:fba1:999::2
      netmask 48
      gateway 2602:fba1:999::1
    chronos@penguin:~$ 
    

    Next up: lxc-usernet file, maybe tomorrow, it's getting late here:

    fmt:~# man lxc-usernet # Works!
    fmt:~# cat /etc/lxc/lxc-usernet
    cat: can't open '/etc/lxc/lxc-usernet': No such file or directory
    fmt:~# 
    
  • @Not_Oles said:
    Is it too crazy just to give each container its own static WAN IPv4 and IPv6/64 ?

    I'd rather use NAT'ed IPv4, so that more containers can be accommodated.

    auto lxcbr0
    iface lxcbr0 inet static
      bridge-ports eth1
    

    Bridging containers directly on the physical port may result in the containers' MAC addresses becoming visible on the physical network.
    I don't know about Cloudie, but doing this in KVM would get filtered in Virtualizor, and doing this on Hetzner would trigger infraction warning letter.

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles

    Webhosting24 aff best VPS; ServerFactory aff best VDS; Cloudie best ASN; Huel aff best brotein.

  • All working> @Not_Oles said:

    @g121 said:

    @Not_Oles said:

    @g121 said:

    @Not_Oles said:

    @g121 said:
    I would like to have one thx

    Hi @g121!

    Best wishes for a Happy New Year!

    Since you are new here at LES we can say that your being new helps us celebrate the new in the New Year. :)

    Do you want to share a little about who and where you are and what you want to do on the server?

    Thanks!

    Tom

    Thank you, I wish you a happy new year, I am a student from China, I already have two vps, but I haven't used alpine yet, so I want to try it, I will run a web service on it or telegram bot or something

    Hi @g121!

    Could you please post your ed25519 public key?

    May I please ask whether you are a high school student or a university student? Are you studying or do you want to study computer engineering?

    Best wishes!

    Tom

    ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAIATk14TvQ1rBHNPAIvStuSK6OsHQKn8gXxkYa890+4TP

    I am a university student. In fact, I am not learning computer related, but I am very interested in the computer. We learned C. Now I want to learn Python during the holidays

    Hi @g121!

    Hope you have fun learning Python! Hope your new account can help you learn!

    You should be able to get in via IPv4 or IPv6 with your ssh key using something like:

    ssh [email protected] -p 42365

    Your account password is in a file in your home directory. Please change your password.

    Please let us know if you can login okay!

    I am looking forward to seeing your post here in this thread about fun stuff you accomplish on the server. Congrats in advance!

    Best!

    Tom

    All working ,thank you for everything you do

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles
  • hey ,
    What are The Requirements to get this :-P

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles
  • @raveen2k3 said:
    hey ,
    What are The Requirements to get this :-P

    hey ,
    Congrats on your First Post

    Thanked by (2)Not_Oles terrorgen

    "A single swap file or partition may be up to 128 MB in size. [...] [I]f you need 256 MB of swap, you can create two 128-MB swap partitions." (M. Welsh & L. Kaufman, Running Linux, 2e, 1996, p. 49)

  • @raveen2k3 said:
    hey ,
    What are The Requirements to get this :-P

    Just tell @Not_Oles how great he is so he can add the quote to his wall of self-gratification.

    Thanked by (1)yoursunny
  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    Hi @yoursunny!

    Thanks for your helpful, relevant, and interesting comments!

    @yoursunny said: I'd rather use NAT'ed IPv4, so that more containers can be accommodated.

    May I please ask, how many containers do you think we should accommodate?

    @yoursunny said: Bridging containers directly on the physical port may result in the containers' MAC addresses becoming visible on the physical network.
    I don't know about Cloudie, but doing this in KVM would get filtered in Virtualizor, and doing this on Hetzner would trigger infraction warning letter.

    What we previously did at Hetzner was assign VMs an IPv4/32. If I understand correctly, having the VMs use link layer prevented the issue of the VM MAC addresses becoming visible. A difference between what formerly was at Hetzner and what is happening now at Cloudie was that, at Hetzner, the extra IPs were out of band relative to the server's main IPv4. The /etc/network/interfaces file formerly in use at Hetzner looked something like that shown below.

    May I please ask, assuming for the purpose of the question that we stick to assigning VMs individual IPv4s and do not do NAT, would assigning IPv4/32s to the VMs mitigate the MAC address leak without having the extra IPs out of band with respect to the main IP? If no, could adding an additional main IPv4 and gateway from Cloudie plus using link layer solve the MAC address leak problem as it apparently did at Hetzner?

    May I please ask what do others think about whether we should do NAT or assign individual IPs? And, how many containers do others think we should have?

    root@fsn1 ~ # cat /etc/network/interfaces
    ### Hetzner Online GmbH installimage
    
    source /etc/network/interfaces.d/*
    
    auto lo
    iface lo inet loopback
    iface lo inet6 loopback
    
    auto enp7s0
    iface enp7s0 inet static
      address 157.90.35.101
      netmask 255.255.255.255
      gateway 157.90.35.65
      pointopoint 157.90.35.65
        post-up echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/ip_forward
        post-up echo 0 > /proc/sys/net/ipv4/conf/enp7s0/send_redirects
    
    iface enp7s0 inet6 static
      address 2a01:4f8:251:595a::2
      netmask 128
      gateway fe80::1
        post-up echo 1 > /proc/sys/net/ipv6/conf/all/forwarding
    
    auto vmbr0
    iface vmbr0 inet static
      address 157.90.35.101
      netmask 255.255.255.255
      bridge_ports none
      bridge_stp off
      bridge_fd 0
      bridge_maxwait 0  pre-up brctl addbr vmbr0
        post-up ip route add 148.251.166.96/32 dev vmbr0
        pre-down ip route del 148.251.166.96/32 dev vmbr0
        post-up ip route add 148.251.166.97/32 dev vmbr0
        pre-down ip route del 148.251.166.97/32 dev vmbr0
        [ . . . ]
        post-up ip route add 148.251.166.111/32 dev vmbr0
        pre-down ip route del 148.251.166.111/32 dev vmbr0
    
    iface vmbr0 inet6 static
      address 2a01:4f8:251:595a::2
      netmask 64
    root@fsn1 ~ #  
    
  • edited January 2023

    @Not_Oles said:

    @yoursunny said: I'd rather use NAT'ed IPv4, so that more containers can be accommodated.

    May I please ask, how many containers do you think we should accommodate?

    Typically, I create one LXC container for each app or use case.
    In my closet server, there are separate containers for C++ development and Go development, plus one for push-up video encoding (ffmpeg with iGPU access).

    MetalVPS-fmt has dozens of accounts.
    You would eventually run out of dedicated IPv4 if everyone wants an IPv4.
    Thus, NAT is unavoidable.

    would assigning IPv4/32s to the VMs mitigate the MAC address leak

    In my closet server, I just let the MAC addresses leak, and the home router gives each container its own IPs.
    Datacenter switches might not like this.

    In my KVM servers, the bridge for LXC containers has NAT'ed IPv4 and routed IPv6.
    It's defined in Netplan.io like this:

    network:
      bridges:
        brlink:
          interfaces: []
          mtu: 1448
          dhcp4: false
          dhcp6: false
          link-local: []
          addresses:
            - 172.25.0.0/32
            - 2001:db8:0:8d::1b9:b/128
    

    There's also a systemd service that sets static binding of container IP ranges (each container gets IPv4 /24 and IPv6 /116) and MAC addresses.

    I don't know what to do in interfaces file, as it's no longer preferred for Ubuntu.

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles

    Webhosting24 aff best VPS; ServerFactory aff best VDS; Cloudie best ASN; Huel aff best brotein.

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    @raveen2k3 said:
    hey ,
    What are The Requirements to get this :-P

    Hi @raveen2k3!

    I see from your profile that you are new here. Welcome to LES! It is great to meet you!

    Want to introduce yourself? I'm sure everyone would be interested to know your name, where you are from, and something about your Linux experience. Also, what do you want to do on the server?

    I'm looking forward to hearing more from you!

    Best wishes and kindest regards,

    Tom

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    I don't know whether this is at all correct, but here, quoting from above, I fixed a couple of little mistakes. The changed lines are followed by comments.

    chronos@penguin:~$ cat interfaces-fmt-alpine-new
    auto lo
    iface lo inet loopback
    
    auto lxcbr0
    iface lxcbr0 inet static
      address 23.134.88.226
      netmask 255.255.255.240
      gateway 23.134.88.225
      bridge-ports eth1
      bridge-stp off
      bridge-fd 0
      pre-up brctl addbr lxcbr0 # Changed vmbr0 to lxcbr0
        post-up ip route add 23.134.88.224/28  dev lxcbr0  # Changed 225 to 224
        pre-down ip route del 23.134.88.225/28 dev lxcbr0
    
    iface lxcbr0 inet6 static
      address 2602:fba1:999::2
      netmask 48
      gateway 2602:fba1:999::1
    chronos@penguin:~$ 
    
  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    @Not_Oles said: Next up: lxc-usernet file, maybe tomorrow, it's getting late here:

    fmt:~# man lxc-usernet # Works!
    fmt:~# cat /etc/lxc/lxc-usernet
    cat: can't open '/etc/lxc/lxc-usernet': No such file or directory
    fmt:~# 
    

    Okay, it's tomorrow already! :)

    From man lxc-usernet(5):

    This file consists of multiple entries, one per line, of the form:

      user type bridge number
    

    So here's lxc-usernet:

    fmt:~# ls /etc/lxc
    default.conf
    fmt:~# touch /etc/lxc/lxc-usernet # The busybox version of ed editor can edit existing files but seemingly can't create files!
    fmt:~# cat /etc/subuid 
    root:100000:65536
    notoles:1000000000:65536
    localhost:1002000000:65536
    Fritz:1005000000:65536
    yoursunny:1018000000:65536
    subenhon:1022000000:65536
    fmt:~# ed /etc/lxc/lxc-usernet # ed editor allows me to see what was printed in the terminal just before I started editing.
    0
    a
    notoles veth lxcbr0 1 # I am guessing that root doesn't need an entry in the lxc-usernet file, but I am not sure. 
    localhost veth lxcbr0 1
    Fritz veth lxcbr0 1
    yoursunny veth lxcbr0 1
    subenhon veth lxcbr0 1
    .
    w
    113
    q
    fmt:~# 
    

    LXC still is not expected to work yet partly because lxcbr0 isn't present because /etc/network/interfaces hasn't been updated yet. There is no bridge in the current setup. I sent the possible new interfaces configuration to Cloudie, so we will see what he says.

    Best wishes and kindest regards! :)

  • @Not_Oles said:
    Next up: lxc-usernet file

    notoles veth lxcbr0 1
    localhost veth lxcbr0 1
    Fritz veth lxcbr0 1
    yoursunny veth lxcbr0 1
    subenhon veth lxcbr0 1
    

    Need larger numbers, e.g. 16.

    I am guessing that root doesn't need an entry in the lxc-usernet file, but I am not sure.

    root account shouldn't be used except for modifying system settings.

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles

    Webhosting24 aff best VPS; ServerFactory aff best VDS; Cloudie best ASN; Huel aff best brotein.

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    @yoursunny said: Need larger numbers, e.g. 16.

    Hi @yoursunny! Thanks for letting me know your preference! :) Would it be okay with you to leave the lxc-usernet number at 1 until we hopefully find that everyone can make a container that works? Then we could increase the number. However, if you or anyone else needs a larger number from the beginning, please just let me know, and I will increase the number.

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    Tshark and friends

    fmt:~# apk search tshark
    tshark-4.0.2-r0
    fmt:~# apk search tshark-doc
    fmt:~# apk search termshark
    termshark-2.4.0-r6
    fmt:~# apk search termshark-doc
    fmt:~# apk -U add tshark termshark
    fetch http://mirror.fcix.net/alpine/edge/main/x86_64/APKINDEX.tar.gz
    fetch http://mirror.fcix.net/alpine/edge/community/x86_64/APKINDEX.tar.gz
    fetch http://mirror.fcix.net/alpine/edge/testing/x86_64/APKINDEX.tar.gz
    (1/15) Installing libmount (2.38.1-r2)
    (2/15) Installing glib (2.74.4-r0)
    (3/15) Installing c-ares (1.18.1-r1)
    (4/15) Installing krb5-conf (1.0-r2)
    (5/15) Installing keyutils-libs (1.6.3-r1)
    (6/15) Installing libverto (0.3.2-r1)
    (7/15) Installing krb5-libs (1.20.1-r0)
    (8/15) Installing lua5.2-libs (5.2.4-r11)
    (9/15) Installing libmaxminddb-libs (1.7.1-r0)
    (10/15) Installing libnl3 (3.7.0-r0)
    (11/15) Installing libssh (0.10.4-r0)
    (12/15) Installing libxml2 (2.10.3-r2)
    (13/15) Installing wireshark-common (4.0.2-r0)
    Executing wireshark-common-4.0.2-r0.pre-install
    Executing wireshark-common-4.0.2-r0.post-install
    *
    * If you want to run wireshark as an unprivileged user
    * then you must add that user to the group "wireshark".
    *
    (14/15) Installing tshark (4.0.2-r0)
    (15/15) Installing termshark (2.4.0-r6)
    Executing busybox-1.35.0-r29.trigger
    OK: 1566 MiB in 353 packages
    fmt:~#
    
  • @angstrom said:

    @raveen2k3 said:
    hey ,
    What are The Requirements to get this :-P

    hey ,
    Congrats on your First Post

    Thanks ;-)

  • @Not_Oles said:

    @raveen2k3 said:
    hey ,
    What are The Requirements to get this :-P

    Hi @raveen2k3!

    I see from your profile that you are new here. Welcome to LES! It is great to meet you!

    Want to introduce yourself? I'm sure everyone would be interested to know your name, where you are from, and something about your Linux experience. Also, what do you want to do on the server?

    I'm looking forward to hearing more from you!

    Best wishes and kindest regards,

    Tom

    Hi

    Actually I'm new to this forum kind of stuffs , More like this is first forum I've joined .

    And I'm Actually from India,
    I've been Using a Debian 11 for nearly a year , I'm new to linux community though

    I've been looking for a free server to host some of python projects , most likely telegram and Discord Bots That I've made ,

    Also I've never used any other distro than debian, i would love to explore a new distro :-)

  • sounds great , i would like to have a try, thx for all =)

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles
  • question: how do you back up data on metalvps?

    my idea is to set up a cron job that would scp my home folder periodically.

    Any other ideas?

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles

    The all seeing eye sees everything...

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    @raveen2k3 said:

    @Not_Oles said:

    @raveen2k3 said:
    hey ,
    What are The Requirements to get this :-P

    Hi @raveen2k3!

    I see from your profile that you are new here. Welcome to LES! It is great to meet you!

    Want to introduce yourself? I'm sure everyone would be interested to know your name, where you are from, and something about your Linux experience. Also, what do you want to do on the server?

    I'm looking forward to hearing more from you!

    Best wishes and kindest regards,

    Tom

    Hi

    Actually I'm new to this forum kind of stuffs , More like this is first forum I've joined .

    And I'm Actually from India,
    I've been Using a Debian 11 for nearly a year , I'm new to linux community though

    I've been looking for a free server to host some of python projects , most likely telegram and Discord Bots That I've made ,

    Also I've never used any other distro than debian, i would love to explore a new distro :-)

    Hi @raveen2k3!

    Thanks for your intro! Again, it's nice to have you with us! I hope you enjoy the server!

    I made your account already. Your password is in a file in your home directory. Please change your password when you have a chance. Since password login has been disabled, I need your ed25519 ssh public key. If you kindly post your key, I will drop it into your account. Then you hopefully will be able to log in via IPv4 or IPv6 using your key.

    Please keep us updated as your projects progress!

    Best wishes!

    Tom

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    @qmesso said:
    sounds great , i would like to have a try, thx for all =)

    Hi @qmesso!

    Wonderful to hear from you! I see that you have been here on LES for awhile, and that your profile might have less activity than some others. Would you like to introduce yourself by telling us who and where you are plus something about your Linux experience? Also, what do you want to do on the server?

    I'm looking forward to setting up your account!

    Best wishes!

    Tom

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    @terrorgen said:
    question: how do you back up data on metalvps?

    my idea is to set up a cron job that would scp my home folder periodically.

    Any other ideas?

    Hi @terrorgen!

    I'm looking forward to reading some interesting solutions which might be posted by some of the other guys.

    MetalVPS doesn't make any backups. Quoting from the OP:

    Please make your own redundant, offsite backups! It's easy to download or sync or clone your backup to a safe place. Please also make sure that you actually can restore from your backups! Please think of your MetalVPS account as ephemeral! It might blow up! We or you might reinstall the node! 🤦‍♂️

    For myself, I'm like you. I make tar archives and download them with scp. Once in a while I use rsync. One of the users over at Darkstar used Borgbackup. Borgbackup seemed to work pretty well! There's also rclone, which I haven't tried yet.

    A couple of users have, cleverly, I think, "eliminated" the backup process by "reversing" the common use pattern of the server. These guys never leave hardly anything on the server. Maybe a couple of almost empty directories. When they want to use the server, they bring in their files with something like ansible or rsync.

    It's important to make sure backups actually can be restored. I make sha256sums to check the downloads, and then I untar the archives and check the files. Often I make sha256sums of individual files if they are important.

    Hope this helps! Best wishes!

    P.S. @terrorgen I'd be interested to hear more about any new backup procedures that you try. @Everyone, what are you using for backups?

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    @terrorgen said:
    Been using metalvps as a build machine for the multiple VPSs running NixOS. Compiling software from source on this thing is fast!

    It usually take my own PC 20 minutes to finish compiling Zerotier (NixOS doesn't keep its binary on their repo for licensing reasons) but just couple minutes on metalvps!

    It's so great that you are doing this! I'd be interested to hear more details about whatever you are installing on the server with Nix. Congrats again on getting Nix working!

  • Not_OlesNot_Oles Hosting ProviderContent Writer

    @Not_Oles said: LXC still is not expected to work yet partly because lxcbr0 isn't present because /etc/network/interfaces hasn't been updated yet. There is no bridge in the current setup. I sent the possible new interfaces configuration to Cloudie, so we will see what he says.

    Haven't yet heard back from @Cloudie. He is a great guy! Sometimes he gets busy, and that's okay.

    Later today or tomorrow I might mess around with the networking a little to see whether I can get LXC going. There might be some downtime. Please remember that you can check the IPv4 and IPv6 monitors.

    If you are running anything that needs stability, please let me know and I will hold off awhile. Thanks! :)

  • @Not_Oles said:

    @raveen2k3 said:

    @Not_Oles said:

    @raveen2k3 said:
    hey ,
    What are The Requirements to get this :-P

    Hi @raveen2k3!

    I see from your profile that you are new here. Welcome to LES! It is great to meet you!

    Want to introduce yourself? I'm sure everyone would be interested to know your name, where you are from, and something about your Linux experience. Also, what do you want to do on the server?

    I'm looking forward to hearing more from you!

    Best wishes and kindest regards,

    Tom

    Hi

    Actually I'm new to this forum kind of stuffs , More like this is first forum I've joined .

    And I'm Actually from India,
    I've been Using a Debian 11 for nearly a year , I'm new to linux community though

    I've been looking for a free server to host some of python projects , most likely telegram and Discord Bots That I've made ,

    Also I've never used any other distro than debian, i would love to explore a new distro :-)

    Hi @raveen2k3!

    Thanks for your intro! Again, it's nice to have you with us! I hope you enjoy the server!

    I made your account already. Your password is in a file in your home directory. Please change your password when you have a chance. Since password login has been disabled, I need your ed25519 ssh public key. If you kindly post your key, I will drop it into your account. Then you hopefully will be able to log in via IPv4 or IPv6 using your key.

    Please keep us updated as your projects progress!

    Best wishes!

    Tom

    Hey,
    Thanks for the reply ☺️

    And here is my public key

    ssh-ed25519 AAAAC3NzaC1lZDI1NTE5AAAAICTSdu+z+191g3COcxlUDMS7jcJgSqtsg178O4mAnWoz

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles
  • Connection to 1.1.1.1 and 8.8.8.8 seems to not work for some reasons

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles

    The all seeing eye sees everything...

  • @terrorgen said:
    Connection to 1.1.1.1 and 8.8.8.8 seems to not work for some reasons

    fmt:~$ mtr 1.1.1.1
    -ash: mtr: not found
    fmt:~$ traceroute 1.1.1.1
    traceroute to 1.1.1.1 (1.1.1.1), 30 hops max, 46 byte packets
     1  10.100.4.1 (10.100.4.1)  0.228 ms  0.250 ms  0.198 ms
     2  149.112.26.23 (149.112.26.23)  0.480 ms  0.293 ms  0.168 ms
     3  45.45.210.98 (45.45.210.98)  0.346 ms  0.370 ms  0.413 ms
     4  *  *  *
     5  *  *  *
     6^C
    

    149.112.26.23 is Lambda-IX.
    45.45.210.98 is OHANACRAFT LLC game hosting.
    Route leak happening?

    Thanked by (1)Not_Oles

    Webhosting24 aff best VPS; ServerFactory aff best VDS; Cloudie best ASN; Huel aff best brotein.

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