
nullnothere
nullnothere
About
- Username
- nullnothere
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Comments
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Does: grep -oP "(?<=\bFROM=\').*?(?=\')" solve it for you? (I added \b before FROM to signify word boundary and it worked as I think how you'd like it to work - i.e only match FROM and not ENV_FROM). Here's a sample test case from me: …
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(Quote) I've not had any troubles (or rather I'm willing to pay the performance penalty to gain the storage advantage of deduping). (Quote) I understand but didn't get what the benefit of this is. Irrespective, the client needs the session key at e…
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(Quote) Duplicati does something like this (chunk sizes, metadata DB etc.) of course I don't know the specifics of the implementation. (Quote) Asymmetric encryption is quite expensive - so this will have to rely on some form of a master key to encr…
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(Quote) Any specifics? How does it compare vs duplicacy vs duplicati? I don't use any of these (borg, see below). (Quote) I'm very curious on your reasons/findings. I'm a heavy borg user and I have literally no complaints (again for my shell/cli ba…
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(Quote) @Ympker - Exactly as above. It is only the fly - so you write unencrypted stuff and it actually gets encrypted and saved onto whatever (cloud) end point. (Quote) Yes. Easier than gpg or some other encrypt first and then upload. The only &q…
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(Quote) I think there are rclone "clones" for Android that give you equivalent functionality. You will of course need to know the password (in case you encrypt). Think of rclone as more of a automation/scriptable tool rather than somethin…
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Rclone (https://rclone.org/) is something that is extremely useful to have a single unified interface across multiple storage backends.
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(Quote) What? I'm struggling to buy something that I actually need. How did you develop such powers of resistance?
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@Ympker - Do take a look at https://borgbackup.readthedocs.io/en/stable/ ("Borg", which is what I use for backups on Linux). Borg itself doesn't really work (well enough right now) on Windows. There are other somewhat similar tools like Du…
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(Quote) Tom - have you considered experimenting with DN42 - it should help you go a long way with minimal cost (and I think you already have most of what you need). I'd say it's a great way to get your toes wet and then figure out what next after yo…
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Go with either pfSense or OPNSense. pfSense has had some issues with their plans to go pseudo-closed-source/commercial with the community supported edition becoming an after thought. As a result OPNSense is gaining a fair bit of traction. Both are q…
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(Quote) Thank you - I have enough bandwidth to run circles around the globe many times over and still have some left over bits to spin some tails with. (Quote) Oh wow! Now that's evil genius for sure. Just imagine what the nefarious like yours trul…
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Woah @Not_Oles - I'm honoured (or should I be distressed?). Thank you for your kind words. I wrote that up purely as a tribute to our local IPv6 champion @Brueggus - his wit, impishness and repartee over at the OGF have always been fun and inspiring…
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I'm so long behind that I just recently upgraded some machines from Jessie to Buster. So much for state of the art... but there's nothing like stability from Debian. Of course many would say I live in the stone age but I'll gracefully show myself ou…
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If you're only looking for network information (and not detailed protocol specific stuff), I suggest you take a look at vnstat - it's a very lightweight interface monitoring tool that keeps track of traffic totals (in+out).
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I thought I'd just add my random $0.02 - one of the funky things with (I think) newer kernels and/or systemd (or some crazy lunar configuration between them) is that the there's some dynamic sorcery going on for automatic bridge devices (at least at…