If you're setting up Proxmox either use the Proxmox ISO or start with Debian Bookworm. The only Linux machines I have with a GUI are my desktop and my laptop, both running Debian with KDE. All my servers run Debian unless there's a good reason not to.
eros
I found myself in a similar situation last year. MXRoute's lifetime plan works well for those domains that just need basic email and not a lot of storage.
Idle computing capacity that installed, online, but is not being used all the time is exactly what I thought the OP was talking about and calling spare. They said computing power to spare, not space or equipment. I don't understand your argument about installing equipment, that to me isn't what OP was talking about. 🤷♀️ Kinda like the spare capacity that CompuServe had from their time sharing service that they used to bring their online service to the masses at night.
Sorry you didn't appreciate my reply. I was trying to explain my point with real examples from my experience. I don't need your validation. I kinda regret trying to make you see both sides now. But whatever, you do you.
I don't, but I'll run some and try to remember to post back.
Nice writeup. As long as you can throw fast drives, fast networking and plenty of RAM at it Ceph is happy.
Ceph seems to work fine on my cluster at work. For less than $40k I replaced my whole VMware vSAN cluster and we're saving as much again in software licensing over the next 5 years with buying support from Proxmox. Also much lighter as far as administrative tasks to keep it up to date and running well.
3x Supermicro SSG-110P-NTR10
- Intel Xeon Gold 5713
- 256 GB RAM
- 10 Intel D7-P5510 3.84TB NVME
- 2 Micron 5400 Max
- Onboard dual 10GbE
- Mellanox ConnectX4 Dual SFP28 25GbE
- 5 year NBD parts warranty
I mean yeah, but no. It is spare capacity, so it's spare in one way.
I have hundreds of gigaflops of computing power sitting idle 80% of the time, I just don't think the taxpayers would appreciate the power bill if I put it all to use like that. But at home I can spare a few cycles on my solar power sipping Proxmox cluster.
One would assume they mean sitting around, doing nothing. Some would rather use some electricity to support a good cause than have the computing power sit there idle.
There are alternatives. Akamai has a similar product. It's not free, but it works. Also doesn't require all traffic to go through them all the time, you can repoint your traffic at them on the fly and have them mitigate by scrubbing the unwanted traffic until the attack ends and then switch back, and this can be automated. My ISP at work uses this as they have large swaths of public IP address space to protect for vulnerable members.
Look at your school's policy manual. There's likely a policy regarding what they can and cannot do with images of students. Every school I've worked for has some kind of policy around this. In all of them I've read you can opt out of photos being published, but there's usually a caveat that by participating in any school sanctioned event, participation is considered consent to be shown in photos and video of the event.