chirping

joined 3 months ago
[–] chirping@infosec.pub 1 points 3 days ago (1 children)

I don't understand what you mean with the content disappearing when you mount the virtiofs on the guest - isn't the mount empty when bound, untill the guest populates it?

Can you share what sync client+guest os you are using? if the client does "advanced" features like files on demand, then it might clash with virtiofs - this is where the details of which client/OS could be relevant, does it require local storage or support remote?

If guest os is windows, samba share it to the host. if guest os is linux, nfs will probably do. In both cases I would host the share on the client, unless the client specifically supports remote storage.

podman/docker seems to be the proper tool for you here, but a VM with the samba/nfs approach could be less hassle and less complicated, but somewhat bloaty. containers require some more tailoring but in theory is the right way to go.

Keep in mind that a screwup could be interpreted by the sync client as mass-deletes, so backups are important (as a rule of thumb, it always is, but especially for cloud hosted storage)

[–] chirping@infosec.pub -3 points 1 week ago (2 children)

nah I think your reading comprehension is off, it's a week of treatment, then several weeks off. As a non-native English speaker I get why the original phrasing of "weekly" wasn't the clearest way of putting it, but I think the guy you called schizo just didn't understand what you were confused by

[–] chirping@infosec.pub 3 points 1 month ago (3 children)

Agreed! I think a part of the "problem" is that with Nix, there's now at least 3 sides: application specific knowledge, system knowledge, and you have to use the nix language, architecture and tools to interface with it. so for a seasoned linux user, there's maybe just a new programming language, but if you're new to Linux, it's quickly gonna overwhelm you. which in a way is a bit ironic because I'd argue that it's easier to manage a NixOS system, and getting help is so much easier when your problems can be replicated by just aharing your config.

[–] chirping@infosec.pub 2 points 1 month ago

that is one way to do it, and it's a very common one - it's robust and simple. So I can't correct you, but thought I would add to it. In NixOS, they've improved it by making sure all your apps are symlinked, and when updating, these symlinks are updated. That way you can start using your newly updated system straight away, without a reboot. When rebooting, you are prompted to which generation you want to boot into, (defaulting to "latest" after a few seconds of no input) making rollbacks a breeze.

[–] chirping@infosec.pub 5 points 2 months ago (1 children)

The tank and 6v6/5v5 has been heavily discussed, recently devs made a long devblog about it. I can kinda see where you're coming from, I think, but between balance/queue times/the average player (of which there tends to be more of when you're with 5 others instead of just 4) it seems to me like 1 tank works better in practice even though it struggles when compared to the ideal world+nostalgia goggles.

I was very pleasently ~~surprised~~ not disappointed by the monetization, like uncompleted weekly (battle pass -primary method of profression) challenges carry over, so in theory you can do all weekliesduring the last week if a battle pass. also aren't the new heroes available if you play just a few matches?

[–] chirping@infosec.pub 5 points 2 months ago

As an "outside observer", I think maybe you're not seeing (what I believe is) the other guys viewpoint: What you are bringing up (photoshop has been possible already) is a core part of what he said from the start, and his point builds on top of that. So obviously he already knows it, and arguing about it disregards that his line of argumentation builds upon the basis we all agreed upon to be true until you brought it up as ... contrarian? To his point. doesn't seem like "old man yells at cloud" energy, more like "Uhm, achtually"