scrubbles

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[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 8 points 3 days ago (7 children)

Seriously what is the deal with it? I remembered playing it in gym decades ago and everyone hated it. Now I see people lobbying for new freaking complexes for it. Let's see if the fad lasts more than a year before dedicating public land space to it

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 7 points 3 days ago (1 children)

We've been eclipsed in so many other ways - and now we will here too. We'll still eventually get to full green, that just makes that process slower, but in the meantime we're just letting others pass us by.

I wonder what they'll do with all that money they aren't spending on fossil fuels.

Glad to be of help. It is the right decision, I have no regrets if migrating, but it is a long process. Just getting my first few services running was months, just so you are aware of that commitment, but it's worth it.

Agreed on all points, and also would like to point out most of the people who want to "go back" are not the ones who were oppressed during that time. It's no surprise that the people who want to go back are mostly those who grew up in the white suburbs and small towns, where it was simple and easy.

The oppressed are conveniently left out of those conversations. Where were the black people, or the gay people during those times? They existed, but in a very simple worldview it's easy to forget that.

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 6 points 3 days ago (1 children)

Yeah, unfortunately most people don't understand what that is, and buy devices thinking they'll be supported long term. Us here know better (I bought Wemo early on and stopped years and years ago now because I knew this was coming, but I know I'm not the majority).

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 15 points 5 days ago* (last edited 4 days ago) (4 children)

I'll post more later (reply here to remind me), but I have your exact setup. It's a great way to learn k8s and yes, it's going to be an uphill battle for learning - but the payoff is worth it. Both for your professional career and your homelab. It's the big leagues.

For your questions, no to all of them. Once you learn some of it the rest kinda falls together.

I'm going into a meeting, but I'll post here with how I do it later. In the mean time, pick one and only one container you want to get started with. Stateless is easier to start with compared to something that needs volumes. Piece by piece brick by brick you will add more to your knowledge and understanding. Don't try to take it all on day one. First just get a container running. Then access via a port and http. Then proxy. Then certs. Piece by piece, brick by brick. Take small victories, if you try to say "tomorrow everything will be on k8s" you're setting yourself up for anger and frustration.

@sunoc@sh.itjust.works Edit: To help out I would do these things in these steps, note that steps are not equal in length, and they are not complete - but rather to help you get started without burning out on your journey. I recommend just taking each one, and when you get it working rather than jumping to the next one, instead taking a break, having a drink, and celebrating that you got it up and running.

  1. Start documenting everything you do. The great thing about kubernetes is that you can restart from scratch if you have written everything down. I would start a new git repository with a README that contains every command you ran, what it did, and why you did it. Assume that you will be tearing down your cluster and rebuilding it - in fact I would even recommend that. Treat this first cluster as your testing grounds, and then you won't feel crappy spinning up temporary resources. Then, you can rebuild it and know that you did a great job - and you'll feel confident in rebuilding in case of hardware failure.

  2. Get the sample nginx pod up and running with a service and deployment. Simply so you can curl the IP of your main node and port, and see the response. This I assume you have played with already.

  3. Point DNS to your main node, get the nginx pod with http://your.dns.tld:PORT. This should be the same as anything you've done with docker before.

  4. Convert the yaml to a helm chart as other have said, but don't worry about "templating" yet, get comfortable with helm install, helm upgrade -i, and helm uninstall. Understand what each one does and how they operate. Then go back and template, upgrade-ing after each change to understand how it works. It's pretty standard to template the image and tag for example so it's easy to upgrade them. There's a million examples online, but don't go overboard, just do the basics. My (template values.yaml) usually looks like:

<<servicename>>
  name: <<servicename>>
  image:
    repository: path/to/image
    tag: v1.1.1
    network:
     port: 8888

Just keep it simple for now.

  1. Decide on your proxy service. Traefik as you see comes out of the box. I personally use istio. I can go into more details why later, but I like that I can create a "VirtualService" for "$appname.my.custom.tld` and it will point to it.
  2. Implement your proxy service, and get the (http only still) app set up. Set up something like nginx.your.tld and be able to curl http://nginx.your.tld and see that it routes properly to your sample nginx service. Congrats, this is a huge one.
  3. Add the CertManager chart. This will set it up so you can create Certificate types in k8s. You'll need to use the proxy in the previous step to route the /.well-known endpoints on the http port from the open web to cert-manager, for Istio this was another virtual service on the gateway - I assume Traefic would have something similar to "route all traffic on port 80 that starts with /.well-known to this service". Then, in your nginx helm chart, add in a Certificate type for your nginx endpoint, nginx.your.tld, and wait for it to be successfully granted. With Istio, this is all I need now to finally curl https://nginx.your.tld!

At this point you have routing, ports, and https set up. Have 2 drinks after this one. You can officially deploy any stateless service at this point.

Now, the big one, stateful. Longhorn is a bear, there are a thousand caveats to it.

Step one is where are your backups going to go. This can be a simple NFS/SMB share on a local server, it can be an s3 endpoint, but seriously this is step 1. Backups are critical with longhorn. You will fuck up Longhorn - multiple times. Losing these backups means losing all configs to all of your pods, so step one is to decide on your stable backup location.

Now, read the Longhorn install guide: https://longhorn.io/docs/1.9.0/deploy/install/. Do not skip reading the install guide. There are incredibly important things in there that I regretted glossing over that would have saved me. (Like setting up backups first).

The way I use longhorn is to create a PV in longhorn, and then the PVC (you can look up what both of these are later). Then I use Helm to set what the PVC name is to attach it to my pod. Try and do this with another sample pod. You are still not ready to move production things over yet, so just attach it to nginx. exec into it, write some data into the pvc. Helm uninstall. See what happens in longhorn. Helm install. Does your PVC reattach? Exec in, is your data still there? Learn how it works. I fully expect you to ping me with questions at this point, don't worry, I'll be here.

Longhorn will take time in learning, give yourself grace. Also after you feel comfortable with it, you'll need to start moving data from your old docker setup to Longhorn, and that too will be a process. You'll get there though. Just start with some of your lower priority projects, and migrate them one by one.

After all of this, there is still more. You can automount smb/nfs shares directly into pods for media or anything. You can pass in GPUs - or I even pass in some USB devices. You can encrypt your longhorn things, you can manage secrets with your favorite secret manager. There's thousands of things you'll be able to do. I wish you luck, and feel free to ping me here or on Matrix (@scrubbles@halflings.chat) if you ever need an ear. Good luck!

Yeah with Amazon's sheer size this has definitely been done before, curious what limits op is going to hit. My guess is they have a quota for submissions, and they'll be banned from submitting tickets.

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 11 points 5 days ago* (last edited 5 days ago)

I mean go for it? They literally can't do anything, you might as well complain that fire is hot though. It's part of being in the Internet. They provide safety gloves, via VPCs and firewalls, but if you choose not to use them then.. yeah I mean youre probably gonna get burned

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 62 points 5 days ago (10 children)

Uh sorry dude, but no this isn't a script kiddy, these are bots that scan every IP address every day for any open ports, it's a constant thing. If you have a public IP, you have people, govs, nefarious groups scanning it. AWS will tell you the same as if you were hosting it locally, close up the ports, put it on a private network. Use a vpc and WAF in AWS' case.

I get scanned constantly. Every hour of every day dark forced attempt to penetrate our defences.

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 3 points 5 days ago (1 children)

Shows that no matter what you do, people will be mad at you.

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 16 points 5 days ago (4 children)

Oh come on, it's Microsoft. They're forced to use copilot

[–] scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech 22 points 5 days ago (6 children)

I mean they only made one of the most successful MMOs to date, of course Microsoft is closing them

 
 

How many things can you see that are coming? I've counted quite a few new things!

1.1 SpoilerHypertube splitters!

 

Title essentially. Youtube's algorithm is hot garbage, so I can't search for anything anymore without a ton of AI slop and rage bait. So, who do you go to for actual good long form videos? Exposes, scandals, behind the scenes, documentaries, film, travel, transit, who do you recommend I follow?

7
submitted 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) by scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech to c/videos@lemmy.world
 

For those who remember, it was bad enough where it was memeable. Once your factory got to a certain size we would have to turn autosaves down to every half an hour because they would take over 3 minutes - or longer. It became a mandatory break time, to stand up and get a drink.

 

Title question mostly. I've played with XTTS-v2 and it worked pretty well, but I'm wondering if folks are using anything else special. I'd like to train my own voice finetune which is what I did with XTTS-v2, and then use it with home assistant's voice feature. Welcome all opinions on it!

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