Indeed, I do agree but I’ve never done anything close to this magnitude so it is kind of intimidating for me. It is a learning process though!
Strider@lemmy.world 11 hours ago
If you have systems or services you’re dependant so strongly, always have an backup / emergency access. 3rd party or self hosted.
My 5c but I think you agree.
MTZ@lemmy.world 10 hours ago
Strider@lemmy.world 10 hours ago
Ah crap that’s what I get for not being native English. But still, correct somehow.
Pika@sh.itjust.works 1 hour ago
I hard agree with this. I would NEVER have wanted to start with containerized setups. I know how I am, I would have given up before I made it past the second LXC. Starting as a generalized 1 server does everything and then learning as you go is so much better for beginnings. Worst case scenario is they can run docker as the later on containerized setup and migrate to it. Or they can do what I did, start with a single server setup, moved everything onto a few drives a few years later once I was comfortable with how it is, nuked the main server and installed proxmox, and hate life learning how it works for 2 or 3 weeks.
Do i regret that change? No way in hell, but theres also no way I would recommend a fully compartmentalized or containerized setup to someone just starting out. It adds so many layers of complexity.
mic_check_one_two@lemmy.dbzer0.com 7 hours ago
Native vs containerized really depends on what it is going to be doing tbh. If it’s just downloading and/or moving files around, containerized is fine. And having your docker-compose.yml files saved somewhere external will make future hardware upgrades/recovery much easier.
There is certainly some learning curve to figure out the quirks of a compose file, but the nice part is that most services will post an example compose file for you to edit as needed. And that means learning it is basically just a matter of reading the example files and figuring out what the different fields mean; yaml is extremely easy to read, even for someone who has never looked at it before. You may have some fringe cases that need a deeper dive, but the vast majority of setups are basically just a matter of “copy the example compose, edit the volumes as needed, and fuckin send it.”
Strider@lemmy.world 2 hours ago
Yes indeed. However as a beginner I think it’s far easier just to install and run a daemon. But maybe that’s just me. And of course if the intended way of running it is only container by default.
melsaskca@lemmy.ca 10 hours ago
Goddamned inflation. It used to be just 2 cents worth!
Strider@lemmy.world 10 hours ago
Ah crap that’s what I get for not being native English. But still, correct somehow.
Masamune@lemmy.world 6 hours ago
I don’t believe inflation is a serious problem. But that is just my 9 cents.