Mostly my own eyes… /s
I run Dozzle as a container on my host and I use the command ‘docker stats’ on the CLI on the dockerhost for in-depth stuff.
Mostly my own eyes… /s
I run Dozzle as a container on my host and I use the command ‘docker stats’ on the CLI on the dockerhost for in-depth stuff.
And to answer your own points you made:
I have nothing against Windows, so don’t get me wrong. But there are so many better ways to do stuff, also where you don’t have to pay for licensing.
I had my rack before I had my cluster of TinyMiniMicro’s. I’ve ran enterprise hardware for years, but not anymore. But a rack is convenient, because my Synology is rackmount too :)
so I have decided to get a Dell Poweredge R710 instead
Also pretty old. It’s from 2009…
This is the only correct answer to this question!
I run ESXi on most of my systems. So that means, when there is an update of ESXi, I install the updates and reboot them.
Sometimes I need to change hardware or upgrade stuff. Then too.
I took my docker host offline yesterday, because of a RAM upgrade (16GB > 24GB, yeah, I’m aware I lost dual-channel). I regularly check for updates on non-ESXi machines.
Some people love 100% uptime of their servers. I hate it. When somebody has high uptime, it means they are lazy and don’t keep up with updates, which are critical most of the time.
Some SSDs cause this. Don’t know for sure why, but all the Samsung consumer SSDs I’ve put in servers over the years, never triggered those warnings. Maybe for your next round of SSDs, stick with Samsung?