gyptazy

@gyptazy@gyptazy.ch

Believer in the power of open-source & community-driven innovation.

Former AS20621 NetOp that loves FreeBSD & illumos. Currently mostly in DevOps & developing (Python, Rust). Contributes to & . Evaluating and production usage of hardware/software.

Projects:
* BoxyBSD.com - A free VM hosting service to provide some value back to the community.
* manpageblog.org - A static blog generator in manpage design.
* QualvoSec - A security patch management tool.
Bloghttps://gyptazy.ch
GitHubhttps://github.com/gyptazy
Xhttps://twitter.com/gyptazy
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gyptazy »
@gyptazy@gyptazy.ch

Thanks! So it might be a look worth - the only thing is the needed resources for each node...

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oxy »
@oxyhyxo@mastodon.bsd.cafe

@gyptazy yeah I never seemed to have the time or the hardware available at the same time to give it a real test

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gyptazy »
@gyptazy@gyptazy.ch

@oxyhyxo@bsd.cafe while I really like it, the resources are a bummer to me. My nodes tend to have 64-128g mem per node. It would be different when having 1,5TB memory. But in business scope this doesn’t matter

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oxy »
@oxyhyxo@mastodon.bsd.cafe

@gyptazy Indeed. It was the amount of required resources (and complexity) that forced me to reassess and start looking at things like FreeBSD. Do I really need servers this powerful to host some VMs/Containers?

If I was spinning up and destroying containers constantly I could see the use but most of the stuff I touch tends to be longer living and/or repeatable enough that I can automate with shell scripts.

For me it was like returning home - I started professionally way back when using Slackware, compiling things by hand and working to keep things lean and fast. Freebsd feels familiar to me in that sense but a lot more polished and with Ansible et.al I can achieve most of what I need to while not having to assemble some huge stack of software and deploy insanely expensive hardware.

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gyptazy »
@gyptazy@gyptazy.ch

@oxyhyxo@bsd.cafe I can clearly understand what you mean. It also live more slims lightweight solutions, that was also why I created qualvosec and manpageblog. It should just do its designated job - nothing more

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