I’ve event heard of people running Proxmox as a workstation just because it’s a stable Debian based distro with official ZFS support (remember Proxmox even supports being installed onto an existing Debian install)
I’ve event heard of people running Proxmox as a workstation just because it’s a stable Debian based distro with official ZFS support (remember Proxmox even supports being installed onto an existing Debian install)
It’s actually the opposite, with only a single drive of parity, once your hard drive is larger than ~2TB the resilver time for the array is high enough that there’s an uncomfortable chance of an additional drive failure while it’s resilvering
I think you’re thinking of the rule of thumb for RAID5 or the zfs equivalent raidz1
Hey, kinda off topic but what’s the best way to get into a Linux/Kubernetes admin role? I’ve got a degree in networking, several years of helpdesk experience and I’m currently working as an implementation specialist.
Is that something I could simply upskill and slide into or are there specific certs that will blow the doors open for new opportunities?
Oooh I’ll have to take a look into this. I’ve been feeling a bit let down by Portainer as I’ve slowly picked up a slightly better understanding of docker