Lowendbox doing it is what really interests me
Lowendbox doing it is what really interests me
Is there an estimate of the loss in performance that I’m looking at, at full load?
Thanks, that’s a great idea and I’ll keep CPU support in mind
Thanks!
I’m just being a bit paranoid with my attempts, and yes just KVM on Debian would work perfectly fine for my purposes but I’d like to take the more secure alternative if possible. Another comment about kernel hardening was a good one for KVM, and unfortunately AMD SEV is not available on most of their consumer chips (especially the older generations).
If I were to switch off multi-threading but assign vCPUs to my VM assuming multi-threaded capacity (I.e. assign 12 vCPUs to my lab cluster after switching of SMT for my 6 core CPU), would I face performance issues? I wonder
I set up my server too, and other than the fields in the configuration and some iptables rules (I really should switch to nftables), it wasn’t a big hassle. Worked perfectly. But yes good tips about IP forwarding, I did it in the file directly but that can be a problem
Exactly
Is it even coming? They don’t seem very interested
Thank you, I realised that I’d need to reencode transparently. How would I do that?
Thank you, I realised that I’d need to reencode transparently. How would I do that?
Thank you, this is exactly my use-case, along with some live streaming.
However,
I bumped but I don’t use touch screens on desktop, can’t help.
Does it handle AMD PSP settings?
I wish they based it on Debian. It definitely earns my personal recommendation for default distros alongside LMDE
Not having an opt-out toggle should definitely be a cause of concern. Not everyone is running Debian just for the FOSS-only firmware, but there’s definitely a sizeable number of people doing so. Letting the user choose whether they want to install proprietary firmware or not is absolutely an important choice.
This is assuming there really isn’t an opt-out somewhere in the install menu.
Edit: it may be that I am running something without FOSS drivers for it. I happened to forget about it. So what? I’d rather it not run (unless it’s critical), and I definitely want to be prompted that a proprietary driver is recommended to run the specific device because no FOSS driver is available. Not doing so is taking away my choice in the matter, and if Debian is really doing that, then I will personally have to rethink my options, including my donations
Not having an opt-out toggle pisses me off
Wtf, why on earth would they do that? Thanks for pointing it out
My goodness, thank you for this. I hope the project continues for a while!
POSIX on servers, thinking of switching to POSIX on desktop but that’s a bit awkward