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Tell me why I shouldn't use btrfs
  • I'm seeing very similar speeds on my two-HDD RAID1. The computer has an AMD 8500G CPU but the load from ZFS is minimal. Reading / writing a 50GB /dev/urandom file (larger than the cache) gives me:

    • 169 MB/s write
    • 254 MB/s read

    What's your setup?

  • Is anyone here using an enterprise Linux distro?
  • We use Alma Linux at work and it's fine, I suppose. I see two main reasons why you'd choose an EL linux distro:

    1. You have (professional) software that officially supports it. RHEL's release model makes it an attractive target for proprietary software and many vendors choose to support it.
    2. You need/want very long support cycles. You can run 10-year-old software even though you probably shouldn't.

    Apart from those, it's a competent distro, Red Hat know what they're doing. If you want the equivalent to an Ubuntu LTS / Debian in the Fedora world, it get's the job done. I quite like their approach of keeping the core OS stable while updating drivers, tools, and compilers (e.g., the kernel version number has very little meaning in RHEL).

    Is the experience very different from Fedora?

    Yes. the age of the core packages is very noticeable. The number of fully supported packages is also very small and you need to go to EPEL very quickly (at which point you're no longer getting enterprise support...). On the plus side, it's much more stable than Fedora in my experience.

    Edit: My main recommendation for a stable distro would probably be Debian unless one of the above points applies.

  • good replacement options power efficiency and affordable "large" storage?
  • Perhaps my recent NAS/home server build can serve as a bit of an inspiration for you:

    • AMD Ryzen 8500G (8 cores, much more powerful than your two CPUs, with iGPU)
    • Standard B650 mainboard, 32 GB RAM
    • 2 x used 10 TB HDDs in a ZFS pool (mainboard has 4x SATA ports)
    • Debian Bookworm with Docker containers for applications (containers should be more efficient than VMs).
    • Average power consumption of 19W. Usually cooled passively.

    I don't think it's more efficient to separate processing and storage so I'd only go for that if you want to play around with a cluster. I would also avoid SD cards as a root FS, as they tend to die early and catastrophically.

  • can't update System (Fedora 41)
  • It sounds like Proton VPN (or its repo) is causing issues for you. Given that it's a paid service, you can probably contact their support.

    Alternatively, you can also look for the repo file in /etc/yum.repos.d, something like /etc/yum.repos.d/file_name.repo, for Proton VPN. You can then disable it by renaming it to .repo.disabled and try again (sudo dnf upgrade in the terminal). Note: This is not really a permanent solution, as it will disable updates for Proton VPN.

  • How do you do to install Drupal 11 on debian?
  • I used the docker compose template from https://hub.docker.com/_/drupal and mostly changed the image:

    Compose file
    # Drupal with PostgreSQL
    #
    # Access via "http://localhost:8080"
    #   (or "http://$(docker-machine ip):8080" if using docker-machine)
    #
    # During initial Drupal setup,
    # Database type: PostgreSQL
    # Database name: postgres
    # Database username: postgres
    # Database password: example
    # ADVANCED OPTIONS; Database host: postgres
    
    version: '3.1'
    
    services:
    
      drupal:
        # image: drupal:10-apache
        # image: drupal:10.3.7-apache-bookworm
        # image: drupal:10.3.6-apache-bookworm
        image: drupal:11.0.5-apache-bookworm
        # image: drupal:10-php8.3-fpm-alpine
        ports:
          - 8080:80
        volumes:
          - /var/www/html/modules
          - /var/www/html/profiles
          - /var/www/html/themes
          # this takes advantage of the feature in Docker that a new anonymous
          # volume (which is what we're creating here) will be initialized with the
          # existing content of the image at the same location
          - /var/www/html/sites
        restart: always
        environment:
          PHP_MEMORY_LIMIT: "1024M"
    
      postgres:
        image: postgres:16
        environment:
          POSTGRES_PASSWORD: example
        restart: always
    
    

    The details for the v11 image are here: https://hub.docker.com/layers/library/drupal/11.0.5-apache-bookworm/images/sha256-0e41e0173b4b5d470d30e2486016e1355608ab40651549e3e146a7334f9c8f77?context=explore

  • How do you do to install Drupal 11 on debian?
  • I wanted to recommend using a Docker container but I ran into the same issue with the default config for "drupal:10-apache" (aka "drupal:10.3.7-apache-bookworm"). Opening "node/add/article" results in the OOM error. Downgrading to "drupal:10.3.6-apache-bookworm" resolved the issue. Looks like a Drupal regression to me. Maybe you can also try an older version of Drupal 11?

  • Best Open Source LLM:Tencent Hunyuan-Large: The 389 Billion Parameter Model Outperforming Llama 3 and DeepSeek V2
  • IMHO the OSI is right, the designation "open source" should be reserved for those models that are actually open source (including training data). And apparently there are a few models that actually meet this criterion: "Though none are confirmed, the handful of models that Bdeir told MIT Technology Review are expected to land on the list are relatively small names, including Pythia by Eleuther, OLMo by Ai2, and models by the open-source collective LLM360." (https://www.technologyreview.com/2024/08/22/1097224/we-finally-have-a-definition-for-open-source-ai/)

    Perhaps it would also be useful to have a name for models that release their weights under an OSI license, maybe "open weight"? However, this model would not even meet that... (same for Llama).