

Very cool.


Very cool.


I mean, he’s not lying. He just forgot to mention that every other ethnicity is treated very badly aswell in that hellhole he created. Unless they have money.


I think you just realized you were wrong and don’t want to admit it tbh.


That’s not how wealth works. Wealth is not a representation of money, but money is a representation of wealth. Printing money doesn’t create wealth, it just makes the representation of wealth worth less. The implication that wealth has to be “taken away” from something or someone is just straightup wrong because that would imply the world has not gained any wealth ever, which would be a stupid assumption. Wealth is created by work and innovation - that’s why the materials inside a smartphone are worth significantly less than the entire smartphone.


Nah. Wealth isn’t finite. It hasn’t been for a long time.


Yeah why be happy for someone having luck and being able to break out of the hamster wheel.

Well its hard to beat fossil fuel in terms of energy density.


All right-wing parties do that. Not only in germany, but also in austria, France etc.
Italy has the only right-wing party that I would not consider as kreml whores lmao.


But but but the NATOOOOOOO they are the evil ones ;(((((( Russia is just defending themselves from the evil war machine that is NATOOOOOOOOO. ;(((


Congrats to all the execs, you’ve completely ruined the tech industry.
No - I think they made it (involuntary) better by forcing people into looking into self hosting everything and taking control over their own infrastructure.


Terraform and Puppet. Not very simple to get into, but extremely powerful and reliable.


How do you notify yourself about the status of a container?
I usually notice if a container or application is down because that usually results in something in my house not working. Sounds stupid, but I’m not hosting a hyper available cluster at home.
Is there a “quick” way to know if a container has healthcheck as a feature.
Check the documentation
Does healthcheck feature simply depend on the developer of each app, or the person building the container?
If the developer adds a healthcheck feature, you should use that. If there is none, you can always build one yourself. If it’s a web app, a simple HTTP request does the trick, just validate the returned HTML - if the status code is 200 and the output contains a certain string, it seems to be up. If it’s not a web app, like a database, a simple SELECT 1 on the database could tell you if it’s reachable or not.
Is it better to simply monitor the http(s) request to each service? (I believe this in my case would make Caddy a single point of failure for this kind of monitor).
If you only run a bunch of web services that you use on demand, monitoring the HTTP requests to each service is more than enough. Caddy being a single point of failure is not a problem because your caddy being dead still results in the service being unusable. And you will immediately know if caddy died or the service behind it because the error message looks different. If the upstream is dead, caddy returns a 502, if caddy is dead, you’ll get a “Connection timed out”
I think because there are ways to protect your entire systems with cryptographic keys - there’s no need for individual applications to do that themselves. You can either only make your network accessible via an SSH tunnel (which would then use SSH-Keys), use a VPN or use mTLS which would require you to install a cert into your browsers key storage.
There’s many good solutions to this problem - no need for individual applications to do it themselves.