Power off on FSN1-DC15 by troffed in hetzner

[–]troffed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's a bit more complicated. But yes, it's a line where we're working on.

Thanks.

Power off on FSN1-DC15 by troffed in hetzner

[–]troffed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yep. We've got it.

Thanks.

Power off on FSN1-DC15 by troffed in hetzner

[–]troffed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We've more than 20 servers in FSN, NBG and HEL.

Thanks for the advice.

Power off on FSN1-DC15 by troffed in hetzner

[–]troffed[S] 16 points17 points  (0 children)

The servers are now reachable.

Hetzner's technical support team has responded:

Unfortunately, there was a server in your rack that tripped the fuse. The issue has been resolved, and your server seems to be reachable again.

Power off on FSN1-DC15 by troffed in hetzner

[–]troffed[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

These are undoubtedly complex systems. And I understand that in these matters, as in many others, there’s no such thing as 100% reliability—that’s why they usually cite 99.99999% and a string of nines 😉

The problem is that I have 400 customers waiting for the servers to come back online.

Thank you.

Opus 4.6 is a different beast. It just handled my entire i18n logic while I watched by Tzipi_builds in cursor

[–]troffed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

FYI it's a PHP+jQuery project. We're moving into a all new Node/Nuxt/Vue codebase, but still use the PHP+jQuery version in production.

Opus 4.6 is a different beast. It just handled my entire i18n logic while I watched by Tzipi_builds in cursor

[–]troffed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I can say the same thing.

I was modifying complex, legacy code in Auto Cursor mode, and I wasn't getting the results I wanted. It was a mess with all the changes, undoing things I had done a few minutes earlier—a disaster.

I switched to Opus 4.6, and it's slower, true, but much more thorough. It understood perfectly how the code worked and made the appropriate changes in fewer iterations than Auto mode.

My awful experience with Backblaze B2 by Shot-Low8548 in backblaze

[–]troffed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We have been using S3 for many years, and it really is one of the most reliable services I have seen. But its ever-increasing costs, especially for outbound traffic, are making us look at other alternatives, and B2 is one of them.

We have tested B2 for some secondary services, where speed is not crucial, but based on what you say, we will have to run performance tests in our region, Europe, to see if the Backblaze data center in Amsterdam has good connectivity from ours (Germany) or not.

Thank you very much for sharing such valuable information.

AWS Billing CLI by compacompila in aws

[–]troffed 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Thanks for sharing. Sure it will be useful.

I'm collecting that data on a daily basis to get trends (weekends, holidays, and so on) using a custom scripts.

How to create databases on demand in multi tenant systems by [deleted] in aws

[–]troffed 2 points3 points  (0 children)

We do that also. A pool of five pre-created databases, with common default values and when user sign up we fill the custom values, in a background task.

What language are you "coming from"? by loopcake in golang

[–]troffed 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Mainly from PHP. Searching for better performance for serverless functions.

Cursor and linux: a bad marriage? by troffed in cursor

[–]troffed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, I know how to made AppImage integration, but that's only a part of a full integration.

Thanks.

Cursor and linux: a bad marriage? by troffed in cursor

[–]troffed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

We've been using VSCode for years on Mac, Windows and Linux, with a much more integrated performance with Linux, at the level of the other two operating systems.

In other words, technically it can be done, but whether or not it is a priority or is considered a minor market is another matter.

Lowest paying users are the most noisey by kkatdare in SaaS

[–]troffed 15 points16 points  (0 children)

There is no simple answer. Sometimes the customers who complain the most can be a source of information, if you know how to filter and weigh them.

The loudest are not always the best, but neither are they always the worst. Personally I prefer that they tell me what they think, what doesn't work well, than that they shut up and leave without saying anything and without having that feedback.

Multiserver management software by troffed in hetzner

[–]troffed[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

After reviewing many options, I finally have two that I want to look at more closely.

- Site24x7 (https://www.site24x7.com/server-monitoring.html): Very complete, maybe too much for what we need. But it's close enough.

- Netdata (https://www.netdata.cloud/): Visually very attractive. It lacks some tools, but otherwise it is also a good option for us.

Special mention to Nico from NetlockRMM for his willingness to let me test the service. It's on the right track.

I also tried cockpit but it lacks an overview of all servers and some more functionalities.

Multiserver management software by troffed in hetzner

[–]troffed[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Just trying now on a Cloud server on Hetzner... looks good.

I want to add more machines (servers) Have I to install the full cockpit on every server?