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Flirc raspberry pi 4
Flirc raspberry pi 4






flirc raspberry pi 4

The main issue: spamhaus block lists, they are hostile to all self-hosted people and they don't provide a irc server, or a non blocked email to be removed from their lists (which are unfortunately used by too many open source related companies/project, which is a mistake). I am kind of surprise it was not already pown by some trashy hackers.

#FLIRC RASPBERRY PI 4 CODE#

I never had to modify the code of my smtp server, yet (and I run IPv4 and native IPv6 provided by default to millions of clients by my ISP, I think it has been the case for more than a decade, may be wrong about this one though). I did the same thing with a nanomimal http server to serve static content and maybe dynamic in the future: a noscript/basic (x)html http server for maps (which uses openstreet map tiles), which does provide proper map display in links2, with a font not too big, and with harmless html tables.Ĭonfigured the "server" to restart everything if something is detected missing (you know, cron with SH scripts and certainly not bash scripts). Got myself a Pi, a plastic box, a memory card, a big usb key, wrote my own SMTP server in super lean no-libc C (c89 with benign bit of c99/c11), put a devuan GNU/linux (NOT debian with its toxic trashy bloat and kludge of systemd). So I wonder, where are the middle grounds? I've had a pleasure of WfH involving setting up some PowerEdges in my living room, was fun but extremely noisy. But the next "step" I see when searching for ARM servers are those fan-screaming behemoths you put in a rack in a proper server room, which is something I dread for a homelab, as I don't have a dedicated room for it. I would fancy an ARMv8 machine - just for fun of it (and possibly better performance per watt) - but I think I can't get anything comparable from a RPi-level hardware.

flirc raspberry pi 4

And it's an entry-level server-oriented board so I have proper LOM without having to throw in an IPKVM. It sits on my desk in a small-ish cubic Supermicro chassis and barely makes any noise beyond the normal HDD screeching. I'm curious, is there anything more serious - but less serious than some proper rack server hardware?Ĭurrently I'm running a home server on EPYC 3251 mini-ITX board, which I use to route 1GbE WAN and 10GbE LAN, serve as a NAS, and run a bunch of services all without it breaking a sweat, and leaving plenty of headroom shall I want to run more stuff there. This seems to be low-power entry-level stuff.








Flirc raspberry pi 4