

It can run for days and puts additional strain on the hardware.
Check the physical attachment and obvious hardware failures first.
In case the hardware seems fine, try to zfs send the most important data to a safe place.


It can run for days and puts additional strain on the hardware.
Check the physical attachment and obvious hardware failures first.
In case the hardware seems fine, try to zfs send the most important data to a safe place.


Yes, I referred to the Debian part only.


I’ve seen that the patches are only available in the debian-security repository. It’s important to review your repo list in /etc/apt/sources.list.d.


I already have Forgejo installed and found out it does basic Oauth2. I didn’t have to do anything. It just worked out of the box.


There is probably something wrong with your setup, if Synapse has these problems.
I’ve been running Synapse for years, including voice/videocalls and even video conferences.
https://matrix.org/docs/matrix-concepts/end-to-end-encryption/
Key sharing When an event cannot be decrypted due to missing keys, a client may want to request them from other clients which may have them.
If users cannot do anything because all encryption keys are lost, then they need to know that and also how to avoid the situation in the future.
I think it’s not a bug. It’s simply no one online who can share a decryption key.
This is quite annoying. When will devs learn to tell people to resolve the problem instead of just showing a pointless error messages?
Did you use iperf? It makes sure that HDD/SSD is not the bottleneck.
You can also check the statistics and watch for uncommon errors. Or trace the connection with tcpdump.
CLI is so easy. You learn the basic concepts and can use thousands of tools.
curl is a very common tool. It’s installed everywhere, probably also on the postman servers… lol