Hello there!

I’m also @savvywolf@furry.engineer , and I have a website at https://www.savagewolf.org .

He/They

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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 27th, 2023

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  • When I’ve needed to transfer data over to a new disk, I’ve used gparted from a live usb to copy/paste partitions directly. Once that’s done, you’ll probably need to update /etc/fstab to point to the new drives and run update-grub (assuming you are using grub) to update the bootloader config.












  • You can have multiple A records point to the same IP address, yes. Whatever website you’re managing your DNS with should allow you to create multiple subdomains as A/AAAA records. You can also (if you wish) use a wildcard to ensure that all subdomains go to your VPS’s server.

    If you want to run multiple HTTP/HTTPS services on the same IP address (as it looks like you want to do), you’ll need to use a reverse proxy like Nginx. It can pattern match on domain names and ensure that traffic for one domain goes to an appropriate port/socket (mastodon.example.com being sent to the mastodon service). It’s not possible for DNS to specify port redirection.

    Also, you’ve not mentioned it here, but look into https://letsencrypt.org/ for HTTPS certificates.



  • Firstly, for my dotfiles, I use home-manager. I keep the config on my git server and in theory I can pull it down and set up a system the way I like it.

    In terms of backups, I use Pika to backup my home directory to my hard disk every day, so I can, in theory, pull back files I delete.

    I also push a core selection of my files to my server using Pika, just in case my house burns down. Likewise, I pull backups from my server to my desktop (again with Pika) in case Linode starts messing me about.

    I also have a 2TiB ssd I keep in a strongbox and some cloud storage which I push bigger things to sporadically.

    I also take occasional data exports from online services I use. Because hey, Google or Discord can ban you at any time for no reason. :P




  • So the question is this: Do you want to be able to reproduce the system exactly, or are you fine taking a few hours to reinstall software. If you’re just wanting to keep settings and data for apps rather than the apps themselves, you can cut down on your storage requirements a lot.

    If it’s the latter, all of your user settings should be in your home directory (“/home/username” or just “~”). If you back that up, you should be able to recover your settings and data on a fresh install of your distro of choice.


  • … Uh… This doesn’t seem that objectionable. It’s a bunch of targeted fixes to websites, I imagine every browser does it in some form. Firefox at least allows you to turn it off if for some reason you wanted to.

    BTW, I think Proton (for playing games) does this as well.

    Also, Every site FF pretends to be a different UA on is artificially reducing FF market share data.

    Ehhh… I think a bigger effect on FF market share statistics is probably all those privacy addons and settings everyone is using.