Sure did. I totally tried recording sounds of the coins dropping in. Never worked but I was too young to know why.
manwichmakesameal
This is what I ended up going with. I’ll just have to keep an eye on disk space.
I'll have to check this out. Have you run this in a container or just a native app?
And just like other posters, don't keep anything you can't lose on it. I keep my matrix homeserver there but have a backup and some other containers that if they get lost, no biggie. I've only had mine for ~6mos or so but haven't had any issues.
Kind of. I'm thinking something along the lines of sonarr/radarr/etc but with the ability to play/stream the podcast instead of downloading it. I tend to use web interfaces of stuff like that at work and can't really use my phone. Maybe I'll have to look into a roll-your-own solution using some existing stuff. Was hoping I wouldn't have to.
Of course it’s Missouri……..
Use a USB drive or otherwise download this on the Win side and get it over to your Ubuntu side: linky Install that package and you should be able to build your kernel module using dkms.
links is pretty lightweight. All joking aside, I'd look at adding RAM to it if possible. That's probably going to help the most.
Also, to add to this: you're setup sounds almost identical to mine. I have a NAS with multiple TBs of storage and another machine with plenty of CPU and RAM. Using NFS for your docker share is going to be a pain. I "fixed" my pains by also using shares inside my docker-compose files. What I mean by that is specify your share in a volume section:
volumes:
media:
driver: local
driver_opts:
type: "nfs"
o: "addr=192.168.0.0,ro"
device: ":/mnt/zraid_default/media"
Then mount that volume when the container comes up:
services:
...
volumes:
- type: volume
source: media
target: /data
volume:
nocopy: true
This way, I don't have to worry as much. I also use local directories for storing all my container info. e.g.: ./container-data:/path/in/container
Basically when you make a new group or user, make sure that the NUMBER that it's using matches whatever you're using on your export. So for example: if you use groupadd -g 5000 nfsusers
just make sure that whenever you make your share on your NAS, you use GID of 5000 no matter what you actually name it. Personally, I make sure the names and GIDs/UIDs are the same across systems for ease of use.
I'm 100% sure that your problem is permissions. You need to make sure the permissions match. Personally, I created a group specifically for my NFS shares then when I export them they are mapped to the group. You don't have to do this, you can use your normal users, you just have to make sure the UID/GID numbers match. They can be named different as long as the numbers match up.
Unfortunately, I couldn't get ChatGPT to write correct Python code for my ESP32 project. I got no problem just writing a bash script to email me.