![]() That will most likely be Ubuntu with a PPA, though I can't say how to do it exactly since I use something else. Which brings us to the last question: for a beginner, I'd recommend a Linux distribution that provides all the packages you need either in the distributor's repositories or via a 3rd party repository. ![]() That way, your packages will be updated using your package manager, as long as they're in the distributor's repository. I'd recommend setting up a classic Linux environment. The strength of containerization is consistency when you depend on given versions of complex software, like databases and big libraries that need to be carefully tuned to work with each other. I consider Docker to be an overkill solution for something as simple as this. I totally see how, if you were trying to do this on a budget/single box, and you did not know how to configure OS / config files / etc. So I guess my thought process is based on that "starting point". At home, I already have a pretty solid VM Host setup (3 host machines) and plenty of cpu/ram/disk/ssd resources to allocate, and I'm very familiar with VM tech (not so familiar with Docker). I've been using USENET for "linux ISOs" since the mid 1990's (anyone else remember manually decoding. This technique also works with the "more advanced" VM Technology as well.Īlso - I guess I should be clear - I'm a tech guy and have been for 2 decades. If you are not grossly oversubscribed on RAM the hit should be pretty minimal. It also helps mitigate some of the "heaviness" of VM tech, though you may sacrifice a slight bit of VM Guest performance doing so. Now, if you are talking about a different or consumer-level VM Host technology (think: KVM or Oracle VirtualBox or something else not mentioned), then I believe your premise stands that VM's are "heavier" than docker containers, memory-wise.Īlso - even with those "less advanced" VM Technology - you can always over-allocate your memory which will cause your VMs to balloon/share memory. So if you use "dynamic memory" it will/should have similar RAM usage to a docker container (at least from the hypervisor level looking down - multiple guest OS will still think they have all those "common" libraries in RAM, but truly they are only stored once at the hypervisor layer). I know for a fact that both VMWare and Hyper-V do memory de-duplication between VM guests - so OS-level stuff (like system DLLs, services, etc) is only stored in memory once. This includes hacking, using a loophole, or other methods not publicly advertised by the usenet provider.Īlthough my understanding is that your perceived "overhead" is not technically correct for all VM technology. No promoting of 'backdoor' access into usenet providers' networks. We do not allow attempts to request/offer/buy/sell/trade/share invites or accounts. We will even add flair to your username after verification. Message the mods and let them know who you are. However we want to verify the identity of anyone posting on behalf of a company/project. ![]() No discussion of specific media content names, titles, etc. We only have a few, but they are important. Please read over the rules before contributing. We are a thriving community dedicated to helping users old and new understand and use usenet. I tried reinstalling CouchPotato but after initially configuring it, I couldn't then log back into it with the same error, etc.Īnother Internet post suggested using Radarr instead, so I installed it, but had the same ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED after I'd installed the QPKG, so I then read someone suggesting I should do a 'docker' thing.ĭocker is brand-new to me, and just on the edge of my technical abilities, so a tutorial/guide would be nice - I think I've installed it, but when I 'open link' to RADARR in the 'container station' app, I still get an 'ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED' error.Welcome to the usenet subreddit. (I get an 'ERR_CONNECTION_REFUSED' error when trying to access it from either other computers on my network, or even by opening up the icon on the QNAP itself.)Ī Google Search suggested this might be an issue with the 'Hybridbackup' but disabling this didn't solve anything. ![]() So I've been using CouchPotato with my QNAP for years, but it stopped working in the last two weeks. ![]()
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