Read the statement by Michael Teeuw here.
What can YOUR mirror do?
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working likea charm.
Thanks a lot.Let’s see what the WAF barometer will say.
Nothing good i guess.At least mit little daughter is still to little to see the scary eye ;)
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@barnosch said in What can YOUR mirror do?:
working likea charm.
Thanks a lot.Let’s see what the WAF barometer will say.
Nothing good i guess.At least mit little daughter is still to little to see the scary eye ;)
Hahahhahaha
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Mine is also hosting PiHole and also doing a cron job every hour to test ISP download speeds
I don’t have any processor intensive modules installed.
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@orayoflighto said in What can YOUR mirror do?:
I don’t have any processor intensive modules installed.
Then give it a try!
Let me know how it works for you
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Well mine can whistle Dixie… LOL
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I don’t have any processor intensive modules installed, but I do have ones that seem to use memory like no tomorrow. I have a dual monitor installation (write up and pics to follow within the next few weeks), and both have over 800Mb used
MM1
MM2
Is that normal, as when I started out using the mirrors I don’t recall either using that kind of memory ?
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@Bob said in What can YOUR mirror do?:
Is that normal?
I really can’t say. There are so many different configurations being used (MM versions, OS versions, types of modules, etc) by users.
I do know that all these things make a difference in performance and requirements. Here is a screenshot of my Pi mirror’s system stats. It runs flawlessly with just 5% of Free Ram. However, this mirror is running very many modules so the Free Ram percentage is expected.
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crap.
that didn’t last very long.
My wife is scared of the eye ;) -
@Bob
That value is coming fromfree -h
linux command.
This could be help : https://www.linuxatemyram.com/ -
@barnosch said in What can YOUR mirror do?:
My wife is scared of the eye ;)
And you’re scared of the wife? ;-)