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| author | Paul Buetow <paul@buetow.org> | 2024-11-16 23:21:10 +0200 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Paul Buetow <paul@buetow.org> | 2024-11-16 23:21:10 +0200 |
| commit | 7421012914d49ad8224b193e50be0b0909caef07 (patch) | |
| tree | 90fc1ff9cafc6ad7b481e87f59750558413bab7b /gemfeed/atom.xml | |
| parent | 905c5afafd4ba481215ac006c8fcae1957fe74b3 (diff) | |
Update content for html
Diffstat (limited to 'gemfeed/atom.xml')
| -rw-r--r-- | gemfeed/atom.xml | 6 |
1 files changed, 4 insertions, 2 deletions
diff --git a/gemfeed/atom.xml b/gemfeed/atom.xml index bdd6e7ab..a523c87d 100644 --- a/gemfeed/atom.xml +++ b/gemfeed/atom.xml @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?> <feed xmlns="http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom"> - <updated>2024-11-16T23:08:11+02:00</updated> + <updated>2024-11-16T23:20:14+02:00</updated> <title>foo.zone feed</title> <subtitle>To be in the .zone!</subtitle> <link href="https://foo.zone/gemfeed/atom.xml" rel="self" /> @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@ <title>f3s: Kubernetes with FreeBSD - Setting the stage - Part 1</title> <link href="https://foo.zone/gemfeed/2024-11-17-f3s-kubernetes-with-freebsd-part-1.html" /> <id>https://foo.zone/gemfeed/2024-11-17-f3s-kubernetes-with-freebsd-part-1.html</id> - <updated>2024-11-16T23:08:10+02:00</updated> + <updated>2024-11-16T23:20:14+02:00</updated> <author> <name>Paul Buetow aka snonux</name> <email>paul@dev.buetow.org</email> @@ -99,6 +99,8 @@ <br /> <a class='textlink' href='https://wiki.freebsd.org/HighlyAvailableStorage'>https://wiki.freebsd.org/HighlyAvailableStorage</a><br /> <br /> +<span>You can think of DRBD being the Linux equivalent to FreeBSD's HAST.</span><br /> +<br /> <h3 style='display: inline' id='openbsdrelayd-to-the-rescue-for-external-connectivity'>OpenBSD/<span class='inlinecode'>relayd</span> to the rescue for external connectivity</h3><br /> <br /> <span>All apps should be reachable through the internet (e.g., from my phone or computer when travelling). For external connectivity and TLS management, I've got two OpenBSD VMs (one hosted by OpenBSD Amsterdam and another hosted by Hetzner) handling public-facing services like DNS, relaying traffic, and automating Let's Encrypt certificates. </span><br /> |
