diff options
| -rw-r--r-- | gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi | 2 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi.tpl | 2 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | gemfeed/atom.xml | 4 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | index.gmi | 2 | ||||
| -rw-r--r-- | uptime-stats.gmi | 2 |
5 files changed, 6 insertions, 6 deletions
diff --git a/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi b/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi index 3c1c0985..965168f9 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi +++ b/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ It would be fine if my personal website wasn't highly available, but the geek in * It's fine if my sites aren't reachable for five or ten minutes every other month. Due to their static nature, I don't care if there's a split-brain scenario where some requests reach one server and other requests reach another server. * Failover should work for both HTTP/HTTPS and Gemini protocols. My self-hosted MTAs and DNS servers should also be highly available. * Let's Encrypt TLS certificates should always work (before and after a failover). -* Have good monitoring in place so I know when a failover was performed and when something went wrong with the failover. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base system, but I coded my own monigoring system in Go.) +* Have good monitoring in place so I know when a failover was performed and when something went wrong with the failover. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base system, but I coded my own monitoring system in Go.) * Don't configure everything manually. The configuration should be automated and reproducible. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base system, but I didn't need to install any external software on OpenBSD either.) ## My HA solution diff --git a/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi.tpl b/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi.tpl index 49f9e260..220cc30f 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi.tpl +++ b/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi.tpl @@ -44,7 +44,7 @@ It would be fine if my personal website wasn't highly available, but the geek in * It's fine if my sites aren't reachable for five or ten minutes every other month. Due to their static nature, I don't care if there's a split-brain scenario where some requests reach one server and other requests reach another server. * Failover should work for both HTTP/HTTPS and Gemini protocols. My self-hosted MTAs and DNS servers should also be highly available. * Let's Encrypt TLS certificates should always work (before and after a failover). -* Have good monitoring in place so I know when a failover was performed and when something went wrong with the failover. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base system, but I coded my own monigoring system in Go.) +* Have good monitoring in place so I know when a failover was performed and when something went wrong with the failover. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base system, but I coded my own monitoring system in Go.) * Don't configure everything manually. The configuration should be automated and reproducible. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base system, but I didn't need to install any external software on OpenBSD either.) ## My HA solution diff --git a/gemfeed/atom.xml b/gemfeed/atom.xml index 6e8097ea..81702d15 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>2024-03-30T22:55:25+02:00</updated> + <updated>2024-03-30T23:00:41+02:00</updated> <title>foo.zone feed</title> <subtitle>To be in the .zone!</subtitle> <link href="gemini://foo.zone/gemfeed/atom.xml" rel="self" /> @@ -65,7 +65,7 @@ _____|_:_:_| (o)-(o) |_:_:_|--'`-. ,--. ksh under-water (((\'/ <li>It's fine if my sites aren't reachable for five or ten minutes every other month. Due to their static nature, I don't care if there's a split-brain scenario where some requests reach one server and other requests reach another server.</li> <li>Failover should work for both HTTP/HTTPS and Gemini protocols. My self-hosted MTAs and DNS servers should also be highly available.</li> <li>Let's Encrypt TLS certificates should always work (before and after a failover).</li> -<li>Have good monitoring in place so I know when a failover was performed and when something went wrong with the failover. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base system, but I coded my own monigoring system in Go.)</li> +<li>Have good monitoring in place so I know when a failover was performed and when something went wrong with the failover. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base system, but I coded my own monitoring system in Go.)</li> <li>Don't configure everything manually. The configuration should be automated and reproducible. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base system, but I didn't need to install any external software on OpenBSD either.)</li> </ul><br /> <h2 style='display: inline'>My HA solution</h2><br /> @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ # foo.zone -> This site was generated at 2024-03-30T22:55:25+02:00 by `Gemtexter` +> This site was generated at 2024-03-30T23:00:41+02:00 by `Gemtexter` ``` |\---/| diff --git a/uptime-stats.gmi b/uptime-stats.gmi index 7ce1417f..5eb683d1 100644 --- a/uptime-stats.gmi +++ b/uptime-stats.gmi @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ # My machine uptime stats -> This site was last updated at 2024-03-30T22:55:25+02:00 +> This site was last updated at 2024-03-30T23:00:41+02:00 The following stats were collected via `uptimed` on all of my personal computers over many years and the output was generated by `guprecords`, the global uptime records stats analyser of mine. |
