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-rw-r--r--gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi4
-rw-r--r--gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi.tpl4
-rw-r--r--gemfeed/atom.xml6
3 files changed, 7 insertions, 7 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 0f15de27..3d0bc299 100644
--- a/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi
+++ b/gemfeed/2024-04-01-KISS-high-availability-with-OpenBSD.gmi
@@ -44,8 +44,8 @@ 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)
-* Don't configure everything manually. The configuration should be automated and reproducible. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base syste, but I didn't need to install any external package on OpenBSD either)
+* 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.)
+* 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 package 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 40a41e7b..473a9d66 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
@@ -44,8 +44,8 @@ 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)
-* Don't configure everything manually. The configuration should be automated and reproducible. (This isn't part of the OpenBSD base syste, but I didn't need to install any external package on OpenBSD either)
+* 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.)
+* 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 package on OpenBSD either.)
## My HA solution
diff --git a/gemfeed/atom.xml b/gemfeed/atom.xml
index fe2206f8..171fc305 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>2024-03-30T22:47:35+02:00</updated>
+ <updated>2024-03-30T22:48:57+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" />
@@ -65,8 +65,8 @@ _____|_:_:_| (o)-(o) |_:_:_|--&#39;`-. ,--. ksh under-water (((\&#39;/
<li>It&#39;s fine if my sites aren&#39;t reachable for five or ten minutes every other month. Due to their static nature, I don&#39;t care if there&#39;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&#39;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&#39;t part of the OpenBSD base system, but I coded my own monigoring system in Go)</li>
-<li>Don&#39;t configure everything manually. The configuration should be automated and reproducible. (This isn&#39;t part of the OpenBSD base syste, but I didn&#39;t need to install any external package on OpenBSD either)</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&#39;t part of the OpenBSD base system, but I coded my own monigoring system in Go.)</li>
+<li>Don&#39;t configure everything manually. The configuration should be automated and reproducible. (This isn&#39;t part of the OpenBSD base system, but I didn&#39;t need to install any external package on OpenBSD either.)</li>
</ul><br />
<h2 style='display: inline'>My HA solution</h2><br />
<br />