From 70a750de393aa672f1841cdda819e46d1152cc6a Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Paul Buetow Date: Sat, 16 Nov 2024 23:53:14 +0200 Subject: Update content for html --- about/resources.html | 158 ++++++++++----------- ...4-11-17-f3s-kubernetes-with-freebsd-part-1.html | 2 +- gemfeed/atom.xml | 4 +- index.html | 2 +- uptime-stats.html | 2 +- 5 files changed, 84 insertions(+), 84 deletions(-) diff --git a/about/resources.html b/about/resources.html index 8f2dc05d..3bf13cfa 100644 --- a/about/resources.html +++ b/about/resources.html @@ -47,100 +47,100 @@ In random order:


Technical references



I didn't read them from the beginning to the end, but I am using them to look up things. The books are in random order:


Self-development and soft-skills books



In random order:


Here are notes of mine for some of the books

@@ -149,30 +149,30 @@ Some of these were in-person with exams; others were online learning lectures only. In random order:


Technical guides



These are not whole books, but guides (smaller or larger) which I found very useful. in random order:


Podcasts



@@ -181,16 +181,16 @@ In random order:


Podcasts I liked



@@ -198,24 +198,24 @@

Newsletters I like



This is a mix of tech and non-tech newsletters I am subscribed to. In random order:


Formal education



diff --git a/gemfeed/2024-11-17-f3s-kubernetes-with-freebsd-part-1.html b/gemfeed/2024-11-17-f3s-kubernetes-with-freebsd-part-1.html index dbdb737a..bb14cc84 100644 --- a/gemfeed/2024-11-17-f3s-kubernetes-with-freebsd-part-1.html +++ b/gemfeed/2024-11-17-f3s-kubernetes-with-freebsd-part-1.html @@ -63,7 +63,7 @@

Physical FreeBSD nodes and Linux VMs



-The setup starts with three physical FreeBSD nodes. On these, I'm running Rocky Linux virtual machines with bhyve. Why Linux VMs in FreeBSD and not Linux directly? I want to leverage the great ZFS integration in FreeBSD (among other features), and I have been using FreeBSD for a while in my home lab. And with bhyve, there is a very performant hypervisor available which makes the Linux VMs de-facto run at native speed (another use case of mine would be maybe running a Windows bhyve VM on one of the nodes - but out of scope for this blog series).
+The setup starts with three physical FreeBSD nodes deployed into my home LAN. On these, I'm going to run Rocky Linux virtual machines with bhyve. Why Linux VMs in FreeBSD and not Linux directly? I want to leverage the great ZFS integration in FreeBSD (among other features), and I have been using FreeBSD for a while in my home lab. And with bhyve, there is a very performant hypervisor available which makes the Linux VMs de-facto run at native speed (another use case of mine would be maybe running a Windows bhyve VM on one of the nodes - but out of scope for this blog series).

https://www.freebsd.org/
https://wiki.freebsd.org/bhyve
diff --git a/gemfeed/atom.xml b/gemfeed/atom.xml index 101a7ee1..80526d1e 100644 --- a/gemfeed/atom.xml +++ b/gemfeed/atom.xml @@ -1,6 +1,6 @@ - 2024-11-16T23:45:38+02:00 + 2024-11-16T23:52:20+02:00 foo.zone feed To be in the .zone! @@ -73,7 +73,7 @@

Physical FreeBSD nodes and Linux VMs



-The setup starts with three physical FreeBSD nodes. On these, I'm running Rocky Linux virtual machines with bhyve. Why Linux VMs in FreeBSD and not Linux directly? I want to leverage the great ZFS integration in FreeBSD (among other features), and I have been using FreeBSD for a while in my home lab. And with bhyve, there is a very performant hypervisor available which makes the Linux VMs de-facto run at native speed (another use case of mine would be maybe running a Windows bhyve VM on one of the nodes - but out of scope for this blog series).
+The setup starts with three physical FreeBSD nodes deployed into my home LAN. On these, I'm going to run Rocky Linux virtual machines with bhyve. Why Linux VMs in FreeBSD and not Linux directly? I want to leverage the great ZFS integration in FreeBSD (among other features), and I have been using FreeBSD for a while in my home lab. And with bhyve, there is a very performant hypervisor available which makes the Linux VMs de-facto run at native speed (another use case of mine would be maybe running a Windows bhyve VM on one of the nodes - but out of scope for this blog series).

https://www.freebsd.org/
https://wiki.freebsd.org/bhyve
diff --git a/index.html b/index.html index 8d3af22f..09ab9cd4 100644 --- a/index.html +++ b/index.html @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@

foo.zone



-This site was generated at 2024-11-16T23:45:38+02:00 by Gemtexter
+This site was generated at 2024-11-16T23:52:20+02:00 by Gemtexter

Welcome to the foo.zone. Everything you read on this site is my personal opinion and experience. You can call me a Linux/*BSD enthusiast and hobbyist. I mainly write about tech, IT, programming and sometimes also about self-improvement here. Note that this blog usually does not overlap with what I do at my day job as a Site Reliability Engineer.

diff --git a/uptime-stats.html b/uptime-stats.html index 3b7b1081..5e520af1 100644 --- a/uptime-stats.html +++ b/uptime-stats.html @@ -10,7 +10,7 @@

My machine uptime stats



-This site was last updated at 2024-11-16T23:45:38+02:00
+This site was last updated at 2024-11-16T23:52:20+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.

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