That looks amazing.
chris
If I were a traffic cop, I’d pretty much just enforce this one law. All day. Every day. Left lane squatter? Straight to jail.
I have 4 spinny disks in my NAS. The tile the server is sitting on makes more noise than the drives. I wouldn’t worry about it too much.
I just got one last month. Love it.
I liked having them all in the same file - easier to keep everything in sync. I also had “dependency” links to keep things starting in order.
7 of 9. She’s on the Fediverse…
As an American, you can’t argue that metric is better than using CLS. How big is a kilometer? Who the hell knows? How big is a CLS? Everyone knows the approximate size. Well done.
A peck of pickled peppers, you certainly didn’t pick.
I used to do this when on Windows too: C was for the OS and apps, D was for user data. The same principle here - separating OS from data is a game changer - and even easier on Linux I think. Makes it so easy to wipe a partition and try something new.
Honestly, it doesn’t really matter that much. 99.999% of my content I see comes from the people I follow and what they post and boost. Start by following people that interest you-and the rest just happens.
Now they have to carry a metal detector, drone, and a huge set of balls. Seems unfair.
This doesn’t answer your exact question and I haven’t done this with webfingers, but I’ve done this with a reverse proxy like nginx (or traefik) and no special DNS tricks. Your example.com will point to 1.2.3.4 IP and then the subdomain routing is handled by the reverse proxy. I’ve had upwards of 8 different domains and subdomains all running on a single box taking advantage of docker containers.