The bitwarden client caches the database locally, so you can still access your credentials even if your server is down.
To setup proxmox, you could install it on top of your current debian install : https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Install_Proxmox_VE_on_Debian_11_Bullseye
Docker in a lxc container is also used quite a lot with proxmox and would allow you to keep some resources without allocating everything for a docker VM.
More server oriented than a classical desktop: https://cockpit-project.org/
I would start by moving the services running on the host to a VM, less downtime for those when switching to proxmox.
Also, if possible, address the data issue before migrating. If you can add more disks, you could setup a new zfs pool, ready to be used by proxmox.
And don't forget to backup (to external storage), you never know what could go wrong.
Great post, thanks for sharing 👍
I would suggest to give Ansible a try, it would make it really easy to deploy a new service with all required users and config.
Good news, DNS over TCP in musl has been fixed since v1.2.4 released in May https://www.openwall.com/lists/musl/2023/05/02/1
So if you use alpine >= 3.18 you should no longer have this issue.
It looks like you are trying to reinvent parts of kubernetes.
I would recommend to give it a try, it's easy to spin up with k3s, even on a single node!
Set imagePullPolicy to Always in your deployments (this is more or less k8s version of compose) and latest tag, then every time you restart a deployment, you get the latest version, with auto rollback. Set the tag to a static version and it doesn't update as long as you don't change it.
For gitops, add fluxcd.io and you're set, it doesn't even require a CI workflow.
For the data copy, k8s provides Volume Snapshots https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/storage/volume-snapshots/
Got the same printer, it's also great if you don't print a lot. I'm still on the same third party toner from 7+ years ago. Never again will I buy an inkjets printer.
Syncthing is also an option.
10w is +- 87kwh/year. Depending on your electricity cost, it would take 1 to 5 years to gain anything from switching to a picopsu, that's it if you even manage to gain 10w, which is not a certainty.
If you really care about those 10w watts, selling the optiplex and getting a second G3 would be a better option I think.
The documentation clearly states that idle vms on free tier could be reclaimed: https://docs.oracle.com/en-us/iaas/Content/FreeTier/freetier_topic-Always_Free_Resources.htm#freetier_topic_Always_Free_Resources_Infrastructure
Idle Always Free compute instances may be reclaimed by Oracle. Oracle will deem virtual machine and bare metal compute instances as idle if, during a 7-day period, the following are true: CPU utilization for the 95th percentile is less than 15% Network utilization is less than 15% Memory utilization is less than 15% (applies to A1 shapes only)
So don't create a 4 core 32gb ram vm to run a vpn, and you should be fine :)
In plugins.lua, you've commented the line loading the null-ls config, which was setting clang-format as a null-ls source, maybe that's your culprit?
K8s really shines when you start hosting more stuff, even on a single node. I definitely recommend giving k3s a try. I wouldn't recommend it for only a couple of services though.
Is it overkill? Yes, applying docker-compose manually also works. But then you still have to make your reverse proxy, your certificate and all your services work together. You can write Ansible for it, but then you end up with a lot of custom code to maintain and you still don't get all the nice features.
For me the killer feature was flux. Your code, configs and even secrets live in git and get autodeployed and autohealed. And it has other features such as operators to fetch helm charts from other repos and apply your config to it.
The openai cookbook, while mostly focused on openai llms, provides lots of useful information about how to improve result reliability by tweaking your prompt and a lot more such as code samples: https://github.com/openai/openai-cookbook
About langchain, I'll go a bit against the flow and would suggest against it if you want to actually understand what is happening. It provides too much abstraction that hides the prompts and prevents you to easily adapt it's behavior. This discussion on hackernews talks more about it: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=36645575 Having recently dived into this topic and having been bitten by langchain shortcomings, I cannot but agree with the comments.
You didn't say anything about firewall or security list, so did you add rules in the subnet security list of your instance and did you open ports in iptables to allow incoming traffic on NPM port?
See this blog post for more details : https://blogs.oracle.com/developers/post/enabling-network-traffic-to-ubuntu-images-in-oracle-cloud-infrastructure