The same way I did - steal from others
ragingHungryPanda
That's next cloud and the news mobile app
I need to make a proper list. Since I'm on mobile, it's easier to screenshot.
Based on old memories since I've been working in mongo lately, after making the UDT on the db side, you make a data table that has the same name, namespace (ie dbo/public), and the same schema as the UDT (better if that could be generated) and populate it in code. Then you execute the db query with the UDT type as a parameter.
This is better for a few reasons, including not building up a string, but also having the same text means that each query didn't need to be re-parsed and can reuse execution plans. If the query text isn't an exact match, it gets that whole pipeline each time.
Create a user defined table type and use that as a parameter. I'm not sure what the postgres name of that is.
Victoria 3 will be a good tell
It sounds like you're diving right in. If you go that route, one thing I found was that Ceph wants to work with while drives only, not partitions. I switched to using longhorn so I could take advantage of all of my storage without throwing any away
Id say don't go down the distributed software route just yet. An option is to keep the NAS and set up a new computer with your router or whatever handling dns to it for services. You should be able to use NAS storage over the network. It'll be slower, but let's say you put your database on the big one, then it shouldn't be so bad since you'll just make database calls to it.
There are a lot of options. I'm currently learning kubernetes and all that stuff is a big learning curve, so avoid that stuff.
My thoughts: you can do some simple dns load balancing between the two servers at whatever level is handling that. Set up a database on the storage server and let the new computer communicate to it over the network.
I don't. It's never worked. I try really hard to not say, "That's the stupidest fucking shit I've heard since the last time I came here."
I haven't been great at it, but I started a couple of years ago. I very much vary in frequency.
Ohhhhh it's so much worse. Here's the intro to the BlowBack podcast S3, which is all about the Korean War https://open.spotify.com/episode/4ZX1YIvtHhxuoOTaH41VNC
I'm not sure what you mean, it's just an rss link to an xml file. Oh, do you mean if you want to be tracked? It has a newsletter you can sign up for.