For me: uploading single file using their client ~25MB/s, downloading ~50MB/s (30-60MB/s). In newer versions of their linux client it’s possible to mount filen as network drive or to start webdav/s3 server.
For me: uploading single file using their client ~25MB/s, downloading ~50MB/s (30-60MB/s). In newer versions of their linux client it’s possible to mount filen as network drive or to start webdav/s3 server.
Kbin no run
Install Termux and run sshd -D -d -p <port>
You can mount remote with rclone and fine tune caching to your liking: https://rclone.org/commands/rclone_mount/#vfs-file-caching
I use FSArchiver. There’s nice list on Archwiki.
Grab live cd and run it in qemu:
qemu-system-x86_64 -enable-kvm -machine type=pc \
-cpu host -smp 2 \
-m 4096 -device virtio-balloon \
-vga virtio -display sdl,gl=on \
-usb -device usb-tablet \
-boot d -cdrom "$@"
It can be achieved with nat proxy on the server https://serverfault.com/questions/379360/vpn-tunneling-to-hide-real-ip-through-my-proxy-server-while-showing-the-clien
Rclone works with mega (25gb free), storj (25gb free), google (15gb free).
Scaleway also offers glacier storage class. ~€0.002/GB/month. €0.009/GB retrieval. €0.01/GB transfer.
I use mine as kitchen radio with https://moodeaudio.org/
I’m a fan of managing dotfiles with plain git. I think it could be orchestrated a bit to make it more declarative.
I recommend FSArchiver, it can handle different size partitions