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Pretty sure they want to boot the hypervisor itself via PXE, not the VMs.

It's close, but there are some missing pieces I think. The way it manages storage pools would fit your use case, if you import a zpool, for example, it will scan the datasets and can figure out what zvols should be attached to which VMs..

but there's also VM config info under `/etc/pve` or something similar. I'm pretty sure that's some kind of FUSE filesystem, it's supposed to be synchronized between cluster members.. you might be able to host that externally somehow. But that'll probably take some effort.

You'll also need to figure out how to configure `/etc/network/interfaces` on boot for your network config. But that's doable.

Would be pretty neat.


Sounds like this might help: https://www.gnu.org/software/bash/manual/html_node/The-Restr...

I'm not familiar with rbash, but it seems like it can do (at least some of) what you want.


I really like the Python + Qt/pyside combination. I can whip together a rough GUI using QtCreator and then write the app logic in Python super quickly.


I’m sure it would be a goto if I made gui apps more regularly, because it’s clearly the more robust solution. So far wxglade is great for a drag-and-drop designer and the code is just enough closer to the regular Python way of doing things that it’s one less thing to learn.


What would that accomplish?


it doesnt install windows 11...


The person who wrote this article doesn't even have a TPM, his point is that it keeps nagging him to upgrade even though he can't upgrade.


I get what you're saying, but I feel like they should highlight comments in some way if a repo admin completely replaces a comment with different text. I'm struggling to imagine a situation where that would really be appropriate. The "Edited by: username" seems too easy to overlook.


They could show multiple post authors, similar to how they do for co-authored commits.


WSL also uses binfmt so that you can run windows executables from inside whatever distro you have running. I thought that was pretty neat.


Such a case would never end up in court. You can't sue someone for doing something that's perfectly legal.. well you can try, but it's going to be really hard to find a lawyer willing to waste their time (a lawyer you're going to have to pay).. and the case would ultimately get thrown out long before court.


Check this out: https://www.suedbynintendo.com/

If a gaming company can sue a local supermarket over trademark, I don't know what to say.


I don't think it even matters how canned it sounds.. it seems like a polite way to move the discussion to a phone call where some real communication can happen. I think that was a perfect response. Forums are not ideal for resolving conflict, especially if language barriers exist.


I was struck by some of the responses. "No I don't want to talk on a call, just read what I typed." If that's how you think then you're part of the problem.


Yeah I don't think 400M is really that big a deal. My `.emacs.d/` dir weighs in at over 1G and I've never thought twice about it.

For people who are serious about their text editors, 400m is a small price to pay for something that works for you.


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