It appears to. I just copy-pasted the link into Mastodon and it loaded this post with all the comments. Discovery for Lemmy posts on Mastodon still sucks though.
It appears to. I just copy-pasted the link into Mastodon and it loaded this post with all the comments. Discovery for Lemmy posts on Mastodon still sucks though.
Or Arch if you don’t explicitly set it up yourself lol
The Steam Deck has shared RAM for the CPU and GPU, right?
Now I’m curious: Could something similar also be done for VRAM?
That’s amazing, I’m gonna have to dig a little deeper into that
If you’re on a time crunch, go ahead and use network namespaces under network manager to set up something like what you want as another user suggested.
Is there a way to do this without NetworkManager?
I’d go for netdata, if you just want to monitor the health of your entire Linux server, and Uptime Kuma for checking individual services. You can also set it up, so that you receive a notification if a service goes down, e.g. over ntfy or Pushover. See the documentation for Uptime Kuma push notifications https://github.com/louislam/uptime-kuma/wiki/Notification-Methods
Or Gentoo, Void, Alpine, I could go on and on
But these distros hardly set up anything for you out of the box, they’re meant to be configured manually
But I can see Arch including an option for this in their install script at some point in the near future