Kubernetes is a beast to get into to. If you’re looking for wet toes, I would go a different route.
Look into each service and see what they offer for being configured for high availability.
No one compares You stand alone To every record I own Music to my heart That’s what you are A song that goes on and on
Kubernetes is a beast to get into to. If you’re looking for wet toes, I would go a different route.
Look into each service and see what they offer for being configured for high availability.
If all those services are web based, squid might be a suitable caching option.
Look for chipsets that advertise Linux Kernel 2.x support those work right out of the box typically.
Stuff people recommend for the raspberry pi should also work fine.
Try for USB-C, if you can’t find anything good there. Just make sure you’re not getting a USB2 device or 10/100 nic.
You can track it with iptables.
https://www.linux.com/training-tutorials/bandwidth-monitoring-iptables/
I’m not familiar with your specific system. But I have managed systems like it. Do you have a hardware encoder available?
The splitting might be a phenomenon of the file system. I’ve seen it come up when targeting a FAT32 drive.
Do a long smart test with the manufacturers tool. Seagate and Western Digital have tools you can run from a dos boot disk.
Edit: if that test comes back failed they will warranty it.