auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
auto enp1s0f0np0
iface enp1s0f0np0 inet static
# public server address
address <IPv4>/32
# route to default gateway
post-up ip route add 88.190.120.1 dev enp1s0f0np0 scope link
post-up ip route add default via 88.190.120.1
pre-down ip route del default via 88.190.120.1
pre-down ip route del 88.190.120.1 dev enp1s0f0np0
iface enp1s0f0np0 inet6 static
address <IPv6>/64
gateway fe80::1
auto enp1s0f1np1
iface enp1s0f1np1 inet static
# ceph cluster interface
mtu 9000
address 192.168.1.11/24
auto vlan4000
iface vlan4000 inet manual
# public subnets on vswitch
vlan-raw-device enp1s0f0np0
vlan-id 4000
mtu 1400
iface vlan4000 inet6 manual
auto vmbr4000
iface vmbr4000 inet manual
# bridge for routing subnets
bridge-ports vlan4000
bridge-stp off
bridge-fd 0
mtu 1400
iface vmbr4000 inet6 manual
auto vlan4010
iface vlan4010 inet static
# proxmox cluster traffic
vlan-raw-device enp1s0f0np0
vlan-id 4010
mtu 1400
address 10.0.0.11/24"data": "\/pxebootfile\u0000V"Not relying on evil filesystem hacks is nice, but managing KEA through files while a perfectly capable GUI is there for everything else also detracts from maintainability.QuoteWhat filtering options would you actually use?
Anything missing in the IOC view?
QuoteIdeas for improving the OPNsense plugin?
zfs create zroot/opt
zfs set mountpoint=/opt zroot/opt
cd /tmp
fetch https://github.com/sec/dotnet-core-freebsd-source-build/releases/download/10.0.103-vmr/dotnet-sdk-10.0.103-freebsd.14-x64.tar.gz
tar -zxf dotnet-sdk-10.0.103-freebsd.14-x64.tar.gz -C /opt/dotnet/
ln -s /opt/dotnet/dotnet /usr/local/bin/dotnet
fetch https://download.technitium.com/dns/DnsServerPortable.tar.gz
tar -zxf DnsServerPortable.tar.gz -C /opt/technitium/dns/
cd /opt/technitium/dns
./start.sh &
Quote from: VRBitman on May 01, 2026, 05:13:27 PM[...]My CPU is an i9[...]