![]() I think all that will become a lot simpler to implement if and when I transition to SCALE due to the native Linux underpinnings. But in a RPi, whose sole job it is to run a NTP server, this isn't exactly stuff that keeps me up at night.ĭon't get me wrong, I'd love for jails to work great because the 8 cores in my D-1537 are perennially bored and I'd love to give them some low impact tasks running like yet another pi-hole, or an IDS for example. ![]() ![]() installing bullseye from scratch is not being able to go for 64bit. The only downside of updating from buster vs. I recently upgraded my NTP pi from buster to bullseye without any issues. Other Pis I run here (NTP) required zero attention as automated updates did their thing. It operates as a DNS server that re-routes tracking domains to a black hole, thus preventing your devices from connecting to those servers. After you set it up, it'll cover ALL your home devices, and you don't need any client-side software for that. They had one bad experience a few years back and since then pihole update themselves are a manual affair. AdGuard Home is a network-wide software for blocking ads and tracking. Pi-hole itself does a good job of updating various adlists (see Gravity DB), but it as-yet lacks the ability to "pi-hole -up" on a regular basis. For example, Derek Seaman does a great job of documenting how to setup a Pi with unattended updates, Pi-hole, and DNS crypt. toiling in the guts of BSD jails whose setup/support is not as widely documented. Maintenance of RPis is an issue, though I balance that need with the ease that a Rpi can be brought up and deployed (thanks to plentiful guides) vs. In the end, I made peace with that and went for a bridge instead. Click to expand.I wanted to use LAGG in failover mode.
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