I don't remember where I found it, but there was another possible solution to fix it by changing a line in /etc/nsswitch.conf
# Default setting
hosts: files mdns4_minimal [NOTFOUND=return] dns myhostname
# Noticed dns is now in front of mdns4_minimal
hosts: files dns mdns4_minimal [NOTFOUND=return] myhostname
"Hey boss, i want you to try out this new software. It is called !@#$. That is the actual name. Totally ready for business use. We should also tell our customers to install it as well. Ill go find a new job now, kthxbai."
This really isn't software that anyone would discuss. Just a command line editing tool.
It also completely ignores what DWPD is often a proxy for. Write latency consistency. A drive with .3DWPD MIGHT be good enough for your endurance requirements but might also completely implode on performance if all your writes are done within a short period of time and the application has end users accessing it.
I haven't stopped creating Linux virtual disks that way on Hyper-V yet until I know for sure, so I'll continue doing so. I suppose it can't hurt anything if they are smaller than the default, even if it doesn't apply.
Right, unless you want to really go out and test this FS by FS, I'd keep doing it. 🙂
What all hypervisors that are not Xen need, is hardware from the CPU to do their virtualization. So what they need from their underlying hypervisor is for the entire CPU, not just part of it, to be virtualized. The problem with most hypervisors is that the "pc appearance" that they create on which an OS is installed is a less capable processor than the real one that the HV is running on. So while the HV is getting virtualization enabled hardware, the OS normally is not. But if the HV passes that through, then the secondary HV will be fully capable as well.
In Hyper-V 2016, I noticed that if you want to use Gen2 and Secure Boot, at least when booting to the .ISO installer, you need to change the Secure Boot template to "Microsoft UEFI Certificate Authority", because it defaults to "Microsoft Windows".
I like the above suggestions (Baroque, metal), and I also sometimes like uptempo electronic stuff (specifically jungle / drum n bass, because I'm old school like that). Bassdrive.com plays drum n bass 24/7, DJs from all over the globe, no commercials.
edit: really, anything that you get into, any music you can lose yourself in, makes for great workout music.
I really like dubstep metal type music. I See Stars has some cool songs.
WTF do you mean voltage is different? PoE is PoE. There is either 24V passive (older wireless stuff, and Ubiquiti) or there is standard 48V PoE/PoE+.
That DLINK is exactly what you need.
That drink is like 54 volts and 0.60 ma or something like that, slightly more than PoE injector I brought with me (0.15 I think without looking). I'd get that dlink, but im afraid it'll fry the phone, which is why im asking. I want to be be sure the slight difference in volts and bigger difference in mA is okay.
Higher amps are fine, it will only pull what is needed.
And the 902.3af standard is a minimum of 44VDC. The gernally accepted actual voltage is 48VDC.
54VDC is fine.
I went and got that DLink and is working great, thanks!