I don’t know as I don’t use zfs pools, but a simple search led me to this https://grafana.com/grafana/dashboards/15362-zfs-pool-metrics/
Grafana set up to run on the server locally, then I connect to it via SSH forwarding. Then I can view all kinds of metrics in my browser in a neat interface.
For future reference, consider !buyitforlife@slrpnk.net
What alternative do you suggest? Please tell me it’s not crypto.
What does it matter if X is more popular than Y if I prefer Y and I can see all the same stuff as the people using X see?
The Fediverse is not a popularity contest either.
Also for the record, ever since I started taking donations from my users for my instance, they have been extremely generous and have more than covered costs. So I’m not sure I agree with your cost argument so far.
If you think the Fediverse is about “winning”, you’ve already failed to understand it.
The Fediverse is about choice. Some people will use X. Other people will use Y. Under the hood, both X and Y use the same protocols and they can communicate so everyone stays connected even when making different choices (if they choose to stay connected of course).
Nobody “wins”; everybody wins.
What @asdfasdfasdf@lemmy.world said, but also they kind of have the same problem as goto. The control flow becomes very complicated and you can jump from one place in the code to another extremely far away.
Spooky action at a distance, basically.
I’m all for competition within the Fediverse (that’s a big strength of the Fediverse if you ask me). I just wish we’d move on from Java and other exception-based languages.
Link to the community so you can see it in your own instance: !announcements@lemmy.ml.
Yeah, Rust is cool, but every CS grad and their mother knows Java.
This is quite an outdated view I would say.
More users is nice, but the real metric should be the quality of the content and discussions. And for me that’s the real winner with Lemmy.
Quality over quantity.
It’s not a problem with federated platforms, it’s a problem with any new platform.
Anything that’s been around for less than a year is not too likely to stick around for a year.
Something that’s been around for 10 years is likely to stick around for another year.
Time will filter out the instances that stick and the ones that don’t. Users will go to the older instances because those are the ones they can trust to still be up for the foreseeable future.
Damn, @EU_Comission has 90000+ followers, nice.
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I’m not on Mastodon, why were people against search?
Isn’t this just registration applications? Lemmy has that feature already.