

I wanted to provide feedback for THIS part only. :) not for OPs issue. I would have responded to OPs post if that were the case…
Hello! I am originally @[email protected] but moved to lemmy.blahaj due to the June 2025 shutdown of lemm.ee (o7)


I wanted to provide feedback for THIS part only. :) not for OPs issue. I would have responded to OPs post if that were the case…


This but put the entries in /etc/fstab instead.


This looks pretty interesting. I have been passively looking for such a service. I will give this a whirl and try it out.


Based off what you wrote - and the fact that I’m massively sleep-deprived - it all makes sense. The issue you describe and the fix applied are akin to what we see in the database world, where users complain about queries being slow or unresponsive after trying to force-kill. Only for us to find out, that they submitted queries with a COMMIT after the whole 10mil record transaction, which clearly the DB can handle, but it will take a significant amount of time to rollback vs if the COMMITs are broken up and submitted more frequent. Basically chunking up the data into more manageable pieces as to not saturate the db threads, not to mention the underlying REDO and transaction log files too. So hope this was truly a long-term fix vs just a short-term one. Either way, great write up.( Also, you may want to invest in some 2.5gb networking for later, not that 1GbE isn’t enough, but just more pipeline is great, although I don’t know how much upgradeability your Synology will have in that department, so YMMV)


Libreoffice calc/MS Excel. Old school tracking and extremly flexible for documentation. I have been doing this for the last decade, both at home and at my workplace. My team loves it, tho YMMV.


Seconded…
Everyone in this thread is complaining about their short-lived UniFi devices, meanwhile I have two dream machines (the original WiFi 5 sol’n, not the rack mounted variant) that have had zero issues and are still running 24/7. I guess I should count my stars. (They replaced multiple failed netgear routers).