The nginx documentation for the ssl preread module has an almost identical example.
The nginx documentation for the ssl preread module has an almost identical example.
I am running a similar setup to yours. The issue is that only one server block can listen to an address+port pair. You ought to do something like this:
map $ssl_preread_server_name $proxy_backend_router {
serviceA.example.com upstreamA:12346;
serviceB.example.com upstreamB:12346;
default $ssl_preread_server_name.invalid_proxy:443;
}
server {
listen 443;
ssl_preread on;
proxy_pass $proxy_backend_router;
}
What you should be asking is whether the cables qre the bottleneck in your network or not.
Is there any link that is not negotiating 1Gbps? Do you have devices that could push 10Gbps but the cable is not allowing it? If not, then there’s no need to upgrade them.
Unless, of course, if you want to do it just for fun, which is also a legitimate reason 😄
Sounds interesting! It could be useful for self hosting apps without the complexity of k8s.
Thanks, although I haven’t contributed much to the core of ratbag. I only added drivers for the Mars Gaming MM4 mouse, which you’re unlikely to have heard of. Thanks should be given to the maintainers, which did a great job in mentoring and reviewing my PR!
I love Task! Thanks for your work! I’ve recently been attempting to add a feature to it related to this issue. It’s looking good so far, but still needs a bit of polish. I regularly use Task, and this is the only thing that I feel Task is missing to become the ideal self-descriptive task runner.
I recently bought an x86 passive cooled box from Topton, an aliexpress merchant, that was recommended by ServeTheHome, a great youtube channel/blog that reviews all kinds of networking equipment for homelabs. Since it’s x86, you can pretty much install anything on it, in my case OPNSense. I recommend you watch some of their videos/read their blogs and see what fits!