

What does farming have to do with anything? It was a paid endorsement, an infomercial run by the sitting President of the US. It’s disgusting.
What does farming have to do with anything? It was a paid endorsement, an infomercial run by the sitting President of the US. It’s disgusting.
Elon is really unpopular right now and “regular” republicans feel like he and DOGE are attacking them.
Only those who have been personally harmed. The rest of them, and that’s the vast majority, actually believe Elon is cleaning up the government and finding/eliminating corruption. I work with one, he’s convinced everything DOGE has found and cut is corruption/fraud, the kids who are rooting through the Treasury are geniuses capable of finding things that no other administration has been able to (or been willing to?) find, and ultimately the Government is going to run more efficiently and taxes can be lower for regular people when it’s all said and done. They’re too deep in the rabbit hole to see the light.
Would you mind if I added this as a discussion (crediting you and this post!) in the github project?
Yeah that would be fine
But from a grammatical sense it’s the opposite. In a sentence, a comma is a short pause, while a period is a hard stop. That means it makes far more sense for the comma to be the thousands separator and the period to be the stop between integer and fraction.
Sure, it’s a bit hack-and-slash, but not too bad. Honestly the dockcheck portion is already pretty complete, I’m not sure what all you could add to improve it. The custom plugin I’m using does nothing more than dump the array of container names with available updates to a comma-separated list in a file. In addition to that I also have a wrapper for dockcheck which does two things:
Basically there are 5 steps to the setup:
{
"metrics-addr": "127.0.0.1:9323"
}
Once running, you should be able to run curl http://localhost:9323/metrics
and see a dump of Prometheus metrics
send_notification() {
Updates=("$@")
UpdToString=$(printf ", %s" "${Updates[@]}")
UpdToString=${UpdToString:2}
File=updatelist_local.txt
echo -n $UpdToString > $File
}
#!/bin/bash
cd $(dirname $0)
./dockcheck/dockcheck.sh -mni
if [[ -f updatelist_local.txt ]]; then
mv updatelist_local.txt updatelist.txt
else
echo -n "None" > updatelist.txt
fi
At this point you should be able to run your script, and at the end you’ll have the file “updatelist.txt” which will either contain a comma-separated list of all containers with available updates, or “None” if there are none. Add this script into cron to run on whatever cadence you want, I use 4 hours.
#!/usr/bin/python3
from flask import Flask, jsonify
import os
import time
import requests
import json
app = Flask(__name__)
# Listen addresses for docker metrics
dockerurls = ['http://127.0.0.1:9323/metrics']
# Other dockerstats servers
staturls = []
# File containing list of pending updates
updatefile = '/path/to/updatelist.txt'
@app.route('/metrics', methods=['GET'])
def get_tasks():
running = 0
stopped = 0
updates = ""
for url in dockerurls:
response = requests.get(url)
if (response.status_code == 200):
for line in response.text.split("\n"):
if 'engine_daemon_container_states_containers{state="running"}' in line:
running += int(line.split()[1])
if 'engine_daemon_container_states_containers{state="paused"}' in line:
stopped += int(line.split()[1])
if 'engine_daemon_container_states_containers{state="stopped"}' in line:
stopped += int(line.split()[1])
for url in staturls:
response = requests.get(url)
if (response.status_code == 200):
apidata = response.json()
running += int(apidata['results']['running'])
stopped += int(apidata['results']['stopped'])
if (apidata['results']['updates'] != "None"):
updates += ", " + apidata['results']['updates']
if (os.path.isfile(updatefile)):
st = os.stat(updatefile)
age = (time.time() - st.st_mtime)
if (age < 86400):
f = open(updatefile, "r")
temp = f.readline()
if (temp != "None"):
updates += ", " + temp
else:
updates += ", Error"
else:
updates += ", Error"
if not updates:
updates = "None"
else:
updates = updates[2:]
status = {
'running': running,
'stopped': stopped,
'updates': updates
}
return jsonify({'results': status})
if __name__ == '__main__':
app.run(host='0.0.0.0')
The neat thing about this program is it’s nestable, meaning if you run steps 1-4 independently on all of your Docker servers (assuming you have more than one), then you can pick one of the machines to be the “master” and update the “staturls” variable to point to the other ones, allowing it to collect all of the data from other copies of itself into its own output. If the output of this program will only need to be accessed from localhost, you can change the host variable in app.run to 127.0.0.1 to lock it down. Once this is running, you should be able to run curl http://localhost:5000/metrics
and see the running and stopped container counts and available updates for the current machine and any other machines you’ve added into “staturls”. You can then turn this program into a service or launch it @reboot in cron or in /etc/rc.local, whatever fits with your management style to start it up on boot. Note that it does verify the age of the updatelist.txt file before using it, if it’s more than a day old it likely means something is wrong with the dockcheck wrapper script or similar, and rather than using the output the REST API will print “Error” to let you know something is wrong.
widget:
type: customapi
url: http://localhost:5000/metrics
refreshInterval: 2000
display: list
mappings:
- field:
results: running
label: Running
format: number
- field:
results: stopped
label: Stopped
format: number
- field:
results: updates
label: Updates
Personally, I just have a couple of cheap CyberPower UPSs for my servers. I know I know, but I’m waiting for them to get old and die before I replace them with something better. My modem, router, and primary WiFi AP are on a custom LiFePO4-based UPS that I designed and built, because I felt like it. It’ll keep them running for around 10 hours, long past everything else in the house has shut down.
Anything on a separate disk can be simply remounted after reinstalling the OS. It doesn’t have to be a NAS, DAS, RAID enclosure, or anything else that’s external to the machine unless you want it to be. Actually it looks like that Beelink only supports a single NVMe disk and doesn’t have SATA, so I guess it does have to be external to the machine, but for different reasons than you’re alluding to.
I’d like to know the same. I really like the RP2040 and use it often, looking to move to the RP2350 but the GPIO issue is holding me back.
This is their attempt to get around that pesky 1st amendment. Make criticism of the king a “mental disorder”, and then you can lock them up involuntarily “for their own protection”.
This is a great tool, thanks for the continued support.
Personally, I don’t actually use dockcheck to perform updates, I only use it for its update check functionality, along with a custom plugin which, in cooperation with a python script of mine, serves a REST API that lists all containers on all of my systems with available updates. That then gets pulled into homepage using their custom API function to make something like this: https://imgur.com/a/tAaJ6xf
So at a glance I can see any containers that have updates available, then I can hop into Dockge to actually apply them on my own schedule.
While true, and I have a lot of DRM-free music that I’ve bought from Apple, the difference is that getting music purchased from Apple onto your computer in a usable format is a bit of a pain, and it’s all lossy. Music from Qobuz can be downloaded directly from their site after purchasing, in lossless FLAC format, and many of their albums are available in high-res 24-bit and/or 96 kHz format as well.