Well, as another data point for you, I have a Ryzen 3900x in an MSI X570-A PRO mainboard, and 64Gb (4 x CMK64GX4M4B3200C16) DDR4 RAM at work, currently running Xen.
With the X570 architecture and the 3000 series Ryzen, this RAM runs at 3200Mhz @ 1.2v simply by just setting the XMP profile in...
That'd do it as well... Just make sure you keep them in pairs and keep the timing / speeds matched to the slowest ones in the group.
I have a Ryzen 2700x that I use for my desktop - that has 32Gb of 3200Mhz RAM and seems to have issues if I set it to 3200Mhz. Setting it to 3133Mhz seems to be...
So, I worked with the AMD guys a while ago when this was a new issue with a newly released AGESA version...
The big thing that can cause instability is if your ATX power supply goes flakey when there is a small load on one of the supply rails. The BIOS option for "Power Supply Idle control" is...
It emulates a USB tablet as a mouse - as that's more accurate for VNC tracking of the cursor.
As its a USB device, it gets polled at ~1000hz. That's the CPU usage you see.
Here's another good example of BAYES catching stuff that other rules did not:
X-SPAM-LEVEL: Spam detection results: 7
BAYES_99 3.5 Bayes spam probability is 99 to 100%
BAYES_999 0.2 Bayes spam probability is 99.9 to 100%
HTML_MESSAGE...
Correct:
[63241.054338] i40e: Intel(R) Ethernet Connection XL710 Network Driver - version 2.8.20-k
[63241.054340] i40e: Copyright (c) 2013 - 2019 Intel Corporation.
I'd guess you'll have to rebuild the newer module, or wait until it gets shipped into the upstream kernel as a newer version.
I'm guessing the UTC time you have set is correct as the local time - so when the timezone conversion happens, you end up getting the timezone correction twice...
Make sure your BIOS time is in UTC and try that...
Hmmm - today (well, ~17 hours ago), it seems my proxmox server rebooted itself.
It's running:
Linux proxmox 5.4.34-1-pve #1 SMP PVE 5.4.34-2 (Thu, 07 May 2020 10:02:02 +0200) x86_64
Doesn't seem to be anything in /var/log that seems to indicate why the system reset, only that it came back up...
I just moved from Xen (not XenServer) to PM.... I had to boot each VM from its install media, then re-create the initramfs for the kernel entries. After this, I could boot normally...
If you were using PVH or PV based VMs in Xen, you'll need to fix the disk layout and install grub onto the...
I still use the quarantine globally, simply because to give PMG a workout, I ended up putting it in front of my mailing list servers that I operate for community projects. The quarantine lets me look at stuff that might be posted to the list if it wasn't for the spam filter.
Some of these are...
It only works by having users throw spam that got through the filters into the Spam folder on their IMAP account. We only really care about spam that made it through the filters - as if its caught and blocked, great.
The annoying part is when spam gets quarantined - as the only way to feed it...
Yeah - I'm looking at how this could be achieved also - although we don't have anywhere near as many nodes or locations - just what will eventually be 4 nodes in 2 locations - but a slow ass WAN link between the two locations...
As such, yeah - it'd be cool to do migrations over the slow ass...
From the backup of my old bayes db, I can gather the following:
v 3 db_version # this must be the first line!!!
v 1840 num_spam
v 11744 num_nonspam
As such, its not really surprising that the detection is better now - as it feels in a history of over 13,000 messages...
So with my imported bayes db, Todays stats show:
As such, it seems to have really firmed up the middle ground compared to before the import...
At this stage, I haven't customised any of the weighting in the PMG setup.
I used to use a hard 550 reject level as 5 too... I'm looking at what it would take to do this - but I'm not getting my hopes up...
EDIT: Ah! One of my systems was still using it... A shared mysql db that was used by multiple systems. I've done a --backup and --restore onto PMG... Lets see what...
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