I have automated IPMI certificate rotation set-up through Let's Encrypt and ACME via the Redfish API. And this is on 15 year old gear running HP iLO4. There's no excuse for not automating things.
I am happily using them for all of my domains they support. The problem with Cloudflare registrar is that they flat out don't support many domains/tlds.
DoH will prevent government from hijacking your query in the first place. These blockades are only possible because of DNS being clear text and suceptible to MITM
Speak for yourself but I'd rather have LPCM surround audio than deal with proprietary formats like Dolby Digital and DTS which are the only way to get surround without using eARC over HDMI.
This has literally nothing to do with any kind of sound bar, toast0's reply to your original comment explains the situation in detail.
So true, I picked up the Samsung G80SD "Smart Monitor" and the deciding factor was literally just that it supports eARC, allowing me to use my Sonos Beam soundbar with my computer and supporting compressed audio formats like Dolby Atmos.
To make things even worse, this monitor supports sending back the ARC audio over DisplayPort, but only in stereo. If I use HDMI between the monitor and the computer, I get all of audio channels.
If you want your devices on your LAN to have publicly routable IP addresses, by definition they need to be GUA. I think you just mis-understand what end-to-end connectivity means.
Your "WAN" is a small transit subnet between your router and your ISPs, while the "LAN" is the actual public ip space you will be assigning to your end devices.
>If an address is publicly routable, what's "LAN" about it?
Routable or not, it's LAN because it's in your network behind your router. It's just an identifier.
You definitely don't need to drain your nodes. I have never drained my nodes on my peronal cluster and just update and restart the control-plane components.
The procedure is more of a cloud-ism where people don't upgrade their nodes in place but rather get entirely new nodes.