Your answer could potentially help me un-fuck my website!

Details here.


Edit: The total capacity is currently 160 GB, so no amount of pruning will free up 1 TB. I need to mount an external share or something.


Edit2: I'm trying this but the command isn't working despite zero exit status.

  • farting_weedman [none/use name]
    ·
    5 months ago

    Stop the service that’s doing the thing causing you a problem.

    Fix the thing you screwed up

    Restart the fixed service that was causing the problem

    What could possibly go wrong?

    In this case, and I’m making wild assumptions because I don’t have a peertube instance to play with, stop peertube, connect your local system up to it with a vpn to traverse your nat, mount some volume in the local system as the remote systems target for the file system move, then start peertube back up and see if it starts filling your local drive with some data.

    • TankieTanuki [he/him]
      hexagon
      ·
      edit-2
      5 months ago

      When I made the wrong command, the application registered hundreds of move jobs in its database. The developer said there is no way to cancel the jobs. If I restart peertube.service then it will notice the incomplete jobs and immediately resume them. I think I'm going to use btrfs next time so I can take a system snapshot before executing risky server commands.

      connect your local system up to it with a vpn to traverse your nat

      I need a little more detail on this. Here's my takeaway:

      1. Host an (e.g.) OpenVPN server on the webserver, after creating the proper certificate infrastructure.
      2. Connect as client from home PC.
      3. VPN Success. Now I can access each other on the local subnet that starts with a 10. or something.
      4. Mount home PC's NFS share on the webserver.