On 04/30/2014 01:46 PM, Les Mikesell wrote: > On Wed, Apr 30, 2014 at 12:17 PM, Lamar Owen <lowen@xxxxxxxx> wrote: >> Dynamic DNS can be, yes. It depends upon the way the zone file is >> updated and whether it's Internet-exposed on not. > So how can it be dynamic, but controlled at the same time? > Set up a DD-WRT consumer router for use with OpenDNS by way of dns-o-matic and you'll see how. Now replace OpenDNS and dns-o-matic with your own services. > I'll take [SRV record examples] as a 'no' for the general case. How is an RFC quote and an example of a running standardized application using the feature a 'no?' Please read https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SRV_record and see just how standardized it is. > How is [rolling a cloud instance dev VM] easier than saying 'ssh > nodename yum -y install postgresql-server'/ Something I already know > how to do and how to make happen any number of ties - and something > that works on real hardware and in spite of the differences in VM > cloud tools. How do you guarantee a clean sandbox? In the cloud case, every VM rolled is as clean as the template that generated it, and gives you a known starting point. And I use PostgreSQL as the example since I maintained those RPMs for five years, and I understand the need for a clean sandbox, having learned the hard way what can happen if you don't take the care to make your sandbox clean (this was pre-mach, and definitely pre-mock, and buildroots had to be carefully regulated since they weren't cleanly sandboxed by mock and kin). > At the expense of being black magic that won't work outside of that > environment. I don't like magic. I don't like things that lock you > in to only one vendor/tool/OS. OpenStack will do most of what I'm talking about already. > Actually, I'd like to see a single device do all of that gunk plus > have an HDMI out to act as a media player so a typical home would only > need one extra 'thing' besides the computer/tablet/phone. But it > doesn't matter - you still have to configure it somehow. Do you want > things to guess at your firewall rules? > That last point is exactly what UPNP was supposed to solve. Such a device as you want exists; see the GuruPlug Display and descendants. They are definitely tinkering boxen, and they do have their issues (I have a GuruPlug Server Plus with the eSATA port and the infamous overheating problems) but they are available. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@xxxxxxxxxx http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos