[01:00] <strixdio> it seems putting "optional: yes" on the interfaces makes it work *shrug*
[01:02] <sarnold> is that in the netplan?
[01:02] <strixdio> yeah.
[01:03] <sarnold> cool, thanks
[14:24] <Jenshae> Heya
[14:25] <Jenshae> RoyK: I am more certain it is a write problem and not a power off one, now. Could it be a permissions problem? Do the ZFS subsystems need folder permissions set to a specified group for write access?
[17:43] <Skyrider> If I were to request a self-host application, where can I ask it best? I know the type what I'm looking for, just unsure if it exists.
[20:33] <RoyK> Jenshae: the filesysteme rights are set like on any other filesystem except zfs may use another ACL scheme, also called NFS4 ACLs. From a user's perspective, they're the same, though. If you're not using complex ACLs, there's no difference between the two
[21:24] <Jenshae> RoyK: I found an article explaining setting the maximum Access Control Lists in CentOS and another saying how to use it generally in /etc/fstab. How would I check it is correct for ZFS?
[21:26] <Jenshae> Most of the other results are focused on Oracle. How different is that from Ubuntu's version? I think the syntax for their SQL is quite different and some of the ways they handle things like joins are a bit unique.