

At the very least, dollar signs will still matter, due to environment variable interpolation.
At the very least, dollar signs will still matter, due to environment variable interpolation.
First of all, make sure the PostgreSQL username matches as well.
Does your password contain any special characters such as quotes, dollar signs or backslashes? They can have special meanings in yaml, resulting in the password being different from what you’d expect.
There even are still some (shitty) webhosts that require payment for a TLS certificate, because they refuse to support letsencrypt.
I have an ancient Dell desktop (Intel Core 2, 1TB HDD, 2.5GB RAM, one partially corrupted RAM stick) running as server, current uptime is 318 days. I reckon you should be fine, as long as the cooling keeps up.
Can you pinpoint the exact moment when the internet cuts out? Have you checked your logs (dmesg
, /var/log/syslog
, journalctl
, etc) around that time for anything weird?
To add on to this, if you’re using some random RAM stick picked out of the gutter, then it might be worth it to run memtest86+. Bad RAM sectors can give some weird unpredictable issues.