

I used to keep a list of repos to pull onto my NAS in case they someday went closed source. I use “mr” for it. It worked great. I had it on a systemd timer.
Plutus, Haskell, Nix, Purescript, Swift/Kotlin. laser-focused on FP: formality, purity, and totality; repulsed by pragmatic, unsafe, “move fast and break things” approaches
AC24 1DE5 AE92 3B37 E584 02BA AAF9 795E 393B 4DA0
I used to keep a list of repos to pull onto my NAS in case they someday went closed source. I use “mr” for it. It worked great. I had it on a systemd timer.
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::Robert Redford nodding gif::
I build, configure, and deploy them with nix flakes for maximum reproducibility. It’s the way you should be doing it for archival purposes. With this tech, you can rebuild any docker image identically to today’s in 100 years.
https://youtu.be/0uixRE8xlbY?si=NIIFyzRhXDmcU8Kh
and here’s a link to a blog post, showing how to create a docker image and rust dev environment.
https://johns.codes/blog/rust-enviorment-and-docker-build-with-nix-flakes
If you can use another method, disabling SSH entirely would do it. ;)
This is how Talos Linux achieves best-in-class security properties.
https://www.siderolabs.com/blog/how-to-ssh-into-talos-linux/