It can help to download your local map for offline use. The default basemap doesn't have details like house numbers, but the downloaded maps should.
tychosmoose
Same, I also use peanut oil. It's inexpensive and works great.
OsmAnd will do that. If you edit the destinations you can manually specify their order. Click sort there and choose door-to-door to get the most efficient routing.
The app takes some getting used to, but it works very well, and can act as a front-end for contributing to OpenStreetsMap.
See what's using the space. This will list any dirs using >100MiB:
sudo du -h -d 5 -t 100M /var
I use LibreNMS, which is a fork of Observium. It is primarily SNMP polling, so if you haven't worked with SNMP before there can be a bit of a learning curve to get it set up. Once you get the basics working it's pretty easy to add service monitoring, syslog collection, alerting and more. And since it's SNMP you can monitor network hardware pretty easily as well as servers.
The dashboards aren't as beautiful as some other options but there is lot to work with.
Interesting. In NC here. Not sure if there's a difference regionally. I was seeing that kind of RTT on ipv4, but ipv6 was slower. I'll need to give it another try. The last time I did was at my last place where I had the BGW210. I have the BGW320 now and haven't tried on that. Maybe that, or changes in their routing since then will make a difference.
Did I read right that it doesn't use systemd?
AT&T is the same. And the last time I looked they don't give you enough address space to host your own subnet. You get a /64 instead of a /56. And it's slower than ipv4.
Every few months I try it out, complain and then switch it off.
Legrand makes a recessed keystone wall plate that may help. There are also other recessed and angled plate options that may help.
Monit works for me. Good basic monitoring solution that can also restart a service/interface.
I also use LibreNMS to do alerting for a variety of conditions (syslog events, sensor conditions, outages and services via nagios). But this is more work to get set up.
I tried draw.io, but ended up liking LibreOffice Draw better for hand-drawing.
If you want to get a live map of the connections on your network you may want to check out netdisco.org or librenms.org. Both are open source network management tools that have mapping.
And if you did, and want a fun tech project to track what species are in your yard, check out BirdNET Pi: https://github.com/mcguirepr89/BirdNET-Pi