Some easy display rules, and a couple of plugins and it’s perfect.
Some easy display rules, and a couple of plugins and it’s perfect.
It doesn’t matter. Put it in ~/foo/bar/Baz for all the shell cares.
If you don’t have root is it really a VPS?
Anyway, unpack the binaries to ~/local/usr/bin
and add that to your PATH.
I’d trust also the official Arch repo.
Yeah they’ve only rolled out a version of curl that broke the package manager a few times.
It’s not quite what you’ve asked for here, but as a Dev I’d be remiss if I didn’t shill for Gentoo.
It ticks your rolling release box, has fantastic docs, a huge package repository (and the community repo Guru), and by design enables almost infinite configurability and customisation. We also have a binary package repository now for popular architectures, so you can choose to avoid compiling if you don’t want to deviate from sane defaults (or only compile in cases where you do!)
On the hardware side, we have fantastic support for a number of architectures, I recently brought up a SPARC system and have some arch64 and riscv in the past.
Finally, even if you just decide to check the distro out, the process of installing, configuring, and maintaining a Linux system is outlined in detail within our handbook, and can provide a peek behind the scenes at what some other distros abstract; it’s a fantastic learning experience for those interested.
Finally, we have fantastic support through volunteers in official IRC channels and forums, as well as unofficial hubs like discord.
Hopefully I’ve planted a seed and you’ll check it out down the line. :)
Contrast that with CLI where if you forgot or don’t know any command there is little help or indicator of what’s available and what can be done without external help.
man
would like to have words with your strawman.
No, this is egregious, even for Dan. Don’t feel bad. I called him out on the forums/article comments.
I’m looking at bringing Dillo back into Gentoo atm. I had to read 15k lines of code, and that’s just what’s different since the last release…
I’m a huge proponent of Gentoo Linux as a learning experience. It’s a great way to learn how the components of a system work together and the distro enables an amazing amount of configurability for your system.
Even following a handbook install in a VM can be a good experience if you’re interested.
I may be a touch biased, but I feel like you might enjoy trying Gentoo one day, especially with the recent official binary package host.
I once spent a month automating the production of repositories for each kernel version supported on our HPC and rested every step exhaustively in isolation.
When I was satisfied I ran it with root permissions and hosed the VMs it was running on because a recursive chmod evaluated to /.
Oops.
Pipewire is great .
Write out syslogs to disk or better yet mirror to grayling or something, there might be valuable information right before the reboot.
I’ve also had weirdness where the CPU/iGPU was just faulty and the IME would halt the system. That took weeks to diagnose.
Definitely reach out to support!
It should work with ‘host’ match detection. If it isn’t working check your URIs.
Or do the sane thing and run everything on a different DNS and share 80/443.
What? Bitwarden doesn’t give a shit about non standard ports on services you’re accessing. They’re a valid part of the URI string.
Try changing your match detection settings in the add-on.
If you’re talking about bitwarden not supporting being run from container on a non standard port, we’ll, you’re doing it wrong. Expose whatever port on the container then Add a proper reverse proxy / edge router like traefik, then set up some DNS and Let’s encrypt and only use 80 and 443 for all of your services.
At least weekly.
This link might be useful in quickly getting a binhost configured while following a standard handbook install.
You don’t need to, we have official binary package hosts if you choose to use them.
There absolutely was. Intel got smacked on the wrist for doing their benchmarks using ICC… you know, the compiler that builds code that detects that it’s not running on an Intel CPU and disables all optimisations and extended instruction sets (like say MMX/SSE).
What a hot take. I bet you’re real fun at parties.