You can compile on a big pi and copy the binary to your zeros. No need to compile on a zero lol
You can compile on a big pi and copy the binary to your zeros. No need to compile on a zero lol
For me, setting up colored man pages is essential. I was hoping to see that in this article, because my methods aren’t ideal.
I’m either holding most
back a couple versions, using a personal version of gentoos man pager that relies on texinfo and breaks on fedora, or using vim which is not my favorite.
I found this. I didn’t look at the code at all but the Readme mentions another project that might help.
Fedora Linux and expectations for part time remembering it is not send to the same room as the other one that is pertinent
I just did the same thing with llama and got the same thing
You didn’t like flying through 150 rings?
it still mounts and at first glance seems to be working
What makes you say that?
Show us the output of things like lsblk
, mount
and cat /etc/fstab
to give us a fuller picture
Anybody else notice the first graph goes from 2020 to 1996?
Hyprland is an official package as of fedora 39
Yeah you’re right, it’s time for bed lol
The default start timeout is disabled by default for oneshot.
You could try setting TimeoutStopSec=“infinity” for the service. There may be a default timeout for services and its killing rclone before it can finish because the oneshot type is considered “starting” until the program exits.
Can you share your service file?
I haven’t yet! Today I did a kernel update with it, I was kind of hoping something would go wrong so I would have a bug to report. But nope. Everything worked flawlessly. I’m not really sure how to break it but I’m going to try (in a vm lol)
Yeah pretty much, but it’s wayyyy faster. There’s times where it feels like dnf is hanging trying to download metadata that’s 25KB. I have 1Gb down and it takes like 2 minutes, its ridiculous. I know in the grand scheme of things I’m being petty. But it’s frustrating when the metadata step takes longer than downloading 500MB of packages lol
I’ve been using dnf5 for a few weeks now. I never want to go back. If you use fedora, seriously consider checking it out. The only thing I’m missing is the provides subcommand.
Just to offer the other perspective. I started with podman years ago. I knew very little about containers and I would say it made the learbing curve a lot steeper. Most guides and README’s use docker and when things didnt work I had to figure out if it was networking, selinux, rootless, not having the docker daemon, etc… without understanding fully what those things were because I didn’t know docker. But when I started running stuff on kubernetes, it was really easy. Pods in podman are isomorphic to kubernetes pods. I think the pain was worth it, but it was definitely not easy at the time. Documentation, guides, and networking have improved since then, so it may not be as big of a deal now
I think librewolf scrubs most of that stuff out. I’m basing that off of using burpsuite’s proxy server though. On vanilla firefox it captures so much crap going out. I havent tried with wireshark though.
Quadlets with podman have completely replaced compose files for me. I use the kuberentes configs. Then I run a tailscale container in the pod and BAM, all of my computers can access that service without have to expose any ports.
Then I have an ansible playbook to log in to the host and start a detached tmux session so my user systemd services keep running. Its all rootless, and just so dang easy.
Is that a 32 bit cpu?
I was going to say this too, but I’ve never cross compiled a cmake project so I wasn’t sure how much overhead there would be