Me BTW I use arch
I wrote my own file system in binary BTW (on a computer I forged from sand in my back yard)
Oh you refined your own sand? What semiconductor did you end up using for the CPU?
Germanium intrinsic.
You better have etched the binary onto storage by hand, and also made the storage medium yourself
Person behind Makes Hannah Montana boot with modern Nvidia drivers
The wizard on the wall (disguised as a skeleton) uses NixOS and also happens to declare their incantations in the Nix language.
And the clock is running Doom
Mint users just getting drunk and having a great time.
Oh, PopOS too!
Apropos ich benutze Arch
AproPO ich benutze auch Arsch
À propos, ich benutze auch Arsch
A pro Po, bin ich, auch Arsch.
Ich benutze ebenfalls Bogen bei dem Weg. !bogengemeinschaft@feddit.de
Meine Fresse was es hier alles gibt lol
Hehe, geil, wa?
Gibt es auch eine Gemeinschaft für Bogennutzer mit Wegland?
Schau doch erstmal ins Wiki!!!11
Jokus. Glaube es gibt keine extra Kommune für Bogennutzer mit Wegland.
Gibt es wenigstens eine für Benutzende des Test-Lagers? Kern Version 6.9 ist schon ein schmackhaftes Privileg.
Nein, ich fürchte du musst diesen Raum auch mit uns LTS-Barbaren (und schlimmerem) teilen.
Become vegan and start cooking with only a cast iron skillet.
I used to be a gentoo user in the 00s. Recently came bsck to linux and I find tge popularity of gentoo died down as fast as arch became popular.
Why does arch exist ? Is it like, gentoo but with a binary cache ? Can you automatically build everything from source still ? Is there something equivalent to use flags .
It’s a rolling release with minimal changes to packages from upstream, and generally the latest versions of available software in the repos. I guess you could go through and rebuild the whole system from source if you were determined to, but a quick look at the ABS wiki page doesn’t make it seem like it’s set up to make doing so all that easy. For other software not in the repos, the AUR makes it easy enough to build them from source, though there’s often binary options available as well. The base install is pretty simple, so you can build upon it as you’d like if you really want to go wild on a minimal, highly customized system. Or you can go wild installing what you’d like and trying all the things.
Is there anything akin to use flags ? Suppose there’s a package you need to enable sonething not enabled by default, how painful is that ?
You can set general options for all compilations in /etc/makepkg.conf, and package specific options would probably be best handled by just downloading a PKGBUILD for the package in question and editing it to include the option you want to enable. makepkg won’t ask you about options by default when building something, but it’s not that complicated to edit the PKGBUILD prior to calling makepkg.