What a function does should be self evident. Why it does it might not be.
What a function does should be self evident. Why it does it might not be.
Honestly, wasps (the ones common where I live) are pretty chill, sure they always go in your face, but you can just gently wave in their general vicinity and they will avoid you. The only times when they are aggressive is in autumn.
Bash, not because its my favourite but because it’s nearly ubiquitous. I don’t want to have to think about which shell I’m using.
Went with lineage since I grew up on cyanogenmod.
I’m not sure why they specifically say laptop, and then don’t mention what’s different to a desktop PC.
Then you click on the linked NVIDIA article and the first comment says, that it also happens on their desktop.
Didn’t really hop much, started with Windows, went on to OSX, got annoyed at it and ran Arch in a VM until I was comfortable with it, then went bare-metal with it.
Happy Arch user for some years now, though recently I’m using Fedora for work and I really like it. It’s not a good fit for some machines I’m running which need a lot of customisations to run properly.
I would really like to know how this graph was generated, because some expenditure per capita values have three different corresponding life expectancy values. Just look at Spain for example.
It was built in the early 12th century.
.I just switch providers, it’s easier to get a good deal than by staying and nagging customer support. Though I currently pay €10,- with my current provider because I also have fibre with them, so I’ll probably stay with them for the foreseeable future.
I switched ever couple of years.
Better check, you definitely already have a firewall running since docker needs it for NAT. A fresh debian has, as far as I know nftables and iptables-nft installed.
What firewall are you using? Docker doesn’t like non-iptables firewalls and it has been more than once that I changed my nftables config and really the whole networking stack to figure that out. I have a ubuntu server vm which had some iptables save-restore unit activated which was messing with my rules, that was fun to debug.
You could install qemu-user and register it in binfmt in the vm, that lets you run programs for other architectures.
Is anything keeping you from just reinstalling the system and mounting your home into it again (maybe the majority of your customisations live in /home too)? I feel that is a lot less of a hassle than copying files around.
In principle you should be able to restore your system by just copying all of the relevant files from the backup to their correct partitions - it can’t really get any worse if it doesn’t work.
For the future: A backup is only any good if you know how to restore it and tested that that actually works.
Regarding the permissions: If you do a cp fileA.txt fileB.txt
fileB.txt
will normally be owned by the creating user. So a sudo cp ...
will create the files as root.
I would personally use rsync
with a few additional options, archive among them. This way the fs is restored exactly as it was. But that doesn’t make a whole lot of sense if the files weren’t copied that way too.
Nouveau is stable and runs, but don’t expect the best performance. The official NVIDIA driver is unstable, lacks proper wayland support but has decent performance. I’d go with anything but a NVIDIA GPU.
I recently did expand my storage. I started with one raid5 array with 4 drives. I just added another drive and grew the array, the LUKS container and the filesystem.
Exim and Dovecot. With a clean IP on a VPS and SPF, DKIM and DMARC I haven’t really encountered any problems yet. Though I’m only doing it for about 2 years.
I have a cheap Kobo and put KOReader and Syncthing on it.
Cries in 1080 ti