The Linux Thread - The Autist's OS of Choice

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There's been over an hour or so with no mysterious ~20 MB writes (they usually strike every half hour or so). During that time there's no tabs left open on YouTube or GMail.

(sudo maybe) fatrace -ct -f "CW+" | grep ".mozilla"
Tried that and Terminal output was fatrace wasn't found. Is that a package I have to install?

bash: fatrace: command not found
 
I have a hypothesis what could be causing the mystery 20 MB writes: sites with Google site metrics?

:thinking:
 
Dude, just tell newbies to fuck off and use Windows at this point, because by pulling this shit you're actively maintaining the zeitgeist that all Linux users are egotistical, narcissistic dickheads.
Did you even read my post? I explicitly outlined that MX or Devuan should be the newbie choice because they are so simple and intuitive, but also happen to lack systemd. Why should I suggest something does the same exact thing but comes with pottering shovelware?
Everything is made around systemd on Linux now. That's just the reality, and for people to have the most seamless move to Linux possible. They will almost always want to just go with something systemd. And if it's mx getting recommended.
See, that's the problem. I suggested MX explicitly because it is just as easy to use as Mint sans systmed. Say what you will, but I see the widespread adoption of systemd as a problem, and so naturally, I wouldn't recommend a newbie get hooked on it from the get go.
I am out of space for drives. So I would want to setup a second pc for backups with like multiple 4TB+ drives. Just 1 for now since my entire linux drive is 2TB.
Would highly recommend running a super simple RAID or ZFS. Not to go into too much detail, but if you've got more than one 1/2 TB drives, I'd look into mirroring your sensitive files to keep them safe in case of drive failure. Like @Aidan said, you can jam them in either a simple case or an old PC. Just be aware that if you buy refurbished server drives, they can get very loud and run very hot.
 
yay just uses pacman behind the scenes. There's zero reason you should be using both. Please do not use both.

Post your lsblk and some description about your filesystem layout and someone here will probably be able to write you an fstab.
What do you mean by filesystem layout?

Also where should I mount drives to? Just anywhere? In my home folder?
 
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under /mnt/ or /media/$user/ is pretty good
This whole time I thought /mnt was a placeholder for a mount location.... I didn't realize y'all were referring to an actual thing

After work ima see if I can get a drive mounted and working. If I can I will add the drives I want to my fstab
 
This whole time I thought /mnt was a placeholder for a mount location.... I didn't realize y'all were referring to an actual thing

After work ima see if I can get a drive mounted and working. If I can I will add the drives I want to my fstab
Didn't you use /mnt during the arch install process? It's been a while since I've done one but back in like 2022 that was the default place you mounted your root to prior to pacstrap
 
Oh. Then never mind. I think everyone knows Israel is our greatest ally. We can't stand for someone speaking ill of our best menches.
It's less he opposes Israel and more that he supports the palestinians. His reasoning is that Israel is an oppressive fascist coloniser state that slaughters innocent brown people, rather than "Israel is run by da jooos". It's the same retarded "palestinian solidarity" bullshit that leads to people importing masses of muslims into the west, in order to stick it to the oppressors and the colonisers, whoever they may be. Anyone who disagrees with his belief that the palestinians are entirely innocent in every circumstance is a nazi and should stop using Mint entirely. Not a rational position.

However, he doesn't include any of that shit in the distro, so to use it or not, because of your view of his stance, is purely an ideological decision.
 
I'm using endeavourOS. Still arch. But not like arch arch
No neofetch street cred for you
1689610710323440.webp
 
Just as an aside, while discussing musical partitions: Puppy Linux is still going, still fits on a CD, and still includes a disk wrangler for when you (OK, *I*) bork the system from lack of coffee.
Probably not the sanest choice as a daily driver, but a useful thing to keep lying around for emergencies.
 
No neofetch street cred for you
View attachment 7457933
That is unless you remove EOS packages, repositories, keyrings, mirror list and then update. I did this for a laugh once and it's unsurprisingly easy to convert an EOS system back to Arch. I suppose it's an option if the script stops working and you don't want to do the manual install. I usually do the manual because I like to set up GUID partitions for the auto-generator that locates and mount said partitions without any explicit /etc/fstab entries. It's what I am used to now and you don't risk stuff happening to your entries messing your system up. IIRC no manual installer lets you set that up during partitioning, but I could be out of date on that.

Just as an aside, while discussing musical partitions: Puppy Linux is still going, still fits on a CD, and still includes a disk wrangler for when you (OK, *I*) bork the system from lack of coffee.
Probably not the sanest choice as a daily driver, but a useful thing to keep lying around for emergencies.
I use the distro SystemRescue for this instead. It's intended to be used in this way and comes with a ton of tools for it, but PuppyLinux probably works just as well too. For fstab issues you don't really need either, you can append systemd.unit=emergency to boot parameters which boots you into emergency mode, the most minimal environment available on systemd. You then mount to write, and you can fix from there. I prefer to use SystemRescue still though, it's nice to have a XFCE environment to fix in.
 
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Just as an aside, while discussing musical partitions: Puppy Linux is still going, still fits on a CD, and still includes a disk wrangler for when you (OK, *I*) bork the system from lack of coffee.
Probably not the sanest choice as a daily driver, but a useful thing to keep lying around for emergencies.
I respect Puppy Linux a lot for what it is. It's not much of a "daily driver" for anyone passing through here but for someone who does basic stuff on their computer it's great and can extend the life of old hardware significantly. And as you say, you can keep it lying around as it's designed to live entirely on removable media if you want so if you want a portable OS with GUI that runs well, it's a good choice. I've never considered using it for recovery, though.

NomadBSD is another option to have lying around or use while traveling if you want to keep everything on an encrypted USB.
 
I've been waiting for a year or two for my Arch install to brick itself so I can go back to Gentoo *sigh*
That's like saying that you want to wait for your horse to die before getting a car. Just make the switch when it's convenient so it doesn't happen when you are in the middle of a bunch of important things like a vacation or a family crisis.
 
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