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jbd2 is the journaling part of ext4. You can disable this with:There's also "jbd2" doing some constant writing, though not as much. So what's this BS and how do I stop it?
sudo mke2fs -t ext4 -O ^has_journal /dev/drivename
If you know how to compile a package it shouldn't be too difficult to start using it right now, but if you don't already know how to compile an application I would advise against trying to use XLibre at this early stage of development. It will take relatively no effort for Mint or any other distro to make their own XLibre package whenever they want to do that, they are not reliant on Ubuntu or Debian for this at all, although Debian will probably adopt XLibre eventually.What would be needed to install Xlibre on Linux Mint? Would the Linux Mint devs be forced to maintain it themselves if Debian and Ubuntu refuse to add it to their repositories?
So does turning logging off help?Sounds about right...
I don't see this happening. I see Debian falling into rank-and-file with Redhat, Ubuntu, and GNOME.Debian will probably adopt XLibre eventually.
I don't think Debian cares about Wayland and X11 beyond product functionality.I don't see this happening. I see Debian falling into rank-and-file with Redhat, Ubuntu, and GNOME.
relatime has been the default for a very long time."atime" records every time the file is accessed.
relatime
Update inode access times relative to modify or change time. Access
time is only updated if the previous access time was earlier than
the current modify or change time. (Similar to noatime, but it
doesn’t break mutt(1) or other applications that need to know if a
file has been read since the last time it was modified.)
Couldn't you just use Fn + Keyboard keys to turn RGB on and off?Just had to install a Win10 VM and icue to disable my corsair keyboard rgb after it reset itself. I tried openrgb and ckb-next, but neither recognized my K70. If anyone knows something I might have missed I'd appreciate it in case I have to do this again
@prollyanotherlurker 's idea of switching it to RAM only by setting storage=volatile is probably saner, just in case to want to look at it at some point later. But if the only sign of something going wrong is that systemd is vomiting out gibberish then why not?So does turning logging off help?
(also lol)
So does turning logging off help?
(also lol)
Turning it off solves the symptom not the root cause. It could be something extremely stupid like misconfigured wifi/net settings, or it could be extremely complex@prollyanotherlurker 's idea of switching it to RAM only by setting storage=volatile is probably saner, just in case to want to look at it at some point later. But if the only sign of something going wrong is that systemd is vomiting out gibberish then why not?
RuntimeDirectory + LoadCredential memory leak on crash loop
Is that "gnome-system-monitor.desktop[2583]: glibtop(c=2583): [WARNING] statvfs '/run/user/1000/doc' failed: Operation not permitted" and stuff like "Window manager warning: Overwriting existing binding of keysym 39 with keysym 39 (keycode 12)" some things really bad? Those were what seemed to be the recurrent issues. Also, it's just logging, so deactivating that alone doesn't cause any major issues? I doubt the OS can actually read the logs and do stuff with them to automatically correct issues like a person can...It could be something extremely stupid like misconfigured wifi/net settings, or it could be extremely complexand totaly not maliciousbullshitwritten by pottering that's just buggy.
Oh yeah, and I can always turn the logging back on if I notice performance issues.Turning it off solves the symptom not the root cause.
Not to be a jackass, I don't use systemd or GNOMEIs that "gnome-system-monitor.desktop[2583]: glibtop(c=2583): [WARNING] statvfs '/run/user/1000/doc' failed: Operation not permitted" and stuff like "Window manager warning: Overwriting existing binding of keysym 39 with keysym 39 (keycode 12)" some things really bad? Those were what seemed to be the recurrent issues. Also, it's just logging, so deactivating that alone doesn't cause any major issues? I dunno if the OS can read the logs and do stuff with them to automatically correct issues -- logs are for people.
. I think it should be safe to ignore. The issue is when you need logs to figure out what went wrong (like a failing RAM stick), and then you forget you don't keep logs...Is that the System Monitor? At least neither issue looks serious.First error is related to your task manager display. Seems like a regression (again) since they've patched it twice lmao. Try killing that app.
Yeah its the system monitor. And I think so for the latter. You'll still need to address the root cause eventually.Is that the System Monitor? At least neither issue looks serious.
Oh yeah, and is editing that one file with #storeage=volatile all it takes to switch logging to RAM?
At least it's nothing serious (or so you say from what I gather anyway).You'll still need to address the root cause eventually.

He's an Aussie. Thats enough.Does anyone else just Hate (capital H) that Brodie Robertson faggot?
Looking it up make sure you have xdg-desktop-portal installed. Maybe xdg-desktop-portal-gtk and xdg-desktop-portal-gnome installed too (I'm guessing you are running gnome or something) because that looks to be the root of the issue.At least it's nothing serious (or so you say from what I gather anyway).