Gentoo is a great learning tool for linux. It’s also got a great package manager and lets you truly customise the system to your liking, which is why I stuck around.
Of course I hear you can do the latter thing with Arch, but I don’t know Arch, so…
Gentoo is a great learning tool for linux. It’s also got a great package manager and lets you truly customise the system to your liking, which is why I stuck around.
Of course I hear you can do the latter thing with Arch, but I don’t know Arch, so…
I tried transferring a ublue based install to another drive recently. Didn’t go well. And I wasn’t really able to find any info on how to do such a simple maintenance task as fix the bootloader in their weird way of doing things. :/
On my phone, F-Droid occasionally pops up saying it has downloaded an update for itself. But when I tap it to install it, I get told the APK is corrupt. Will this finally fix that, I wonder? :P
Good, web3 was a bunch of wank anyway.
We talking about web4 when web3 isn’t even real yet?
I know Blender can do at least some of this on windows. I assume the same is true on linux?
Gentoo because it’s what I know, and I know enough to make it do what I want.
Petition to force anyone talking about software to use “trendy” or “fashionable” instead of “modern”.
removed that guy. Don’t let him influence you. Install gentoo or don’t, for your own reasons.
Yes, that’s right.
Okay? These aren’t from the bootloader tho.
The first two lines seem like they probably came from X, the old standard UI system for *nix. The last line is just saying that your 2nd partition on your 3rd disk was checked with no errors found. This is fine.
Given that the UI then starts up you can ignore these messages. They’re there in case the system fails to start up after that point.
I personally have a tiny fat32 EFI partition, a small ext4 root, and everything else allocated to LVM2. Then LVs for every large path, like /home, /var, etc. I leave most of the extents unallocated until I need more space.
The article says it works by messaging systemd to run the process as the given user, rather than being a SUID binary. So it wouldn’t work without systemd.