Chmod works recursively.
What modes exactly are you trying to set? Why do you need different perms based on the file type?
Infrastructure nerd, gamer, and Lemmy.ca maintainer
Chmod works recursively.
What modes exactly are you trying to set? Why do you need different perms based on the file type?
Leminal.space’s pict-rs seems to be was down, so when I expand this I get a broken image icon. I thought that was the css joke at first.
Ah no, I haven’t mined in years. That sucks to hear, they used to be an easy thing to point people at.
Nicehash is an easy way to get started.
Exactly. I’ve gotten this too, indeed is a joke.
Someone hasn’t learned to block themselves out a lunch hour.
Never attribute to malice that which is adequately explained by stupidity
Had a zfs array on an adaptec raid card. On reboot the partition table would get trashed and block the zfs pool from coming up, but running fdisk against the disk would recover it from the backup.
Had a script to run on reboot that just ran “fdisk -l” on every disk, then brought up the zfs pool. Worked great for years until I finally did a kernel upgrade that resolved it.
I’d believe it. I’ve had hundreds of Linux servers that don’t have any desktop Gui at all deployed on them.
Linux desktop users make up an absolutely tiny fraction of Linux installs.
Yeah, pretty much everyone agrees that once something goes to git it lasts forever.
The fact they call out that secret keys must be rotated if committed, makes me think they thought just deleting a commit was enough 🤦
Ladybird is a fork of the serenity browser, no?
Does this 3 year old pr involve anyone from the ladybird project?
With the hw MCE errors, it’s probably toast.
You could try reseating or swapping the ram around, if it’s socketed
Interesting, thanks for the link!
Well that’s technically correct, but if you’re so dependent on disk cache for system performance that you can’t live without it then you really need to look at doing an upgrade.
When a box swap deaths, it usually struggles to actually fill swap enough to have the kernel still OOM kill it at any point. Generally the massive performance impact of swapping just slows the app down to the point of being useless, along with the entire rest of the box. Disk cache should not be a concern during these abnormal events.
Just turn off swap? You don’t really need it, and the kernel wiil just oom kill without it.
Foreplay is important! Gotta get me excited for that app.
Did you enable accept subnets or exit node?
Try doing a --reset --up and don’t turn on any extra features.