It works with USB interfaces using passthrough. But yeah doesn’t make a lot of sense.
Software developer interested into security and sustainability.
It works with USB interfaces using passthrough. But yeah doesn’t make a lot of sense.
I’m not buying anything, as I do not need anything.
I understand your project’s constraints. I meant that you could try compiling and running the mongoose server linked against the packed filesystem in your development machine.
It seems to me that the problem would be caused by Mongoose packing, rather than vite/rollup’s build, since it seems to run fine on your development environment.
PS: Could you try reproducing the Problem using a mongoose server running on your development machine, or even better: on a Dockerfile? Then you could share a minimal example that could help to further diagnose the issue.
Pepper itself is overrated. At least the black one.
From Archwiki > xrandr:
Tip: Both GDM and SDDM have startup scripts that are executed when X is initiated. For GDM, these are in /etc/gdm/, while for SDDM this is done at /usr/share/sddm/scripts/Xsetup. This method requires root access and mucking around in system configuration files, but will take effect earlier in the startup process than using xprofile.
Maybe you should consider a server & client architecture to use the right tool for the right job on each platform.
We growing wiser, or are we just growing tall?
Try this:
for file in ./*
do
echo "$file"
done
To do some substitution operation om the filename you can use Bash Parameter Expansion.
Rumors say there are some platforms selling grow-kits including everything needed to get started. In Europe, people recommend some platform starting with Zam and ending with nesia, which supposedly provide a variety of kits.
You can also find plenty of resources online to start from scratch. The easiest seems to be the uncle bens method.
I think it helps to cool the drink and inot only satisfactory.
Phosphorescent light-rods.
Maybe Firefox needs to add a new “Clipboard access” permission that can be granted on a site-per-site basis. When disabled, simple highlight and copy could still be enabled if hidden text cannot be added in between normal text.
The same permission model could be used system wide, but I do not think that such a feature exists on the X server or Wayland. Maybe using a wrapper that runs before the Desktop Environment?
There is a fun app called StreetComplete than makes it easy to complete missing info and I suppose fix it too.
ncdu
for analyzing disk space usage in TUI.
Which country are you from?
I think you may want to use
for device in /dev/disk/by-uuid/*
That doesn’t explain why you aren’t seeing messages. I see there is a shebang at the start of the script. Can you confirm that the script has the executable bit set for the root user?