On my machine, the L2 cache is 256KiB
Is this a typo or are they running on a Pentium 3?
On my machine, the L2 cache is 256KiB
Is this a typo or are they running on a Pentium 3?
In the future, you should look into using LVMs for your partitions.
I ran into a similar problem recently where my /var needed to be increased - I was able to run a simple lvextend -L+4G /dev/myvg/var --resizefs
to grow my /var by 4 gigabytes.
Before I was using LVMs though I used a gparted live disk a lot
I’ve been a decades long Gentoo user, but now I’m experimenting with NixOS as I’ve gotten older and value my time more. The 12+ hours of compiling when there’s a chromium / QT update is no longer a badge of honor. I haven’t fully converted though, Gentoo binary packages are working as an acceptable stopgap
I don’t think he knows about second gun, Pip
I’m using Gentoo with systemd and a customized kernel, and additionally I have the /usr
partition LUKS encrypted.
Because /usr
is absolutely essential for systemd to function, I configured dracut to make a specially crafted initrd which activates the luks lvm and prompts for the password to decrypt and mount /usr
on startup before systemd init tries to run.
About a year or two ago, some update to dracut or some other dependency (assumption) caused the dracut generated initrd’s to kernel panic. After multiple days of troubleshooting, I discovered that just copying forward an older initrd in /boot
and naming it to match the new kernel, e.g. initramfs-6.6.38-gentoo.img
, allows the system to boot normally .
So, my Gentoo is booting a kernel 6.6.something
with a ramdisk generated in the 5.9
kernel era. I am dreading the day when this behavior breaks and I can no longer update my kernel 😳
The President we need, but not the President we deserve
This is the way (as in this is what I do). Every once in a while you’ll have to hard reset the laptop because Windows.
A thread on the site which shall not be named convinced me that a majority of the books are recently published and with above average to highly scored on reviews, so I bought it.
Why the Linux Firewalls book hails from 2007 is a strange outlier.
Not sure where you got the 25kb number from.
This tool is written in go and is a 7.8 MB compiled binary.
Ah, the ol’ switcharoo
50 minutes seems way too long - I run Gentoo on a 2nd gen i5 and my kernel compile is always under 20 minutes.
You are using make -j4
or make -j(number of CPU cores)
for parallel compile, right?
Iirc the original steamOS was Debian based and you really had to be an experienced Linux user to use and enjoy it.
With the new steamOS (arch based?) it’s a much more streamlined experience and opens up the user base because of it