Fyi /usr/local/bin is for system wide applications, freebsd and it’s friends use it for non-core software installs.
Fyi /usr/local/bin is for system wide applications, freebsd and it’s friends use it for non-core software installs.
Unix has had a long running convention of separation between “operating system” and other files, so you can blow away something like /opt or /home without making your system unbeatable.
If you stick stuff under /usr/bin then you have to track the files especially if there are any conflicts.
Best to just add another path, I use ~/bin because it’s easy to get to and it’s a symlink from the git repo that holds my portable environment, just clone it and run a script and I’m home.
Oh sorry that was badly written, I compile my own kernel and run lxc on top of that, with debian base userspace otherwise.
Then kvm on top for really different stuff.
For my server it’s debian on the bottom with zfs file serving raidz2, and on top of that 1 kvm for debian docker containers, and 1 kvm for freebsd jails which actually hosts most of the services I care about, docker is fallback if they’re a pain to set up.
I use debian as my absolute base and build lxc containers for everything above that with my own kernel, works for me.
I set my own complexity, but debian also doesn’t get in my way which works for me.
Ubuntu container for dev work (c++ mostly), arch container for some stuff, few vms for private data.
You’re talking about 2 things: 1. Strict aliasing to guarantee nobody does anything stupid with the pointers, and 2. Bounds checking at compile time with runtime checks for anything that cant be guaranteed at compile time.
There are analysis passes that do this, coverity did some, as does gcov though less well.
lxc-make.sh arch -d arch
Make yourself a quickie container and install it there, my base config has x11 forwarded with opengl.
Yes but with a container wrapper specifying format, padding and where the frame chunks start and stop.
Oh yeah, it’s a 3588, all out of tree, I’m very similar.
Yy3568 has most if not all of that, sata also and thats hard to find.
It’s not that pipewire is amazing, pipewire works.
It’s just that pulseaudio was written by people who hate software.
I do this using lxc, all my environments are different, debian base, arch gaming and some browsing, Ubuntu for work, etc.
Look at lxc-create -t download
Then you just add permissions for the child os to access the x11 and dri and it’s gorgeous.
I’m sure they have a process to do that, it was drilled into us that there were regulations and procedures they had to respect for each country.
While I marginally trust them now, I wouldn’t trust them to the indefinite future, desperate MBAs are capable of anything.
So, I’ve had it not work before, usually for odd reasons. One thing to try is to delete the other partition, then apply, then try to move it.
Resize/move is finicky though.
Right click, resize/move.
Also, you can back up your dB to encrypted json and restore it later.
You can say a lot of shit about intel, but sometimes they do hardware support in linux very well.
What worries me is when they start missing earnings reports and some vp decides he has a clever idea to monetize previously unmonetized data.
That sounds terrifying, but it’s also just a possibility and they would have a debate about it.
Tb support on linux is arguably better than usb support.
Google boltctl to authorize the dock and you’re golden, stuff just works for me, though honestly I didn’t use my pcie dock on linux.
You want fun:
When you open the z fold, all your applications are killed.
It takes 5 seconds to get to the home screen and start opening them again.
Did that a few times, the difficulty is keeping it up to date with new releases or distro hopping, I just git clone my environment with a bin path and distro specific environment variables.