BlackBerry researchers say China-affiliated groups have infiltrated Linux systems for years
https://www.itworldcanada.com/article/china-affiliated-groups-have-infiltrated-linux-systems-for-years-according-to-blackberry-researchers/429457
https://redd.it/fxuqyr
@r_linux
https://www.itworldcanada.com/article/china-affiliated-groups-have-infiltrated-linux-systems-for-years-according-to-blackberry-researchers/429457
https://redd.it/fxuqyr
@r_linux
IT World Canada
BlackBerry researchers say China-affiliated groups have infiltrated Linux systems for years
Detailed report also suggests defenders may be missing threats because they appear to be merely adware
System76 Lemur Pro is now available to order ($1,099+, open source firmware -Coreboot and EC)
https://system76.com/laptops/lemur?utm_medium=social_post&utm_term=LemurLaunch2020&utm_content=LemurProLaunch&utm_campaign=social
https://redd.it/fxvc48
@r_linux
https://system76.com/laptops/lemur?utm_medium=social_post&utm_term=LemurLaunch2020&utm_content=LemurProLaunch&utm_campaign=social
https://redd.it/fxvc48
@r_linux
[opensuse-announce] Bringing Leap and SUSE Linux Enterprise closer together
http://lists.opensuse.org/opensuse-announce/2020-04/msg00000.html
https://redd.it/fxw0az
@r_linux
http://lists.opensuse.org/opensuse-announce/2020-04/msg00000.html
https://redd.it/fxw0az
@r_linux
reddit
[opensuse-announce] Bringing Leap and SUSE Linux Enterprise closer...
Posted in r/linux by u/-----_-_-_-_-_----- • 6 points and 0 comments
ww - watch, but better
I have been using this snippet as a way of `watch`ing things in a terminal for some time and found it incredible useful. Have posted it to Github in case anyone else also finds a use for it.
In a nutshell, it is `watch`, but with inotify (i.e. file-watching) support, shell alias support, one highlighting support and a few other bits. For my style of working, just makes it way more productive in little things.
https://github.com/jtyers/ww
https://redd.it/fxpozs
@r_linux
I have been using this snippet as a way of `watch`ing things in a terminal for some time and found it incredible useful. Have posted it to Github in case anyone else also finds a use for it.
In a nutshell, it is `watch`, but with inotify (i.e. file-watching) support, shell alias support, one highlighting support and a few other bits. For my style of working, just makes it way more productive in little things.
https://github.com/jtyers/ww
https://redd.it/fxpozs
@r_linux
GitHub
jtyers/ww
ww - a better watch, with highlighting, watching local files, and shell alias compatibility - jtyers/ww
The end of the Linux Action Show/News
https://twitter.com/ChrisLAS/status/1248341347980853248?s=19
https://redd.it/fy0sri
@r_linux
https://twitter.com/ChrisLAS/status/1248341347980853248?s=19
https://redd.it/fy0sri
@r_linux
Twitter
Chris Fisher
After 14 years spending every Sunday covering the news, it is with a heavy heart I announce the end of @LinuxActionNews https://t.co/pz88pSYK3M We as a team felt it was important to let you know before Sunday.
Was cleaning out my bedroom and found an old Ubuntu install disk. Probably circa 2005? Was using Suse out of college in 2003. Switched to Ubuntu a couple years later, then to Debian after the Cannocial/ Microsoft partnership. I've played with other distros. What is your distro journey?
https://redd.it/fy1tsh
@r_linux
https://redd.it/fy1tsh
@r_linux
The story of how I created a way to port Windows Apps to Linux
https://www.blinkingcaret.com/2020/04/09/the-story-of-how-i-created-a-way-to-port-windows-apps-to-linux/
https://redd.it/fy35od
@r_linux
https://www.blinkingcaret.com/2020/04/09/the-story-of-how-i-created-a-way-to-port-windows-apps-to-linux/
https://redd.it/fy35od
@r_linux
The Blinking Caret
The story of how I created a way to port Windows Apps to Linux - The Blinking Caret
Some day during a weekend sometime around the summer in 2018 I was doing house chores while listening to a podcast. The podcast I was listening to is called Coder Radio, and I was specifically listening to episode #322 Not so QT. That episode is about using…
Redhat 7 disk partition expansion
/dev/sdc has two partitions dev/sdc1 & dev/sdc2. Both mounted on /opt & /var respectively. Since we wanted more space on /opt hence, I added more space on Azure disk and then tried to increase partition size of /dev/sdc1 --- Using fdisk i deleted partition tables for sdc1 & sdc2. I have created new partition table for sdc1 with more space and kept the same size of dev/sdc2. After server reboot /var created issues and does not let server boot up. As it does not have filesystem and mount point. here how it looks like shown below.
[How to get \/var on this partition without loosing any existing data in it.](https://preview.redd.it/zr8d3cmj5wr41.png?width=1045&format=png&auto=webp&s=e50a50f584e88de910182730bd221f7ec46af9f4)
How to get /var on this partition without loosing any existing data in it.
https://redd.it/fy52tf
@r_linux
/dev/sdc has two partitions dev/sdc1 & dev/sdc2. Both mounted on /opt & /var respectively. Since we wanted more space on /opt hence, I added more space on Azure disk and then tried to increase partition size of /dev/sdc1 --- Using fdisk i deleted partition tables for sdc1 & sdc2. I have created new partition table for sdc1 with more space and kept the same size of dev/sdc2. After server reboot /var created issues and does not let server boot up. As it does not have filesystem and mount point. here how it looks like shown below.
[How to get \/var on this partition without loosing any existing data in it.](https://preview.redd.it/zr8d3cmj5wr41.png?width=1045&format=png&auto=webp&s=e50a50f584e88de910182730bd221f7ec46af9f4)
How to get /var on this partition without loosing any existing data in it.
https://redd.it/fy52tf
@r_linux
Linux kernel
Hello all,
hope everyone is keeping safe through the crises..
I'm a Linux beginner to intermediate user, and would like to ask if any of you could recommend a good book to help me understand the Linux kernel. I understand programming and hardware enough to grasp the terms but not looking for something too advanced..
Thank you guys
https://redd.it/fy5kvs
@r_linux
Hello all,
hope everyone is keeping safe through the crises..
I'm a Linux beginner to intermediate user, and would like to ask if any of you could recommend a good book to help me understand the Linux kernel. I understand programming and hardware enough to grasp the terms but not looking for something too advanced..
Thank you guys
https://redd.it/fy5kvs
@r_linux
reddit
Linux kernel
Hello all, hope everyone is keeping safe through the crises.. I'm a Linux beginner to intermediate user, and would like to ask if any of you...
How to set up a remote school environment for kids with Linux | Opensource.com
https://opensource.com/article/20/4/school-home-linux
https://redd.it/fy4c9a
@r_linux
https://opensource.com/article/20/4/school-home-linux
https://redd.it/fy4c9a
@r_linux
Opensource.com
How to set up a remote school environment for kids with Linux
COVID-19 has suddenly thrown all of us into a new and challenging situation. Many of us are now working full-time from home, and for a lot of us (especially people who aren't used to working remotely), this is taking some getting used to.
swiper - a libinput gesture handler
[https://git.sr.ht/\~maringuu/swiper](https://git.sr.ht/~maringuu/swiper)
Hello r/linux
I really like having gestures on my trackpad and wanted to do some programming so I decided to write my own programm.
The main feature that I did not find in other gesture handlers are "continous" gestures which means that one command gets execute multiple times during one single gestures. One example is swiping up and down to adjust volume. Or switching workspaces.
​
The code is kind of wip in the sense that I can image some features that could be implemented sometime.
https://redd.it/fxvb96
@r_linux
[https://git.sr.ht/\~maringuu/swiper](https://git.sr.ht/~maringuu/swiper)
Hello r/linux
I really like having gestures on my trackpad and wanted to do some programming so I decided to write my own programm.
The main feature that I did not find in other gesture handlers are "continous" gestures which means that one command gets execute multiple times during one single gestures. One example is swiping up and down to adjust volume. Or switching workspaces.
​
The code is kind of wip in the sense that I can image some features that could be implemented sometime.
https://redd.it/fxvb96
@r_linux
Setting up an email server in 2020 with OpenSMTPD and Dovecot
https://prefet.ch/blog/2020/email-server/
https://redd.it/fxt1ak
@r_linux
https://prefet.ch/blog/2020/email-server/
https://redd.it/fxt1ak
@r_linux
reddit
Setting up an email server in 2020 with OpenSMTPD and Dovecot
Posted in r/linux by u/speckz • 3 points and 1 comment
Making a living during Coronavirus lockdown (with a little help from bash and Ubuntu Studio)
https://www.circusscientist.com/2020/04/09/making-a-living-during-the-coronavirus-outbreak-part-2/
https://redd.it/fy0qjt
@r_linux
https://www.circusscientist.com/2020/04/09/making-a-living-during-the-coronavirus-outbreak-part-2/
https://redd.it/fy0qjt
@r_linux
Circus Scientist
Making a Living during the Coronavirus Outbreak, part 2 - Circus Scientist
A CLOWN’S QUEST TO SURVIVE LOCKDOWN In case you missed the last post, the Corvid-19 epidemic has reduced my income to zero. This is what I am doing to survive. The Problem: My wife and business partner came up with the idea, and did a whole load of FaceBook…
Distros on Distrowatch
I'm going to vent here a little bit...
So, I check the front page of Distrowatch on occasion and tonight I noticed a peculiar distro called EnTix. It was released on 4/2/20 and it's based on Ubuntu 20.04... Why would anyone build a distro around a beta version of anything? That just sounds like someone is looking for problems.
>The best thing with ExTiX 20.4 is that while running the system live (from DVD/USB) or from hard drive you can use Refracta snapshot (pre-installed) to create your own live installable Ubuntu 20.04 system.
So, you can create your own 20.04 beta system? OK...
I could see how this might be practical with a release but using it behind a beta version of anything doesn't sound like a great idea.
OK, I'm done venting.
https://redd.it/fyajs5
@r_linux
I'm going to vent here a little bit...
So, I check the front page of Distrowatch on occasion and tonight I noticed a peculiar distro called EnTix. It was released on 4/2/20 and it's based on Ubuntu 20.04... Why would anyone build a distro around a beta version of anything? That just sounds like someone is looking for problems.
>The best thing with ExTiX 20.4 is that while running the system live (from DVD/USB) or from hard drive you can use Refracta snapshot (pre-installed) to create your own live installable Ubuntu 20.04 system.
So, you can create your own 20.04 beta system? OK...
I could see how this might be practical with a release but using it behind a beta version of anything doesn't sound like a great idea.
OK, I'm done venting.
https://redd.it/fyajs5
@r_linux
reddit
Distros on Distrowatch
I'm going to vent here a little bit... So, I check the front page of Distrowatch on occasion and tonight I noticed a peculiar distro called...
LibreOffice QA/Dev Report: March 2020
https://qa.blog.documentfoundation.org/2020/04/09/qa-dev-report-march-2020/
https://redd.it/fyazu6
@r_linux
https://qa.blog.documentfoundation.org/2020/04/09/qa-dev-report-march-2020/
https://redd.it/fyazu6
@r_linux
LibreOffice QA Blog
QA/Dev Report: March 2020 - LibreOffice QA Blog
General Activities LibreOffice 6.4.2 was announced on March, 19 Luca Carlon and Jan-Marek Glogowski introduced basic HiDPI scale for Qt5 in LibreOffice (tdf#127687) Mark Hung improved Impress/Draw table perfomance (tdf#120216) Seth Chaiklin, Sophia Schröder…
How fast is too fast
I work for a company that created a monster of a hybrid computer (if that’s a thing). The purpose of the damn thing is for a VPS company running on 2X100 Gb/s PCI Cards, 3XMicron X100 SSD, and a NVIDIA® Tesla V100 and some custom configuration for the motherboard, Debian and a AMD EPYC 7601. When we put it into a data center we were amazed at how fast is was. However now we’re puzzled with “who would want this.” The question I’m asking is do people really want fast servers running Linux at the backend?
https://redd.it/fybyiy
@r_linux
I work for a company that created a monster of a hybrid computer (if that’s a thing). The purpose of the damn thing is for a VPS company running on 2X100 Gb/s PCI Cards, 3XMicron X100 SSD, and a NVIDIA® Tesla V100 and some custom configuration for the motherboard, Debian and a AMD EPYC 7601. When we put it into a data center we were amazed at how fast is was. However now we’re puzzled with “who would want this.” The question I’m asking is do people really want fast servers running Linux at the backend?
https://redd.it/fybyiy
@r_linux
reddit
How fast is too fast
I work for a company that created a monster of a hybrid computer (if that’s a thing). The purpose of the damn thing is for a VPS company running...
Making linux fast by disabling Spectre Meltdown Mitigations in the Kernel?
Recently I came across a hacker news [discussion](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22830330) on disabling Spectre Meltdown mitigations in the kernel to make your machine faster. The whole premise is of course that a user/admin should be able to decide if they can tolerate the risk for performance benefits.
Someone also put the code snippet under a domain:
https://make-linux-fast-again.com/
What does the reddit community think about this?
https://redd.it/fydnjz
@r_linux
Recently I came across a hacker news [discussion](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22830330) on disabling Spectre Meltdown mitigations in the kernel to make your machine faster. The whole premise is of course that a user/admin should be able to decide if they can tolerate the risk for performance benefits.
Someone also put the code snippet under a domain:
https://make-linux-fast-again.com/
What does the reddit community think about this?
https://redd.it/fydnjz
@r_linux
reddit
Making linux fast by disabling Spectre Meltdown Mitigations in the...
Recently I came across a hacker news [discussion](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=22830330) on disabling Spectre Meltdown mitigations in the...
Git version control system hits 15 year milestone
https://www.itwire.com/the-linux-distillery/git-version-control-system-hits-15-year-milestone.html
https://redd.it/fyf1jr
@r_linux
https://www.itwire.com/the-linux-distillery/git-version-control-system-hits-15-year-milestone.html
https://redd.it/fyf1jr
@r_linux
Itwire
iTWire - Git version control system hits 15 year milestone
Happy birthday, Git. The open source distributed version control system was first released on April 7th 2005, and thus today marks its 15th anniversary - 15 years aiding software developers to collabo...