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Follow up: DE Free Arch on Surface Go
https://redd.it/1lrm9xa
@r_linux
Remember when the only way to have a GUI was to compile your own kernel modules and edit the xorg config by hand?

I'm feeling old this week, some younger folk asking about GPU support in linux is causing me to remember the "good old days" from the before times, back when slackware was bleeding edge and it was perfectly normal to compile your own kernel.

Who else is feeling the years this week?

https://redd.it/1lrne7k
@r_linux
AerynOS: Initial KDE Plasma session
https://redd.it/1lrmu0m
@r_linux
A wrapper over runit to enable disable and start services easily

runit is a really small but at the same time functional and lightning fast init. for reference on a usb drive 3.0 with void linux installed on it gets me to the login screen under 7sec and if from ssd under 5sec. it is very simple to enable services like ln -s /etc/sv/Foo /var/services or on artix linux ln -s /etc/sv/Foo /run/runit/services.

but everyone doesn't wants to run this long command ppl like me coming from openrc and dinit find it a bit confusing although it is very simple but muscle memory says to do something like runitctl enable or runitctl disable. second thing is that there is no difference between starting a service and enabling a service. if you symlink a service to start it it will also be enabled at boot. although for normal ppl that is not a big deal but for ppl like me this can be.

to address these very niche but existing problems I created a noscript in sh(POSIX) tested on Void Linux and artix linux runit to enable disable and start a service. and if a service is started it is not enabled meaning it will not start on the next boot.

this is a simple example
rntctl start <service>     # Run service once (no boot enable)
rntctl enable <service> # Enable service (symlink to /var/service)
rntctl disable <service> # Disable service (remove symlink)
rntctl status <service> # Show if enabled + running status


do reply if you liked this project and tell me your reviews on here as I am not very experienced in tracking issues at git. although the noscript is too small to even contain issues.

more explanation on github and if you like it please give it a star 🌟

the project link

https://redd.it/1lrxwch
@r_linux
"Known exploited" vulnerability in Chrome and Chromium. Be sure to update, when you can.
https://redd.it/1ls4bfr
@r_linux
Turned my old Asus laptop into a Linux server for Docker instead of overloading my MacBook Air

My MacBook only has 8 GB of RAM, and while it’s still great and fast for everyday tasks, it can struggle a bit when I have multiple Docker containers running. So I decided to breathe new life into my old Asus laptop that was just gathering dust and was actually super slow.

I installed Linux (went with Ubuntu Server) and set it up as a home server. It’s headless now, tucked away in a corner, and I SSH into it from my Mac. 

No more maxing out my MacBook’s RAM for my projects. Plus, I’m learning more about Linux, which is a bonus.

Anyone else doing something similar with old hardware?

https://redd.it/1lsbyud
@r_linux
How many Linux machines are in your menagerie?

I realized that I have an absurdly-large number of Linux machines in my personal fleet... how many do you have? Here's my list:

1. Daily driver: A Linux workstation
2. Laptop: A Lenovo machine running Linux
3. Living room computer
4. Raspberry Pi 4: Mail server, asterisk server, etc.
5. Pi zero #1: KVM access to #4 via serial console
6. Pi zero #2: Bedroom clock (with LED matrix display)
7. Pi 3: Living room weather display
8. Pi 4 #2: Security camera
9. ASUS Tinkerboard: Monitors my basement UPS
10. Pi 4 #3 at my sister's place: Off-site backup
11. Pi zero #3 at my sister's place: KVM access to #10 via serial console
12. Linux KVM instance: Runs my personal web site and is my MX host
13. Linux KVM instance #2: Backup for #12

https://redd.it/1lsc5rf
@r_linux
Linux Gifts?

Hey folks,

I’m putting together a Linux Beginner Survival Box as a birthday gift for a good friend of mine. She’s relatively new to Linux and will soon be working more independently with it at her job – likely managing some basic sysadmin tasks, working on the CLI, etc.

So I figured: let’s make a fun, slightly silly but also useful gift box to prepare her for the ups and downs of life at the terminal. Here’s what I’ve got so far:



A CLI Cheat Sheet poster

A VIM Cheat Sheet mousepad

The O'Reilly book “Linux in a Nutshell”

A bootable USB stick (Ventoy + various Live ISOs)

An Ubuntu mug + cold brew tea (she's not into coffee)

A plush Tux

A T-shirt that says “Sysadmin – because even developers need heroes”

A pack of candy penguins

And lots of penguin stickers

Now I’d love to hear from you all:
Any ideas for small, funny, practical or nerdy items to add?
Things that helped you early on?
Or just anything that would make a new Linux user smile during a rough day at the terminal?

Thanks in advance!

~#>


https://redd.it/1lsbfha
@r_linux
Is windows actually better at never breaking user space?

I remember linus saying there's really only one rule in the kernel, which is "don't break user space", everything else being a "guideline", even "not doing dumb shit". It does frequently happen, however, at least to me, that linux has a bunch of software that gets regularly broke and stops working, e.g. when a braile driver on ubuntu cause arduino ide to malfunction in my machine.

It seems that linux is very temperamental with compatibility issues in general, while Windows is always just "plug in and it works". Does that mean microsoft is better at not breaking user space than linux kernel devs? Or was linus talking about something even more specific about the kernel? And if so, how are the kernel devs better than Microsoft at that?

https://redd.it/1lsf1bn
@r_linux
A gui for linux-wallpaperengine
https://redd.it/1lskj1x
@r_linux
I don’t think these will be necessary.
https://redd.it/1lsmrnu
@r_linux
Linus Torvalds' Master's thesis, "Linux: A Portable Operating System"
https://www.cs.helsinki.fi/u/kutvonen/index_files/linus.pdf

https://redd.it/1lsullz
@r_linux