OpenAFS
Never heard of it. I'll look into it
OpenAFS
Never heard of it. I'll look into it
It bugs me that people will bitch about privacy all day but won't do anything about it. Most people just go
Okay after looking around a little bit it seems LDAP and NFS is the way people usually do it but that's online only. This guy recommends against it. Then This thread mentions LDAP with NFS again but I'm not sure if NFS will work. We have laptops and might not be connected to the internet. I might say f it and go way, way, way overkill cause why not. Worse thing that can happen is I learn something. I hope it does work
So basically have a lot of storage ready?
It's still a proposal if you have more to say about opt-in/opt-out specifically they made a new thread to discuss it here
On Endless OS, applications use a D-Bus API (via a small C library, eos-metrics) to record metrics events locally on the device. This API is implemented by a system-wide service, named eos-metrics-event-recorder or eos-event-recorder-daemon (no, I don’t know why it has two different names either), which buffers those events in memory, and periodically submits them anonymously to a server, Azafea, which ingests them into a PostgreSQL database (after a short layover in a Redis queue). If the computer is offline – often the case for Endless OS systems! – events are persisted to a size-limited ring buffer on disk, and submitted when the computer is online.
From https://blogs.gnome.org/wjjt/2023/07/05/endless-oss-privacy-preserving-metrics-system/
Fedora says they intend to deploy endlessOS's metric system
I used to only use KDE or KDE plasma with i3 but after using fedora I've fallen hard for Gnome and the design philosophy of the project.
Right now just ext4 because I'm just hosting a minecraft server and a website that's not even up right now. I'm thinking about btrfs when I build my next system. Transparent file compression and sub-volumes looks appetizing
After scrolling though a lil bit it looks like it's just a bot. It is called /r/trees and lemmy uses /c/. I think [email protected] is what you're looking for
I usually just have a swap of like 4 or 8 gigs on disk and use ZRAM as well. I set the priority so it uses ZRAM first and if that fills up then it'll use the swap partition. I don't think it has ever used the swap partition tho
yeah it's a shame that most people can't read and learn new things
Alright, if no one else is gonna ask.
Sauce?