autistic fixation with IPV6
tyvm
seems to be working, even with some 404s returned
/var/lib/pacman/sync/multilib.db.part 100%[===================================================================================================================>] 137.53K --.-KB/s in 0.007s
2024-08-14 11:06:10 (19.4 MB/s) - ‘/var/lib/pacman/sync/multilib.db.part’ saved [140827/140827]
--2024-08-14 11:06:10-- https://mirror.osbeck.com/archlinux/multilib/os/x86_64/multilib.db.sig Loaded CA certificate '/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt' Resolving mirror.osbeck.com (mirror.osbeck.com)... 2606:4700:20::6819:5e05, 2606:4700:20::ac43:6136, 2606:4700:20::6819:5f05 Connecting to mirror.osbeck.com (mirror.osbeck.com)|2606:4700:20::6819:5e05|:443... connected. HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 404 not found 2024-08-14 11:06:10 ERROR 404: not found.
I realized it works in most programs, however it doesn't in xwayland
And it's precisely those xwayland programs (IntelliJ and Android Studio) that I would use this key most times
The real scenario lie between these extreme polar opposites of opinions
People new to a hobby (e.g switching to Linux) usually are more active and post more about their personal opinions and difficulties in the first months after getting into it. Then eventually the OS is just another thing working on their lifes, they move on to read and post about other things.
So what you read is usually the opinion of people who barely know what they are doing
If you want to switch, choose a way - any way is good enough - and follow through it. Choose any distro and desktop environment among the top discussed and you will be fine. Eventually you will understand that a "distro" is just a set of default configurations, and that the biggest differences are usually what package manager (the thing that installs/delete programs) and what Desktop Environment (the thing that display graphics and applications in a certain way) they use, and the same result may be achieved throughout most of them
Sure, someone helped me setting up a script to share the wl socket between namespaces so I can run GUI programs in isolated namespaces, and if you look at this post you can check the namespaced-openvpn; also check vole's answer if you want to run GUI programs
Thank you for summarizing it up
I've been using network namespaces in Linux where each one also use a different user; this way you can have multiple profiles of apps separated not only by permissions but also by the VPN connection that is the only route out
So you can have a connection that will supply your favorite iso sharer, a VPN connection to work, all unaware of each ot
I still haven't figured how to make GUI media applications work on them though
I didn't know memes could smell like they're old through the screen until I saw this one
Google logo before Corporate Memphis bullshit and the dude using a feet to hold his cup of tea just like the classical antiquity raptor, it's just perfect
It seems that a namespace only has access to process that originates inside itself
systemctl --user list-units
Failed to connect to bus: No medium found
as we can see, the same user doesn't have access to other processes so we would need to duplicate every process above the namespace until we could acess the media
would duplicate of everything - pulsewire, dbus, etc - even work ?
you install program A, it needs and installs libpotato then later you install program B that depends on libfries, and libfries depends on libpotato, however since you already have libpotato installed, only program B and libfries are installed The intelligence behind this is called a package manager
In windows when you install something, it usually installs itself as a standalone thing and complains/reaks when dependencies are not met - e.g having to install Visual C++ 2005-202x for games, JRE for java programs etc
instead of making you install everything that you need to run something complex, the package manager does this for you and keep tracks of where files are
and each package manager/distribution has an idea of where some files be stored
You can freely manipulate NTFS in Linux. Just make sure your distribution has, after kernel >=5.15, enabled it, otherwise you may need to install the ntfs-eg driver. Other than that, Ach Wiki has info that may help you on any distro:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/NTFS
I have done something similar to what you want to do, just needed the ntfs-3g driver installed and "Disks" (gnome disks) application would mount/read/write the disks as usual
Another section of the log when this happened: