btrfs sub snap -r
btrfs sub snap -r
There’s even .deb, .rpm, flakes, whatever pacman uses, … that are just package files that copy to /bin/ for you, like .apk/.ipas.
Died running indoors with limited space.
Probably a reference to Reddit’s “fourth comment” thing.
My main branch is called HEAD
.
Unless you’re on Voyager, in which case the image is already displayed before you click!
FROM scratch AS internet
# TODO
Yes, with --privileged
. It’s totally safe. Trust me.
This dryer?
symlinks (or whatever windows calls them)
Windows actually has two types of symlinks:
mklink
.moving a symlink can sometimes move all the data too.
Probably, someone managed to create a real symlink in their OneDrive folder, and since OneDrive probably doesn’t check for symlinks it blindly copied all the files to the cloud.
Take all this with a grain of salt — I’m not a Microsoft developer, and it’s been a while since I last used Windows.
IIRC, this is wrong, -p
launches a profile by path, and -P
launches the GUI for selecting/creating a profile.-P
specifies a profile path. I forgot how to open the manager.
How does that even work?
It’s joking about A, which in ASCII stands for America, being the only letter capitalized.
By the way, you can use g~
to get the effects of tildeop without needing to set it.
Thanks for the reminder that I can tag users!
It probably opened it in ${VISUAL:-${EDITOR:-vim}}
; usually setting one of those variables in e.g. bashrc will avoid future vim.
I’m worried about relying on remote servers for random numbers, especially for cryptographic purposes. There’s no way to verify that you aren’t the only person with access to those numbers, and it’s fairly difficult even as the sysadmin to ensure that they’re logged nowhere.
It’s equivalent to
cp -r
, but:btrfs sub send
)