To me that does sound like your initramfs just needed recreating, since un/installing a module will do that usually.
To me that does sound like your initramfs just needed recreating, since un/installing a module will do that usually.
how do i do that?
Probably by editing your GRUB config or whatever bootloader you’re using.
Here is the EDID
Thanks, that should be enough I’ll have a look when I’m free. Also something like get-edid > monitor.bin
would probably be easier for me though.
Edit: I’ve had a look, I can’t see any issues. Both checksums validate correctly and it advertises audio support. As you’ve probably seen in edid-decode, I’d expect it to show as ‘SONY TV’ (or at least for KDE ‘Sony SONY TV’ I believe).
I wrote a guide here: stevetech.me/posts/force-enable-vrr-edid
But it was mostly just changing random things and hoping for the best, so YMMV. I hope it helps!
None of my monitors (which are all DisplayPort) have audio, but one appears in the audio settings, so I’d say DisplayPort itself does support audio.
Is edid/sony.bin
your new EDID? Does it revert back if you remove drm.edid_firmware
all together?
Also, do you mind sharing your EDID? I had to edit mine to get VRR to work, so maybe there’s something invalid in yours. It does contain serial numbers though if that’s a problem.
Is it possible to send the hint from OPNsense itself?
Yes, to me it sounds like you’re already getting a big enough prefix from your ISP (all devices getting a /64), but you’ll have to request a bigger prefix from OPNsense. I believe it should give you the options to do this when you set the IPv6 mode to DHCPv6 on OPNsense, but I can’t say if your ISP router will handle it.
I believe the main contributor for drm_panic wants to add one eventually. Here’s what it might look like:
https://gitlab.com/kdj0c/panic_report/-/issues/1
Also it looks like the colours are configurable at compile time (with white on black default).
For electron, if ELECTRON_OZONE_PLATFORM_HINT
and electron-flags.conf
don’t work, you can also add --ozone-platform-hint=wayland
to the end of Exec
in each .desktop file (also works on Chromium, but not CEF AFAIK and sometimes CEF).
There’s also --ozone-platform-hint=auto
if you find yourself switching between X11 and Wayland.
I have also added all Cloudflare IPs in Jellyfin’s known proxies
You should only need to add the IP of the last proxy before reaching Jellyfin, which would be Caddy.
ADCs, DACs, IO extenders
These should all work without kernel drivers. For example, here’s a user space python library for ADS1*15 ADCs, or Nuvoton MS51 IO Expanders. Unless you need very specific timing or require the kernel to know about it, you shouldn’t need a kernel driver.
Idk, with I2C if it’s not something that needs a kernel level driver, there usually isn’t a problem with interacting with it from user space, for example basically all RAM RGB controllers are I2C and OpenRGB has no problem with them. I’m pretty sure I’ve only ever used an I2C device tree overlay for an RTC.
Also I2C/SMBus is present everywhere on x86, like some graphics cards expose it through their HDMI ports, even some server motherboards have a header for it; but for GPIO I’m unaware of any motherboards that expose it, so good luck researching the chipset and tracing out the pins.
but I can’t figure out which of the “0000:00:whatever’s” correlate to my Bluetooth card
lspci
will list your PCI devices and their ID, but if it’s a combo WiFi & Bluetooth card, they usually use PCIe for WiFi and USB for Bluetooth.
If you can’t get the VPS to work, alternatively there’s Cloudflare but last I checked streaming was a little out of their free terms. With it, you should just have to set your AAAA record and make the cloud orange, that way Cloudflare will proxy it, and IPv4 will work. There’s also Cloudflare tunnels which lets you host websites without port forwarding anything.
I think it mostly relies on Glaxnimate for graphics and stuff, which supports most SVG and Lottie animations.
So there’s not really a library, but things aren’t hard to find.
Online screen recorders already exist too, I also don’t think it really needs any server side logic either.
I don’t know anything that can do an in-place ext4 conversation, but there’s ntfs2btrfs which is already in the Debian repos if you’re okay with BTRFS.
Of course, backup anything important, ntfs2btrfs should create a backup snapshot if you need to revert back to NTFS, but I wouldn’t count on it.
Just curious, what parts aren’t open source? At a glance it seems like they’re working on supporting self hosting and I couldn’t find any binaries.
Google does too, although I only know of it being used for domains.google, which got killed.
This might be just me, but I prefer remembering what the keys actually do:
Also good to know:
If the HOA’s router supports UPnP/NAT-PMP/PCP then you might be able to use that to get some ports forwarded.