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Jeans in the dryer? They’ll definitely shrink that way.
Jeans in the dryer? They’ll definitely shrink that way.
Word. First thing that gets installed by me on any windows install.
They meant the command dtrx, the combination of dtrx as parameters to tar make no sense. Extract AND append?
Then comes a .tar.bz2 file along and you’re screwed. xtract je vucking file?
Pro tip: -z, -j are not needed by tar anymore since many years, tar will autodetect what compression was used if your distro is anything remotely modern.
Is there a 6502 backend?
Under Santa’s hat
That’s why we use Linux, free software and no cracks
Did something similar recently. Turns out rsync by default, if it encounters a symlink to a directory and it’s instructed to copy a directory with the same name, will remove the symlink and create an empty directory.
So I had a script that installs crosscompiled kernel modules via rsync /path/to/nfs/path /
This worked perfectly until Debian 12, like other distros, decided to merge /usr, so now /bin is a symlink to /usr/bin. First time I run the script after upgrade /bin gets replaced and then no programs can be started as all binaries look for /bin/ld-linux.
I managed to fix it by booting into busybox and recreating the symlink, but it took a while until I figured out what was wrong, wasn’t familiar with usrmerge.
I don’t really tweak much. I use the Debian default of 50 percent RAM used. For the NAS’s I tell it to use lz4 as they’re pretty weak cpu-wise.
I’m running ZRAM on my old Netgear ReadyNAS’s, which has 512MB or 256MB RAM. It enables them to do a lot more than they otherwise would be able to, running a modern linux distribution.
I’ve been so satisfied with it that I even started running it on my modern desktop with 32GB RAM, it helps with my tab addiction :)
You have nethack messages activated?
rsnapshot
European here, I suggest Bosch or Electrolux, if that’s available in your part of the world.