this post was submitted on 26 Mar 2024
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    [–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

    Fast data transmission via TCP over a lossy link.

    [–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

    Installed fedora on btrfs and upgraded from 38 to 39 week after installation, everything broke so bad, even ssd which was used for it locked, not just filesystem, ssd was new btw

    [–] folkrav 1 points 11 months ago* (last edited 11 months ago)

    Some of the crap I had to do back in the late 00s to get wifi, sleep and power management even barely working on some machines felt like the hardest thing at the time. I wonder how I’d fare with those issues today, 17 years later, knowing quite a bit more about the underlying OS and working with the OS daily… I don’t know that I’d qualify that as difficult more than it was extremely tedious and a bunch of trial and error of configuration options I didn’t know anything about.

    If we’re talking about modern day… not so much honestly. btrfs snapshots saved my ass a couple of times, the rare issue I encounter I just rollback and wait for an upstream fix, and the rest I typically ignore or use something else. Everything tends to run quite smooth for me as a general rule, though.

    [–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (2 children)

    Rescuing home partition from ZFS, actually that doesn't really count since I did have to reinstall (was no longer booting), but recovering the Home partition from ZFS and to the other ext4 drive was much harder than it should've been and that's why I would never recommend people use ZFS.

    [–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

    oh god zfs.

    tell me, please, who thought it was a good idea for a filesystem to remember the last machine it was mounted from and refuse to let itself be mounted by a different operating system instance even if all the hardware is present?

    [–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago

    agree. zfs is a hairy beast with nice features

    [–] [email protected] 1 points 11 months ago (1 children)

    I managed a CentOS system where someone accidentally deleted everything from /usr, so no lib64, and no bin. I didn't have a way to get proper files at the time, so I hooked the drive up to my Arch system, made sure glibc matched, and copied yum and other tools from Arch.

    Booted the system, reinstalled a whole lot of yum packages, and... the thing still worked.

    That's almost equivalent to a reinstall, though. As a broke college student, I had a laptop with a loose drive, that would fall out very easily. I set it up to load a few crucial things into a ramdisk at boot, so that I could browse the web and take notes even if the drive was disconnected, and it would still load images and things. I could pull the cover off and push the drive back in place to save files, but doing that every time I had class got really tiring, so I wanted it to run a little like a live system.

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