I don’t think he knows about second gun, Pip
I’m using Gentoo with systemd and a customized kernel, and additionally I have the /usr
partition LUKS encrypted.
Because /usr
is absolutely essential for systemd to function, I configured dracut to make a specially crafted initrd which prompts for the password to decrypt and mount /usr
on startup before systemd init tries to run.
About a year or two ago, some update to dracut or some other dependency (assumption) caused the dracut generated initrd’s to kernel panic. After multiple days of troubleshooting, I discovered that just copying forward an older initrd in /boot
and naming it to match the new kernel, e.g. initramfs-6.6.38-gentoo.img
, allows the system to boot normally .
So, my Gentoo is booting a kernel 6.6.something
with a ramdisk generated in the 5.9
kernel era. I am dreading the day when this behavior breaks and I can no longer update my kernel 😳
The President we need, but not the President we deserve
This is the way (as in this is what I do). Every once in a while you’ll have to hard reset the laptop because Windows.
A thread on the site which shall not be named convinced me that a majority of the books are recently published and with above average to highly scored on reviews, so I bought it.
Why the Linux Firewalls book hails from 2007 is a strange outlier.
Not sure where you got the 25kb number from.
This tool is written in go and is a 7.8 MB compiled binary.
Force uninstalled glibc on my Gentoo, which basically broke every shell and binary on the system. Was able to repair in place because I
Ah, the ol’ switcharoo
50 minutes seems way too long - I run Gentoo on a 2nd gen i5 and my kernel compile is always under 20 minutes.
You are using make -j4
or make -j(number of CPU cores)
for parallel compile, right?
(migrant) Aliens vs prEdator 3: microscopic
In the future, you should look into using LVMs for your partitions. I ran into a similar problem recently where my /var needed to be increased - I was able to run a simple
lvextend -L+4G /dev/myvg/var --resizefs
to grow my /var by 4 gigabytes.Before I was using LVMs though I used a gparted live disk a lot