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1 yr. ago

  • Already selfhosting it. Thank you so much for your time and effort <3

  • and the 2023 rug pull incident

  • godot

  • This doesn't really prove it.

    Running ths game multiple times will do the same, because the pages will stay cached. Operating systems are smart with RAM. Things that were recently used stay in RAM, even though the OS reports it being "free". Read this for some more info: https://www.linuxatemyram.com/

    And preload might swallow the filepath arg without doing anything with it.

    Instead you could share the output of

     
        
    preload --help
    preload --version
    sudo preload --verbose
    # followed by running a game
    
      

    What you describe can actually be done with another tool https://hoytech.com/vmtouch but not with preload.

  • Are we talking about this preload?

    https://manpages.ubuntu.com/manpages/jammy/man8/preload.8.html

    Cause if so, it doesn't actually let you manually add specific files to RAM. It's an adaptive daemon that automatically learns which files your applications use frequently over time and prefetches them. So when you launch it and then play games, it's observing patterns and making predictions.

    This also explains why there's no "remove files" command. The files preload loads into RAM aren't locked there; they're in the page cache, which the kernel manages freely. If something else needs that memory, the kernel will evict those cached files automatically. Killing preload via htop should not really do anything, except it not doing it's thing anymore.

  • you honestly probably could get my number that way. It's public on the internet together with more words from me (for work).

    I think it's time to delete my lemmy...

  • time to stop writing on social media

  • There is also nanoKVM which is open source and quite a bit cheaper.

  • There is also nanoKVM which is open source and quite a bit cheaper. Should do the job just as well.

  • Arch was definitely tricky to get right for me at yhe beginning.

    You often have a choise between multiple similar tools for each job and you only know the pros and cons or what works and what doesn't after trying.

    I did 3-4 fresh installs before getting it right for my needs and hardware. (for example, btrfs with buttermanager requires a completely different fs layout than btrfs with snapper, I picked buttermanager first, didn't like it after 2 weeks and had to do a fresh install)

    For that it's handy to have a good backup of your important data, ideally outside of your pc, just so there is no risk of fucking it up somehow.

    I definitely recommend using btrfs and using it's snapsotting feature through snapper or timeshift or something else, again, multiple tools for the same job, different pros and cons.

    That way you can roll back after fucking something up. But make sure to try it out a couple of times before the case comes where you have to rely on it, so you're sure that it does work and you know how to properly do it.

    I prefer arch cause I was able to customize it more and I love the up to date packages and the AUR. But there is some additional maintenance you have to do like once or twice a year and you have to pay attention to news for manual interventions when there is a breaking update. So it is way more involved than other distros. Yet it has been rock solid for me and should be very reliable once you know your way around.

    But tbh. as long as you are completely happy with mint, there is no reason to change anything.

  • keepassDx from fdroid

    been using it for years. You have to change a setting for it to auto suggest logins but then it mostly just works

    sync the file with syncthing

  • I fucked up my systems quite a lot back in the day and had to reinstall everything from scratch, because I was inexperienced. Lost quite a lot of personal data as well, cause I had no backups ofc.

    If I were you, I'd try to fix windows rn. (for that you'll probably get better help on the windows reddit)

    And then attempt a linux dual boot again but this time preparing a bit better, reading more, using the newest versions, having a backup plan if everything fails again.

    If you can do a videocall on your phone through discord or wire I can hop in a session and help you in about 20h from now. Videocall so I can see whats on your screen and tell you what to do.

  • I once waited a whole year for debian to ship the next version to get an update for an app that had a bug, that was already fixed upstream.

    Every day I would open the app and experience the bug.

    Anger, frustration, shaking the mouse.

    Every.

    Fucking.

    Day.

  • idk bro I've been running the same arch install for the last 6 years and I will run it for the next 5 as well.

  • do you not have the Pop live usb that you used for installation? Did the resolution work during the install process?

  • 22.04 is super old (22 means year 2022 and 04 means april)

    Thats maybe why your resolution isn't working.

    At least do 24.04 or wait for 26.04 to come out in 1-2 months. A lot has happend in the past years on linux, especially with nvidia.