Idk if titles can be updated but consider
chmod 666
Yup, it can be edited. This is not Reddit. :)
Done. Thanks!
You… You wouldn’t actually do this, would you?
@Ging @nutbutter it’s freedom of init system choice!
You’re not wrong, but …jesus what is that homeserver? I’m gonna go clean the coffee off my monitor now
@Ging this was reference to one funny musks post about mastodon few years ago (post was deleted later)
Also, mascot is green elephant reference:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Green_ElephantAfter further review, I respect this greatly :D
Ooh do snap next
And then apt?
There was a mote of an idea floating about a few months back you’ve reminded me of. Basically distrohopping the hard way - start with one distro and install/remove packages until you’ve gotten to another one.
Theseus OS
Starting from lfs?
Oh that’s nasty. Yeah, do it!
No idea what you’re taking about, but I’ll always upvote this picture.
Installing Arch with extra steps
How does one actually use systemd? I tried making a script to trigger every time I boot up but it didn’t work out for me
Did you set the WantedBy field?
Did you
systemctl enable
the service?This should work. Add a file
/home/username/.config/systemd/user/my_cool_service.service
with this content:[Unit] Description=My cool service [Service] Type=oneshot ExecStart=/home/username/my_cool_script.sh [Install] WantedBy=default.target
Now add the script
/home/username/my_cool_script.sh
.#!/bin/bash echo "Hello from my cool script."
Enable and run the service.
$ chmod +x /home/username/my_cool_script.sh $ systemctl --user daemon-reload $ systemctl --user enable my_cool_service.service # Optional: $ systemctl --user start my_cool_service.service $ journalctl -e --user-unit=my_cool_service # You should see the echoed string from the script.
The service should now run every time the user
username
logs in.Oh, thanks! My distro has a package that has a bunch of visual configurations that reset on boot and I wanted to do my configs on top
go get em, tiger
chmod 640 for the win.