Hmm, I see. The perfectionist in me would want to shed that processor load though ^^
Hmm, I see. The perfectionist in me would want to shed that processor load though ^^
Without any judgement: why are your servers running X11? Just because you dislike SSH’ing to them?
If all of those servers are yours (which they likely are, since you get ssh access), you can use one key for all. Using different keys would make one compromised key less problematic. But if someone was able to copy one file of your system, they can copy multiple files.
That resolves keeping track of things as well 😄
You forgot the package hollywood.
I use the cookiebro extension for that. Allows whitelisting domains or single cookies and can clean up all others with a few clicks.
I would recommend key based authentication for SSH connections. For the normal connection, the key pair is enough, if you want admin (root) access, you would use the command sudo which in turn requires a password. For creating a default admin account: Linux does this for you, it’s called root. You should create a personal user to work with in daily business and add it to the sudoers group (permits using the sudo command)
I’m a sucker for jetbrains Mono when I need a monospaced font. It just looks nice to me.
If the package comes from the repo, you can uninstall it by the same name you used to install it. If it came from a .deb file (in case of debian), you can find out how the package calls itself and use that name to uninstall. Usually the package name is quite identical to the file name. And dpkg -L
shows you which files came from the package and where they were installed.
I’m fine with config files, as long as they are where you expect them (~/.config/tool or ~/.tool). What I dislike is yet another funny config syntax because the dev couldn’t settle on an established standard. Command line syntax is ok, if you give me sensible completions.
Not a recommendation per se, but you can use any backup software as long as you can edit your live iso. For example puting the restic binary into /opt
I guess that’s the life of an ad owner. Just like the dude handing out free samples in the mall. Most of the people don’t buy the sampled product and effectively waste the dude’s money (out his employer’s money).
I use an adblocker, so you’re safe from me clicking your links :P
I wonder if we could pull something similar off…
The only thing I fucked up was /etc/sudoers. Once it refused sudo to me, my colleague told me about visudo and having another terminal with root already open as backup. And handed me a bootable USB stick to fix my fuckup. Good times, lessons were learned.
PlantUML supports Gantt charts if I remember correctly. Can run locally (java if I’m not mistaken) or via web.