Pipewire works well enough for sharing screen even though it isn’t well supported by shit software like Slack. Would this replace it?
Pipewire works well enough for sharing screen even though it isn’t well supported by shit software like Slack. Would this replace it?
Yup. Been using it for about 20 years now. It is more popular in Europe, but I wouldn’t call it a small player in US either.
This anecdote without any context certainly makes OpenSuse a low key player in OS game.
Desktop config has very little to do with OS since most are running kde or gnome and those handle all that.
OpenSUSE is very well known and had btrfs snapshots for a very long time. I’ve used this feature several times to undo updates and it is extremely easy and best of all works perfectly without user having to configure anything.
Those are very basic mice that will have no issues in Linux if you don’t care about their software.
I am surprised there isn’t an automatic mechanism to handle this especially if it is such a frequent issue.
btrfs dynamically allocates inodes.
Are you sure that’s the case with btrfs? I know ext has that feature. My understanding is btrfs just has a global reserve that can be used for any data in an low space situation.
# sudo btrfs fi usage /mnt/disk3
Overall:
Device size: 12.73TiB
Device allocated: 12.73TiB
Device unallocated: 1.00MiB
Device missing: 0.00B
Device slack: 0.00B
Used: 12.29TiB
Free (estimated): 449.43GiB (min: 449.43GiB)
Free (statfs, df): 449.43GiB
Data ratio: 1.00
Metadata ratio: 2.00
Global reserve: 512.00MiB (used: 0.00B)
Multiple profiles: no
Data,single: Size:12.70TiB, Used:12.26TiB (96.55%)
/dev/sdd1 12.70TiB
Metadata,DUP: Size:15.00GiB, Used:14.49GiB (96.58%)
/dev/sdd1 30.00GiB
System,DUP: Size:8.00MiB, Used:1.34MiB (16.80%)
/dev/sdd1 16.00MiB
Unallocated:
/dev/sdd1 1.00MiB
I realize that’s not exactly what you asked for but Pipewire had been incredibly stable for me. Difference between the absolute nightmare of using BT devices with alsa and super smooth experience in pipewire is night and day.
Zero issues for me. Been daily driving it for years. Play Steam games regularly, but have not tried switching to X. Performance on Windows is MUCH better with my 1080ti playing D4, but I’m prefectly content with preformance on Linux and don’t want to keep switching.
Small companies often allow devs access to prod DBs. It doesn’t change the fact that it’s a catastrophically stupid decision, but you often can’t do anything about it.
And of course, when they inevitably fuck up the blame will be on the IT team for not implementing necessary restrictions.
Frequent snapshots ftmfw.
Konsole is fantastic.
I would not be surprised. I’ve done it many times including complicated setups with different databases as replica slaves.
I’m now seeing a lot of new projects that don’t care much about DB backend since the library they use to wrap sql calls obscures all that stuff anyway, but I promise you mysql to Maria is a much more common and straightforward transition than to postgresql.
Huh? Postgresql is not mysql compatible. Mariadb is very popular in a ton of businesses around the world as a not stupidly expensive sql database with great support.
No, but I thought I clarified that when I said it’s basically wireguard VPN which operates using tcp/udp (layer 3.) layer 7 is stuff like https. CF tunnels are lower level.
Page you linked is missing the layer between CF and source server so it doesn’t indicate layer. You can lookup wireguard protocol if you want more details.
CF tunnels are layer 3, not 7 and they have support for web sockets. It’s basically wireguard VPN with a few extras built on top.
https://developers.cloudflare.com/cloudflare-one/faq/cloudflare-tunnels-faq/
Just curious what issues you ran into? Asking as a suse daily driver for about 20 years now, but promise not to proselytize.
My problem with appimage is that they never work. Every time I tried one, best case scenario it crashed with a random error message. All attempts to fix them were damn near impossible to debug.
It honestly felt like they were not universal enough and still relied on certain libraries being available on OS. Hopefully I’m wrong because that would completely defeat their purpose. I stopped wasting time on them after Plex and VLC both failed to run reliably and switched to flatpak that “just works” 100% of the time.
To be honest most of the time I look for an rpm anyway. Flatpaks are always a last resort. I’m on OpenSuse Tumbleweed.
I used to work in the same industry. We transferred several PBs from West US to Australia using Aspera via thick AWS pipes. Awesome software.