My crippled kernel count is around 6, how about yours?

  • TorJansen@sh.itjust.works
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    13 minutes ago

    I learned by a lot of distro hopping, tweaking and tuning and compiling kernels (way back when tho), to not being afraid of “breaking things.” Since Nov. 1992. It helps when you use a spare PC or laptop though, no panic about loss

  • needanke@feddit.org
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    51 minutes ago

    I think we are using linux very differently. Mine is two and one of those was a dead ssd.

  • mybuttnolie@sopuli.xyz
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    1 hour ago

    Two. The first time I had nvidia related issues with nobara, so I removed nvidia drivers for reinstallation… And couldn’t figure out how to get them back. The second time I had used mint for long enough that I felt confident enough to nuke windows partition. I used gparted and nuked the whole disk instead.

    Not counting the times I tried fedora and it killed itself with the first updates and then with multimedia codecs.

  • MoonMelon@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    It’s the same as learning anything, really. A big part of learning to draw is making thousands of bad drawings. A big part of learning DIY skills is not being afraid to cut a hole in the wall. Plan to screw up. Take your time, be patient with yourself, and read ahead so none of the potential screw-ups hurt you. Don’t be afraid to look foolish, reality is absurd, it’s fine.

    We give children largess to fail because they have everything to learn. Then, as adults, we don’t give ourselves permission to fail. But why should we be any better than children at new things? Many adults have forgotten how fraught the process of learning new skills is and when they fail they get scared and frustrated and quit. That’s just how learning feels. Kids cry a lot. Puttering around on a spare computer is an extremely safe way to become reacquainted with that feeling and that will serve you well even if you decide you don’t like Linux and never touch it again. Worst case you fucked up an old laptop that was collecting dust. That is way better than cutting a hole in the wall and hitting a pipe.

    • easily3667@lemmus.org
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      2 hours ago

      See that would be a good analogy if the fail was fun.

      Making a shit painting is still fun.

      Having to reinstall my OS because I ran pacman -Syu and now my computer won’t boot, and now I have to spend hours making things work again: not at all fun.

      Having my server run out of memory and freeze up instead of having a sane out of memory behavior the day before a long trip: not fun

      It’s also archaic, niche information. Do I want to learn how to make a kernel version that didn’t get installed right show up in grub? Fuck no. Do I want to google for the 100th time what command exists to register the encryption key for my hard drive in the TPM? Fuck no. What an absolute waste of life.

      Linux isn’t “I cut a hole in my wall” it’s “my electrician only documented the wiring in hieroglyphs and now I have to reverse engineer everything to turn on a light bulb”.

  • easily3667@lemmus.org
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    2 hours ago

    Unbootable systems in the dozens. I think I’ve only fucked up the kernel itself a few times. But grub or other bootloader tons, desktop environment tons, and getting into states so broken the only readily available option was reinstall, dozens. Thankfully most of these were right after a fresh install. For example dual booting just doesn’t work right for some OS installers and grub fails. Manjaro bricked itself after an update. Etc. etc.

  • nfreak@lemmy.ml
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    3 hours ago

    I haven’t majorly fucked up any recent systems (almost botched the steam deck once or twice but nothing that required a reinstall), but god 10 years ago I probably reset my arch dual boot like five times lmao

  • Asparagus0098@sh.itjust.works
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    3 hours ago

    I haven’t had any issues with the kernel yet. The worst thing that I can remember doing is messing up the systemd boot entry on my Arch Linux install.

  • bert_brause@lemmy.world
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    5 hours ago

    Recently I accidently deleted the contents of /boot/ on my first arch install. The lesson that followed was something I would have rather saved for later ^^

  • daniskarma@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    5 hours ago

    I remember managing to install two DE one above the other, and having them, somehow working at the exact same time. That was trippy.

    I didn’t even know how I did it. I’m pretty sure that I couldn’t replicate that on purpose.

  • gonzo-rand19@moist.catsweat.com
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    4 hours ago

    I’m on my second install now. I fucked up the first one pretty handily by accidentally wiping the boot partition in gparted. (Like a complete idiot, because the partitions are labeled.)

  • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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    3 hours ago

    OpenSUSE Tumbleweed helps because you can create a btrfs snapshot at any moment and then roll back to it if you get in trouble. And it does this automatically whenever you update the packages.

    • overload@sopuli.xyz
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      5 hours ago

      OpenSUSE Tumbleweed Gang. The only distro I haven’t been able to break after 6 months (well, I have, but I’ve been able to snapper rollback every time)

      • floofloof@lemmy.ca
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        2 hours ago

        It’s the first rolling distro I have tried, and I’ve been running it for about 3 years now without any real problems. I think maybe twice there have been updates that cause issues, out of hundreds of updates per week. It’s surprisingly solid, and everything’s up to date.

        Not everyone would want hundreds of updates per week of course, but it’s up to the user to decide how often to install updates. Unlike Windows, the updates don’t intrude, and they are fast.

        • overload@sopuli.xyz
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          1 hour ago

          It seems to hit that right balance of bleeding edge while SUSE are still testing the packages for a bit to ensure there aren’t bad updates. Fedora sounds interesting to me as well, but I’m not going to fix what isn’t broken.

    • HexagonSun@sh.itjust.works
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      4 hours ago

      I wanted to give OpenSuse Tumbleweed a go yesterday, but the live USB got stuck at “Loading basic drivers” so I couldn’t even get to being able to install it.

    • Isaac@waterloolemmy.ca
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      6 hours ago

      Been looking for a DR system for Ubuntu or mint, need to look into it myself but would like some feedback if this could be the right ticket.

      I just bought a raspberry pi 4 to host plex, I’m sure I could get it to do backup and restore too. Looking into it

  • Magiilaro@feddit.org
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    10 hours ago

    Making errors and analysing them to figure out what went wrong and why is a huge part of learning. You can only learn so much from theory, some things can be learned best by trial and error and the experience gained from it.

    When I started with Linux I did choose to use Gentoo Linux because it was the most complex and complicated option, so I had the most opportunities to learn something by ducking up!

  • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    14 hours ago

    The “starting over” part is what made it take so long for linux to “stick” with me.

    Once it became “restore from an earlier image”, it was a game changer!

    • IngeniousRocks (They/She) @lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      13 hours ago

      My game changer was circa 2014 when I broke something and got dropped to a basic shell and for the first time instead of panicking and immediately reinstalling I thought for a moment about what I had just done to break it, and undid the change manually. Wouldn’t you know it booted right up like normal.

      The lesson here: if it broke, you probably broke it, and if you know how you broke it, you know how to fix it.

      • deadbeef79000@lemmy.nz
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        10 hours ago

        100%

        The alternative being variations on:

        Hi my name is [redacted], I have [X] years experience.

        Please run sfc /scannow.

        You can find more help at [Irrelevant KB URL].

        Please rank me 5 stars.

        Ticket closed

    • ComradeSharkfucker@lemmy.ml
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      13 hours ago

      I could be weird for this but the starting over part actually contributed to me continuing to use linux tbh. Trying out a new distro, figuring out how to use it, and building a new user interface each time I killed my system kept me engaged with linux beyond its utility. It functioned essentially as a way to learn about computers and as a creative outlet. I don’t fuck around and find out as much as I used to but I still swap distro every year or so.

      • Ada@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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        13 hours ago

        It was similar for me, but not quite the same. The thing I hated was starting from scratch. I’m very much not a distro hopper. Back in the day, I enjoyed the challenge of trying to troubleshoot issues and get the system working again, and that kept me interested, but eventually, I’d hit a problem I couldn’t resolve, and I’d have to start again from scratch, and at that point, I’d just go back to Windows.

        Now, I still get to do the same thing. If I break it, I get to learn how I broke it and try and fix it, and I find that process compelling. But because I’m using btrfs restore points now, I don’t get to the point where I have to start again from scratch. So I can work at solving it to the limit of my abilities, with confidence that if I can’t work it out, it’s not a huge issue.

        • over_clox@lemmy.world
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          14 hours ago

          Timeshift itself borked my shit up. I had to reinstall all registered packages to fix its fuckups…

          sudo aptitude reinstall '~i'

          Edit: Sure it took a long while, about as long as a full OS reinstall, but never once was there any issue with the kernel.

          • bobs_monkey@lemm.ee
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            14 hours ago

            While only once, timeshift destroyed my bootloader. Don’t update and reboot before a meeting, kids

            • over_clox@lemmy.world
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              13 hours ago

              My test of Timeshift was pretty simple and straightforward.

              1. Fresh install Linux Mint

              2. Install most of the main software I wanted.

              3. Do a Timeshift backup.

              4. Install some extra software I didn’t necessarily need, but might want to use someday.

              5. Restore the backup from step 3.

              Results: Everything from step 4 was still registered as installed, but almost nothing from step 4 actually worked.

              So I brute force reinstalled everything in place, and haven’t used Timeshift since. I’m perfectly comfortable using the terminal, and at worst a live boot media, to fix any issues that might come up.

              • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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                8 hours ago

                Timeshift is a good piece of software doing a tired trick.

                The new hotness is copy on write file systems and snapshots. I can snapshot, instantly, then do a system update and revert to the previous snapshot also instantly.

                Instead of using symlinks files, like Timeshift, the filesystem is keeping track of things at the block level.

                If you update a block it writes a new copy of the block (copy on write). The old copy is still there and will be overwritten unless it is part of a snapshot. Since the block is already written, snapshots don’t require any data to be copied so they’re instant.

                Once you finish the system update, all of the overwritten blocks are still there (part of the snapshot) and reverting is also just a filesystem operation, theres no mass data to be copied and so it is also instant.

                It does use disk space, as allocated blocks AND snapshotted blocks are stored. It uses less than Timeshift though, since Timeshift copies the entire file when it changes

                ZFS and btrfs are the ones to use.

                • ABetterTomorrow@lemm.ee
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                  4 hours ago

                  Didn’t quite follow what you were saying completely. Are you suggesting a new program over time shift or change the file system type like ZFS and Btrfs? I’m using Ubuntu and not sure if I seen those before.

          • Kairos@lemmy.today
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            13 hours ago

            I also can’t get over the fact that it doesn’t understand RAID or filesystems somehow.

  • TimeSquirrel@kbin.melroy.org
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    14 hours ago

    Another big part is learning how to set it up in a way that it’s functional and productive the first time and then STOP FUCKING WITH IT.

      • deadbeef79000@lemmy.nz
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        10 hours ago

        Not quite. But sorta, yeah.

        Learning to “not fuck with it” or ways to do so and rollback are valid lessons themselves.

        Being able to segregate “production” and “development” environments is very valuable.

        • FauxLiving@lemmy.world
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          8 hours ago

          Being able to segregate “production” and “development” environments is very valuable.

          This is a best practice that pretty much everyone, eventually, discovers on their own.