Seriously, this was pretty cool, thanks for sharing!
Seriously, this was pretty cool, thanks for sharing!
Well we certainly appreciate it, thank you for your service tonight
The headline and the contents seem to be very different. Am I having a flashback?
This post has the best comments, thank you all for sharing!
Neat! Thanks for sharing!
This is an underrated comment here
I’m reading this again and had another thought. On an average Debian server reboot-required is really only ever triggered by kernel upgrades and those happen more often than you want but also not very often. They are also usually worth installing for either security or performance improvements.
It’s usually ok to just set a convenient time for unattended-upgrades
to run, let it watch for reboot-required
and then reboot automatically. If your services can’t handle starting at boot or turning off gracefully then you will have other problems anyway.
On the other hand, if even a few minutes of downtime every couple of months at a scheduled time is too much, just disable AUTO-REBOOT in the config file and do it by hand whenever it works for you. It’s all good. Do what works best for you, that’s the best part of Linux.
needs-restart
is another great package that will check if package updates should restart any services to take effect and restart them if so. Goes nicely with unattended-upgrades
There’s a package that handles most people’s needs called unattended-upgrades
. Has some options and some logic to do things like this. Check it out and let me know if you have any questions. Been using it on hundreds of servers for 5+ years.
I like your style cowboy
Oh yeah, this is what I do.
This hit me just right today. Good reminder to be grateful for what we have.
I’ve been a big fan of Manjaro for exactly that reason. Something breaks occasionally and gives my skills a run for their money but a lot of the difficulty of running a rolling release gets nullified by the testing Manjaro does for you. It’s a great compromise, you get almost bleeding edge for much less work than an arch installation can take.
I love me some Debian for their stability and security, I run Debian or Debian based servers mostly. But I wanted something closer to the bleeding edge for my desktop so I could make use of newer features, run newer packages etc…
Also drive Manjaro and I tell people I use Arch, there are dozens of us
I think this is what the kids call “critical reading abilities”
Thanks for providing a strong counterpoint to the click bait narrative, here’s a prize 🏆
Looks useful, thanks for sharing!
I missed something here didn’t I? Anyone have a link?
Haven’t enjoyed the Hularama episodes much until this one. Felt like they managed to land closer to home this time. Maybe we’ll get some episodes we’ll be proud to call Futurama 🤞.
excited noises