deleted by creator
Second vote for bazzite. It’s been so great. It’s my 8 year old son’s first non-console experience and he’s loving it.
I’ve had zero problems with it. The only thing I’ve had to do is select the proton launch option using an easy-to-find gui setting. Everything else has been normal steam GUI stuff.
It’s also my first experience with an immutable distro, which has been interesting for me to learn about. Knowing about those details is completely unnecessary to run bazzite though.
set -x
configures the running process, your shell. This is a posix standard flag. See https://pubs.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/9699919799/utilities/V3_chap02.html
there has to be a hook somewhere for every command that executes
Why do think this? I’m not aware of any shells that have such a feature. I’m not saying it couldn’t be done, but it would be a new feature.
I like the other suggestion of having a wrapper script that does what you need.
Thankfully that still has a distinct word: flow https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow_(psychology)
Yeah. How do you think they trained it?
I’m not aware of a way for it to notify if the internet is down. An expired certificate would not create that failure scenario though.
Also the notification would have gone out well before the certificate expired.
It has a built in alerting mechanism that integrates with demo communication services. Also
Uptime Kuma is integrated Apprise which supports up to 78+ notification services.
deleted by creator
uptime-kuma will monitor your https availability and automatically check your cert expiration.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
My experience running several ssh servers on uncommon nonstandard ports for over 10 years has been that it has eliminated all ssh brute forcing. I don’t even bother with fail2ban. I probably should though, just in case.
Also, PSA: if you use fail2ban, don’t try tab completing rsync commands without using controlmaster
or you will lock yourself out.
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Marcan and Lina are listed separately on the about page. https://asahilinux.org/about/
deleted by creator
deleted by creator