On 1/31/22 02:11, Tim via users wrote:
And at some stage people are going to stop making devices look for DHCP
and fallback on Avahi, they'll decide to simplify things and just
follow the latest fad. You'll end up with a gadget that only does
Avahi.
You have this quite confused. DHCP and mdns
On 2/6/22 14:48, Peter Boy wrote:
BTRFS subvolumes are not dedicated volumes as you may have used to in Fedora
31. That version used xfs filesystem, where every volume is a separate space,
not entangeled with any other volume.
Before btrfs, workstation used ext4 as the default. It was only s
> Am 06.02.2022 um 18:26 schrieb Paolo Galtieri :
>
> The system is x86_64 and I'm using brtfs. So that clears that up:
>
> findmnt --notruncate /
>
> TARGET SOURCE FSTYPE OPTIONS
> / /dev/nvme0n1p10[/root00]
> btrfs
> rw,relatime,seclabel,ssd,space_cache,subvo
> Hello,
>
> I saw some recent discussions (yet another time) how packaging Rust /
> Go / Node.js is horrible, we should simply bundle everything and such.
> Let's not discuss this here, though.
>
> I'm interested to hear if there are any users of the `starship'
> application here in Fedora that
The system is x86_64 and I'm using brtfs. So that clears that up:
findmnt --notruncate /
TARGET SOURCE FSTYPE OPTIONS
/ /dev/nvme0n1p10[/root00]
btrfs
rw,relatime,seclabel,ssd,space_cache,subvolid=276,subvol=/root00
findmnt --notruncate /home
TARGET SOURCE
Hi.
On Sun, 06 Feb 2022 11:42:22 -0500 "Garry T. Williams" wrote:
> You probably have / and /home on subvolumes of a btrfs file system.
+1
The clearer way to see that is probably to use:
findmnt --notruncate /
findmnt --notruncate /home
Example: see the subvol= option:
findmnt --notrunc
On Sunday, February 6, 2022 11:17:25 AM EST Paolo Galtieri wrote:
> so why are / and /home the same device? In the past / and /home where
> separate devices.
You probably have / and /home on subvolumes of a btrfs file system.
That is the current default configuration now.
--
Garry T. Williams
> Am 06.02.2022 um 17:17 schrieb Paolo Galtieri :
>
> Folks,
> today I ran into a strange problem. Both the root file system and the
> /home filesystem showed 100% usage:
>
> df -l
> Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
> ...
> /dev/nvme0n1p10 283625472 281920988
Folks,
today I ran into a strange problem. Both the root file system and
the /home filesystem showed 100% usage:
df -l
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
devtmpfs 4096 0 4096 0% /dev
tmpfs 32793004 0 32793004 0% /dev