

- Delete history manictime install#
- Delete history manictime update#
- Delete history manictime full#
- Delete history manictime code#
With today's distros, it take almost as much time to simply do a fresh re-install of the distro as it does to fiddle with the likes of back up software/images/etc. I basically only back up my Documents, Pictures, and Music folders. Tracking? (by Friar Tux on 13:33:06 GMT from Canada).
Delete history manictime install#
Having a nice, clean, brand new install is kinda nice every once in a while. If/when something goes wrong, I try to fix it, if I can't, I start fresh.
Delete history manictime code#
I have a relatively small number of important files backed up in various ways (docs in cloud, code on github, etc), but other than that I live on the edge. I understand it's different if you need to audit changes, but I don't use whole system backups/snapshots or anything.
Delete history manictime full#
Such little cards/boxes but I run a full desktop suite -with a 500M M2 drive. I think the Armbian developers have up against it for a while trying to support a large number of SBCs, have made some hard decisions and been seeking more support from their user base. I use it to make my TV smarter :) running in a Nanopi M4 V2. Pleased to see Armbian is added to your database.

Perhaps WINE etc might allow the Windows based utilities to work? With the Microsoft agreement on their NTFS copyrights etc, Linux now can try their replacement to Btrfs. This means that it stays as as a geeks only experiment. Btrfs relies so much on CLI, rather than GUI.

The independent benchtests of this partition type show it is slow, compared to Ext4 and other partitions. Each additional feature adds more overheads, complexity & operating system weaknesses. My test runs show that it is currently incompatible with most types of Grub Customizer.ītrfs offers so many optional features. Use BTRFS? Is this the only way that Linux allows this? Btrfs seems so unstable, that it is very rare when any Linux creator dares to offer this as a default partition type. Tracking filesystem changes (by Greg Zeng on 03:03:32 GMT from Australia).OpenBSD doesn't have rkhunter and considers it a gimmick. I used to run aide and tripwire but once installed rarely ever looked at them again. Because it is a Debian box and I run them like one.
Delete history manictime update#
Lynis had helpful hints on Debian hardening I was not previously aware of and was most helpful during thre apt update process. I also run it and Luniz, made by same people, on my Kali Linux boxen, one of which I am using now. It runs as a cron job nightly and when I run it if any changes have been made to files will be able to tell if it's from some work I did or if it's something that needs looked into. I install rkhunter early in the FreeBSD build process after completion of building the Base System, issue the # rehash command so I don't have to reboot and run an initial scan to get a baseline on a clean System to compare any changes to.Īfter all 3rd party programs are installed I run it again and use the -propupd to set prerequisites clean after examining reported changes.
