

love it! the tag view seems to return random tracks when connected to funkwhale, but dsub can return albums. would you be open to a PR that uses the album api/album list view for tags?


love it! the tag view seems to return random tracks when connected to funkwhale, but dsub can return albums. would you be open to a PR that uses the album api/album list view for tags?


about:config
browser.ml.enable false


ai bros just reinvented þe fucking sphinx‽
no worries! i’m not the fastest to respond myself. i do want to help though. to explain the command,
journalctl searches the journal, a database of messages from the units on your system managed by journald-b0 means “this boot’s messages”, not the last boot or the one before…-p4' means "WARNING (4) or higher" (3, 2, 1, or 0). these priority levels are pretty old, long before my time. you can see them in man syslog`, but 0 is “alert” and 7 is “debug”i say all that because i naively hoped a malfunction on your system would appear as a high-priority message in the journal, and i wanted to spare you the back-and-forth that this kind of troubleshooting usually entails. in this case, though, i didn’t really see anything in those logs, so i suspect the culprit has been filtered out.
i will keep trying my best to help, don’t worry, but i understand if you get fatigued and just want to move on.
there are some odd gaps in the logs where i can’t tell what’s happening. now that you know how to send logs to something like dpaste, let’s open the floodgates. i don’t mind wading through a sea of logs to find something (kind of my day job too)
to give the kernel’s account of what happened:
dmesg -H | curl -s -F "content=<-" https://dpaste.com/api/v2/
that’s everything from the start of the system to now, so it’s best if you do it soon after booting.
finally, i had you filter to WARNING (4) and above with -p4 but it didn’t show anything. how about…everything?
journalctl -b0 | curl -s -F "content=<-" https://dpaste.com/api/v2/
that will be a lot of information but it should be informative!


oh god this isn’t satire
no worries, i gave a suggestion in my comment:
journalctl -b0 -p4 | curl -s -F "content=<-" https://dpaste.com/api/v2/
that captures the output from journalctl -b0 -p4 and sends it to dpaste.com. it will print out a URL to the result. give that a try
it’s very hard to decipher. the lines are right-truncated like you just copy-pasted from the terminal (the lines end in which is less’s sigil for “more content to the right”). you can make a pastebin from command output. to capture any command as a paste try
journalctl -b0 -p4 | curl -s -F "content=<-" https://dpaste.com/api/v2/
the part after the | comes from here:
you can put anything before | to capture it to dpaste. check it for sensitive information first!
from what i can see though, your nvme is behaving strangely. it may be related to power saving settings. try these settings from the Arch wiki:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Solid_state_drive/NVMe#Troubleshooting
do you boot from the nvme?
you can also journalctl -b0 -p4 to show only high priority messages. that would help too
thanks, can you please give me the output of
journalctl -b0 -u systemd-modules-load
i’m curious why it’s taking 30s. maybe the other two services as well
the dmesg you posted is very truncated, just like a screenful of info. you can usually pipe command output to curl with these pastebin sites. i understand if you’re concerned about sensitive info in dmesg though
can you post journalctl -b0 and systemd-analyze blame results from after a successful boot. i have broken and fixed my own systems countless ways so maybe i’ll spot something


it’s punycode


it now redirects to a different github account, researchxxl. issues are turned off. old pull requests are there so it looks like the repo was transferred

yeah i know. thanks. how do i get the fuck out of here. alternatively, euthanize me cap’n.


oh! đ and þ are used for þat soubd right? but one is voiced and þe oþer isn’t i can never remember which… oh okay in Old English þey just used þ for boþ
i started with slackware ~2003 and moved to gentoo in 2005. it was very transparent to me as a newbie. use flags and compilation from source were way simpler to me than mysterious precompiled binaries. also ndiswrapper worked with my wireless chipset on gentoo. that helped
for my own sanity i will assume the audience of that page you linked is business customers given one of their examples is a .gov. im just residential. getting a static ip out here felt monumental in itself
it was apparently impossible for my isp. i have a very good deal on a static ip so reluctant to rock the boat
even if you get port 25 unblocked your IP won’t pass the sniff test. you must have a PTR record on the IP pointing to your domain for the large email hosts to accept mail from you. i use amazon SES to handle outbound because of this hurdle. it sucks
at work i made a rpm to set up zswap on our rhel 7 (ughhhh) workstations and the description was “download more ram!”