Use backtics to quote code fragments. Tripple backtics to block quote. You should be able to edit your post.
Use backtics to quote code fragments. Tripple backtics to block quote. You should be able to edit your post.
Unless you go in with a byte editor, you can’t change Mercurial’s commit history. I didn’t say “fabricate”, I said “change”.
In git you also cannot change history of a commit. You can only create a new commit with a new history. You’re arguing about semantics which don’t change the end result.
The point is, with Mercurial it would be hard and the result would be utterly incompatible with any other clone of the repo: there would be no way to propagate your changes to other clones. With git, this is a standard workflow.
As the example under discussion demonstrates, it’s also impossible to propagate the changes to git clones. Since history changed, merging the pull requests shows all the differences. That’s how Linus noticed the issue.
Well, that’s kind of his personality though.
Yes. Linus is known to overreact and use colourful language.
If it was compromised account trying to sneak code into the kernel, the attacker wouldn’t rewrite history since that would be obviously flagged when Linus tries to merge the pull request; as demonstrated by Linus in fact noticing the rewritten history. There was virtually no chance that this was an attack.
Unless commits are signed, you can always rewrite history. No matter the tool. Extreme example demonstrating that this is possible is the fact that I can change my machine’s time, change my user name and reply the tool’s commands to construct whatever history I want.
It was in fact a microscopic deal. Linus overreacted. Lemmy and Reddit milked the drama.
find -type f -exec chmod 644 -- {} +
find -type d -exec chmod 755 -- {} +
will only affect regular files and directories. There are other type
of files (specifically block and character devices, named pipes and
sockets) which those two commands would leave unaffected. In
practice, I suspect you don’t have any of those to worry about so you
can use -find f
.
So does it wait until it has found all the matches to run the command as a giant batch instead of running it as it finds matches?
Indeed. If possible, it is typically what you want (as opposed to find ... -exec ... {} \;
which runs command for each found file) since it will run faster. You want find ... -exec ... {} \;
if the command you’re executing can run on single file only or you’re dealing with legacy system without -exec ... {} +
support.
But I need x on directory, because that’s required to enter/read the directory. If I understand properly.
That’s why bacon listed find ${path} -type d exec chmod 750 {};
as first command. See also my reply.
X
applies to directories and executable files. Presumably, OP wants
to clear the executable bits from any files and +X
won’t do that.
As root:
cd /filesystem/in/question
chown myuser:media -R /filesystem/in/question
find -exec chacl -B -- {} +
find -exec chmod 644 -- {} +
find -type d -exec chmod 755 -- {} +
This is not a legitimate issue. It’s like complaining that wget
reads proxy settings from /etc/wgetrc
. It’s absolutely proper for
programs to read system- or user-level configuration if the
configuration is not specified via environment variables or command
line options.
The typical setting hierarchy goes something like:
uBlock Origin and mouse copy and paste works perfectly well in Firefox.
He made an edgy/abhorrent¹ joke years ago for which he apologised and Lemmy is even worse than Reddit so people still lach onto that.
¹ Whether it was just edgy or much worse than that I leave to the reader to decide. The joke was that he paid some guys in Africa to make a sign saying ‘Hitler did nothing wrong’ or something to that effect. This one of the things that likely contributed to adpocalypse on YouTube.
Switch to a non-buggy browser.
Yes. I’m just keeping the symbols file in home directory so that I don’t have to edit the system files. To change backspace you’d have something like the following I believe:
key <BKSP> { [ BackSpace, Delete ] };
My approach is to define custom keymap and enable it in xinitrc. Might be worth a try though I’ve no idea how that interacts with Wayland.
Hot take: Lemmy is an even bigger piece of garbage than Reddit.
It’s trivial. Use Linux Mint or Debian, enable non-free repositories if required, and that’s pretty much it.
I’ve never had issues with Nvidia drivers. Your mileage may vary.
What you have in title of the post, body of the post and in this screenshot all disagree with each other.