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Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
nixos
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Does anyone use system-manager or some alternative?
This mostly minimal example seems legit, but I can't get it working.
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disko issues
https://github.com/Lillecarl/nixos/blob/master/shitbox/disko.nix https://github.com/Lillecarl/nixos/blob/master/shitbox/default.nix#L10
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Framework announces AMD, new Intel gen, 16“ laptop and more
https://github.com/Lillecarl/nixos/blob/master/shitbox/disko... this is my declarative partitioning scheme, I use mdraid, LUKS, LVM and btrfs. I also mirror my bootloader so if one drive dies I can still boot :)
Hardware raid is legacy :)
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Learning NixOS as a Newbie
https://github.com/Lillecarl/nixos here's my configuration. I'm moving a lot of packages from my system config to my home config instead still. There's also something called devshells you can use with flakes, that'll give you packages in a one time disposable shell, which is quite great.
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Ncdu – NCurses Disk Usage
Zellij instead of tmux (not necessarily better, but it's easier to use)
Xonsh instead of bash (because you already know Python, why learn a new horrible language?)
bat instead of cat (syntax highlights and other nice things)
exa instead of ls (just nicer)
neovim instead of vim (just better)
helix instead of neovim (just tested it, seems promising though)
nix instead of your normal package manager (it works on Mac, and essentially every Linux dist. And it's got superpowers with devshells and home-manager to bring your configuration with you everywhere)
rmtrash instead of rm (because you haven't configured btrfs snapshots yet)
starship instead of your current prompt (is fast and displays a lot of useful information in a compact way, very customizable)
mcfly instead of your current ctrl+r (search history in a nice ncurses tui)
dogdns instead of dig (nicer colors, doesn't display useless information)
amp, kakoune (more alternative text editors)
ripgrep instead of grep (it's just better yo)
htop instead of top (displays stuff nicer)
gitui/lazygit instead of git cli (at least for staging, nice with file, hunk and line staging when you have ADHD)
gron + ripgrep instead of jq when searching through JSON in the shell (so much easier)
keychain instead of ssh-agent (better cli imo)
Wrote this on the train with my phone by checking https://github.com/Lillecarl/nixos/blob/master/common/defaul... for which packages I have installed myself :)
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PipeWire: A year in review and a look ahead
https://github.com/Lillecarl/nixos/blob/1c76775bbed80057cf54...
This is my pipewire config, does the job perfectly for me, tracking unstable.
- Using older package with latest nixpkgs
btop
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Ask HN: Interesting TUIs (text user interfaces), maybe forgotten ones?
Some alternatives:
* `vifm` file manager, more powerful and performant than ranger, for those who lean towards vim keybindings: https://vifm.info/
* `btop` process monitor, for those who like eye candy: https://github.com/aristocratos/btop
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Text UIs != Terminal UIs
I mean mainly things like this:
https://github.com/aristocratos/btop/blob/main/Img/alt.png
Great work, it looks amazing! But what's the point of going through all the pain of rendering graphs in text? At that point, give me an actual graph. The code will be less messy and the information display will be better.
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Command line tools I always install on Ubuntu servers
Btop is even more advanced than htop. It is almost like a GUI in terminal, and it feels like a dashboard of an airplane. I like it, but when I want to see what processes are using most of my resources, it is usually htop that comes to my mind and not btop, since btop shows more by default than I usually want. For more information see https://github.com/aristocratos/btop.
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What's the appeal of the TUI programs?
btop blows me away every time I use it.
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20 Awesome Command Line Tools for the Mac!
Htop is good, but these days I prefer using Btop.
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Harlequin.sh DuckDB IDE for your terminal
I love this and will definitely try it out! Although I admit I'm a little puzzled when people simultaneously want to do a TUI but also design things so there is generous (excessive, actually) whitespace around everything to create the illusion of "minimalism" or "comfort".
It's a TUI! It should be buzzing with numbers, packed with information, sparing with space and using every pixel possible. btop[1] is a great example imo — one of the best.
[1]: https://github.com/aristocratos/btop
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Wifi Adapter not working
I am using Arco Linux (Arch Based) and today my machine was working as normal, but then I lost Wifi connection. I had btop opened in another monitor and when o lost connection, it crashed. Don't know what it means. This has happened before, but before I would just restart and everything would work fine again, but now, the OS doesn't show me anything Wifi related. When it happens,restarting shows are logs that normaly don't appear (can't show them here because they are now showing up anymore) and it takes a long time to restart, if it even restarts, sometimes I have to press down the power button (it's that bad). My mother is TUF GAMING X670E-PLUS WIFI, the Wifi adapter is the one that comes with the motherboard. I am on the Linux kernel 6.4.2 (I think), I updated the system this morning. On Windows (where I am writing this from), I don't have this problem.
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Are there an alternative to htop that lets me see the total resource usage per app?
https://github.com/aristocratos/bpytop https://github.com/aristocratos/btop
- [REQUEST] Rewrite btop in Rust for Lightning Fast Performance 🚀 and Memory Safety ✨
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Jumped on Debian bandwagon to finally have ONE thing stable in life, couldn't be happier.
its btop
What are some alternatives?
pw-volume - Basic interface to PipeWire volume controls
bpytop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor
disko - Declarative disk partitioning and formatting using nix [maintainer=@Lassulus]
bashtop - Linux/OSX/FreeBSD resource monitor
system-manager - Manage system config using nix on any distro
bottom - Yet another cross-platform graphical process/system monitor.
tkdu - Fork of Jeff Epler's tkdu program to visualize disk usage and `du` output — ARCHIVED as I haven't used this myself in years
nvtop - GPU & Accelerator process monitoring for AMD, Apple, Huawei, Intel, NVIDIA and Qualcomm
qmk_firmware - Fork of QMK for the Framework Laptop 16
glances - Glances an Eye on your system. A top/htop alternative for GNU/Linux, BSD, Mac OS and Windows operating systems.
Mainboard - Documentation for the Mainboard and other modules in the Framework Laptop 13 [Moved to: https://github.com/FrameworkComputer/Framework-Laptop-13]
htop - htop - an interactive process viewer