btrfsmaintenance
ydotool
btrfsmaintenance | ydotool | |
---|---|---|
34 | 63 | |
843 | 1,279 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 5.3 | |
about 2 months ago | about 1 month ago | |
Shell | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 only | GNU Affero General Public License v3.0 |
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btrfsmaintenance
- Scripts for Btrfs Maintenance
- About Scripts for Btrfs Maintenance
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Missing Space - BTRFS Balance is the Answer?
Take a look at setting this up for your distro: https://github.com/kdave/btrfsmaintenance
- Btrfs Maintenance Toolbox
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I am looking for a summary of btrfs maintenance tasks
Your distro might already have this https://github.com/kdave/btrfsmaintenance installed or in the repos
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remote management gui?
Is there a btrfs management interface that can be accessed/used remotely? I'm talking about an (independant - not a distro) interface like Rockstor or Truenas Scale. I've been searching until my eyes bug out of my skull and I can't find anything. Good peeps of reddit, please am I missing something? I've found plenty of great projects but not what I'm looking for: snapper-gui - single purpose/not remote snapper - single purpose / not a gui and I hate it (sorry) yast - distro specific https://github.com/yourbsod/btrfs-gui - vaporware? timeshift / autosnap - local only and single purpose btrfs-assistant - not remote https://github.com/kdave/btrfsmaintenance - different purpose and not a gui buttermanager - I was unable to try but seems to require grub-btrfs
- do we need to run maintenance commands like scrub every now and then?
- Is my setup plan okay, or should i give up on btrfs?
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btrfs-scrub timer not working cron not working am i missing something?
The btrfsmaintainence project also has services that cover scrub along with other services you might consider running regularly which are set up to not conflict and run at the same time.
ydotool
- Show HN: Bonk, a command-line tool for X11 window management
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Improving cursor rendering on Wayland
Wayland provides little by design, so this is quite typical. For example:
Screensharing is handled by pipewire [0], changing keyboard layouts aren't defined [1] by wayland, and generally anything Wayland devs think would 'corrupt' their protocol.
They leave most things to the compositor to implement, which leads to significant fragmentation as every compositor implements it differently.
Long gone are the days of xset and xdotool working across nearly every distro due to a common base, now the best you'll get is running a daemon as root to directly access `/dev/uinput` [2] or implementing each compositors accessibility settings (if they have them) as a workaround.
[0] https://superuser.com/questions/1221333/screensharing-under-...
[1] https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/292868/how-to-custo...
[2] https://github.com/ReimuNotMoe/ydotool
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how hard is it to program pinch zoom for my touchpad in linux?
I personally use libinput-gestures to call commands using touchpad gestures. You can also combine it with ydotool to bind macros and such to your gestures, e.g. 4 fingers swipe down closes the current window, 3 fingers swipe left or right changes workspace, etc
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ydotoold background process?
Have you tried using the systemd unit file supplied with ydotool? It's probably installed somewhere on your system. Else you can get it here and just change the install location of ydotoold.
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KDE-Connect keyboard input works on Wayland now!!
For simulated keyboard there are tools such as dotool or ydotool and KeePass extensions such as KPUInput that work by giving the user access to /dev/uinput. That works, but it's a bit inelegant; I guess in the future a Wayland protocol for simulated keyboard input will emerge, like wlroots already has, also for virtual pointers.
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Out of curiosity, I tried to use Wayland earlier and compared to X11, everything seems to load faster which really surprised me. However, I've also noticed some things that confused me, that's why I'm posting this. To ask what I'm missing or what I did wrong. Thanks as always!
ydotool is the generic equivalent. It works on both X11 and Wayland environments.
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Curious to know what are your general experiences on using keyboard and mouse input automations on Wayland...
Autokey does not work yet, but there is Hawck and Espanso that you could play around with. And there is ydotool if all you need is simulating basic input (as in ydotool mousemove -x -10 -y -10, ydotool type 'Hello world!' and so on).
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Asahi Linux To Users: Please Stop Using X.Org
Does ydotool do what you need? I haven't even tried Wayland in years. I'm sure someday I'll find the need.
- Somehow AutoHotKey is kinda good now
- How to emulate mouse clicks with keyboard shortcuts
What are some alternatives?
easy-arch - Script for boostrapping Arch Linux with BTRFS, snapshots and LUKS encryption (UEFI only).
xdotool - fake keyboard/mouse input, window management, and more
ntfs2btrfs
wtype - xdotool type for wayland
btrfs - WinBtrfs - an open-source btrfs driver for Windows
AutoKey - AutoKey, a desktop automation utility for Linux and X11.
borgmatic - Simple, configuration-driven backup software for servers and workstations
evsieve - A utility for mapping events from Linux event devices.
partialscrub - Partial scrubbing for btrfs filesystems
sway - i3-compatible Wayland compositor
key-mapper - 🎮 An easy to use tool to change the mapping of your input device buttons. [Moved to: https://github.com/sezanzeb/input-remapper]