openzfs-docs
osc
openzfs-docs | osc | |
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5 | 14 | |
124 | 165 | |
2.4% | 0.6% | |
7.6 | 9.5 | |
13 days ago | 9 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
- | GNU General Public License v3.0 only |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
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.
openzfs-docs
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OpenZFS bug reports for native encryption
12 Feb 2024, https://www.phoronix.com/news/OpenZFS-Encrypt-Corrupt and https://github.com/openzfs/openzfs-docs/issues/494
> A new ticket has been opened for OpenZFS as well in proposing to add warnings against using ZFS native encryption and the send/receive support in production environments.
"Among experienced zfs users and developers, it's conventional wisdom that zfs native encryption is not suitable for production usage, particularly when combined with snapshotting and zfs send/recv. There is a long standing data corruption issue with many firsthand user reports...Additionally, if you join #zfs or #zfsonlinux on freenode and mention that you're having an issue with zfs native encryption, you'll be met with advice from developers that zfs native encryption is simply not reliable."
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In OpenZFS and Btrfs, everyone was just guessing
I'm a little sad to see this. I've been using ZFS on my PCs for years with minimal issue and significant benefits. [1] I've even contributed [2]. And I remain a huge fan.
I don't believe that "everyone is just guessing". There are some pretty knowledgeable folk that work on this.
[1] I've triggered some corruption in snapshots on an encrypted pool. No permanent problems resulted and no data was lost.
[2] I provided a very minor documentation fix that was encouraged and promptly merged. https://github.com/openzfs/openzfs-docs/pull/472
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I switched from macOS to Linux after 15 years of Apple
- Don't give up to early and switch distro, if something does not work - try to do your research first and then stick to your choice
For everyone who's interested, I ended up using Artix Linux (Arch, no systemd) with encrypted ZFS on boot and KDE as desktop environment, and I'm pretty happy so far. Resources I recommend are:
https://github.com/openzfs/openzfs-docs/blob/91d28894a74a19f...
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New Laptop Ideas
Just bricked my trusty EliteBook 820 G3 while testing Secure Boot.
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zfs on RHEL 8 root
This is the closest I've found: https://github.com/openzfs/openzfs-docs/pull/21
osc
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Building a standalone Haskell binary with alpine-linux and stack.
https://openbuildservice.org/ is one way to produce distribution packages across a wide selection of distributions, if your source code is open.
- RedHat donates $10,000 to OBS Studio, their Flatpak to be official for Linux!
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Manjaro's new website that integrates with pamac to provide a web based interface to install software. Supports repositories' packages, flatpaks and snaps
As fair as I understand, OBS is indeed a suitable replacement for AUR right now.
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The Future of Snapcraft | Ubuntu
OpenBuildService is better in every way, is fully opensource everywhere and can even generate packages for ubuntu better than launchpad appears to, and can even build entire distros. No special integrations are necessary, it can cost-effectively work with a highly paralellized number of virtual machines (iinm 100 or more on generic threadripper or epyc).
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Why is it so difficult for a software application team to support so many distributions via packaging? Is there no machinery to robotically package any application for any of the given major distributions? Why not?
Suse's OBS is another option, and there are likely others...
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How to deploy my FOSS to Linux users / repositories?
[3] https://openbuildservice.org/
- Haha amirite?
- Introducing MPR: the AUR for Debian and Ubuntu based systems
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Linux on the Desktop: Part Two
Good idea, give it a try. I'd recommend Kubuntu or Mint with Cinnamon. I switched to KDE for KDE Connects' amazing smartphone (Android) integration, which i recommend srrongly to try. Switched to openSUSE Tumbleweed myself, best KDE implemention IMHO, rolling release and the software selection is great, whats missing from the repos can be installed via opi, a client for [0]. It is not that newbie friendly though, since SUSEs' focus is on the enterprise ie safety over ease of use.
[0] https://openbuildservice.org/
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I switched from macOS to Linux after 15 years of Apple
Try it on openSUSE, the best KDE integration by far IMHO, since it is their standard DE since IDK/forever? Tumbleweed offers the newest packages, rolling like Arch, but with a huge test battery on OBS (https://openbuildservice.org/). Snapshots on upgrade make the thought of breakage (haven't had any) tolerable.
Disclaimer: very happy user
What are some alternatives?
website - The elementary.io website
PhotoGIMP - A Patch for GIMP 2.10+ for Photoshop Users
docker-mailserver - Production-ready fullstack but simple mail server (SMTP, IMAP, LDAP, Antispam, Antivirus, etc.) running inside a container.
ZeroTier-GUI - A Linux front-end for ZeroTier
readline - Readline is a pure go(golang) implementation for GNU-Readline kind library
azure-cli - Azure Command-Line Interface
egpu-switcher - 🖥🐧 Setup script for eGPUs in Linux (X.Org)
LibreOffice - Read-only LibreOffice core repo - no pull request (use gerrit instead https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/) - don't download zip, use https://dev-www.libreoffice.org/bundles/ instead
archinstall - Arch Linux installer - guided, templates etc.
iced - A cross-platform GUI library for Rust, inspired by Elm
gentoo-on-rpi-64bit - Bootable 64-bit Gentoo image for the Raspberry Pi4B, 3B & 3B+, with Linux 5.4, OpenRC, Xfce4, VC4/V3D, camera and h/w codec support, weekly-autobuild binhost