Am Tue, 11 Apr 2017 09:40:04 +0200
schrieb Raffaele Belardi :
> Kai Krakow wrote:
> [...]
> >>
> >> You might want to also look at sys-process/systemd-cron as a
> >> bridge. It basically generates timer units from your crontab and
> >> also runs the stuff in
Kai Krakow wrote:
- cron/anacron after transition to systemd timers
You might want to also look at sys-process/systemd-cron as a bridge.
It basically generates timer units from your crontab and also runs the
stuff in /etc/cron.*.d/. But, timer scripts also work just fine and I
do that for
Kai Krakow wrote:
Am Mon, 10 Apr 2017 09:27:57 +0200
schrieb Raffaele Belardi :
Looks like systemd does not provide a unit file for hdparm yet,
right? If so I suppose I'll have to write my own.
In general I suppose the same holds for everything that was
under
On Mon, 10 Apr 2017 17:45:59 +0200, Kai Krakow wrote:
> All those services are well integrated with each other and suitable for
> most stuff. Tho, systemd-networkd is not explicitly developed as a
> desktop daemon currently, systemd folks still tend to recommend
> NetworkManager to get all
Am Mon, 10 Apr 2017 10:48:48 -0400
schrieb Rich Freeman :
> On Mon, Apr 10, 2017 at 3:27 AM, Raffaele Belardi
> wrote:
> > After 10+ years of LXDE/OpenRC I decided to give Gnome/systemd a
> > try.
> >
> > 1. With OpenRC I used hdparm to put an external
Am Mon, 10 Apr 2017 09:27:57 +0200
schrieb Raffaele Belardi :
> After 10+ years of LXDE/OpenRC I decided to give Gnome/systemd a try.
>
> 1. With OpenRC I used hdparm to put an external USB disk to sleep:
>
> $ cat /etc/conf.d/hdparm
> sdb_args="-S24"
>
> Looks like
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