I use pdf2ps, cat ps1 ps2 ps3 > final.ps, ps2pdf
I think these come in some postscript package (at least they did in debian).
On Wed, Nov 11, 2015 at 5:09 PM, Ralf
wrote:
> So I'm
> thinking about to migrate to Btrfs.
Have you considered ZFS?
I currently have some disks with {fs}+LVM+RAID1 and others with a ZFS
mirror (no extra disks for ARC or anything), both approaches seem
manageable. To me btrfs still seems "not-rea
On Fri, Oct 2, 2015 at 9:55 AM, Emanuele Rusconi wrote:
>> [1] http://www.pcidatabase.com/
>
>
> I didn't know that. It doesn't seem to have System76 in the database,
> though.
That's because System76 doesn't manufacture hardware components, but
(at least most of) those found in one of their lapt
I'd say the method is the same as with any other laptop: pick one
specific model, look into its hardware (this[1] and a liveCD may be
handy), search for drivers, search "gento" + ,
follow the handbook.
You have the slight assurance those laptops are built with linux in
mind; anything else is just b
I assume your RTFM means set it to legacy and use /etc/fstab?
Seems ucmbersome, but it's worth a try.
Greetings,
If i export/import a zpool, the altroot property is not preserved so
it always gets mounted at /.
In /etc/init.d/zfs, the import line reads
$ZPOOL import -c $ZPOOL_CACHE -aN 2>/dev/null || true
so no -options there.
I've also tried with
zpool import -o altroot=/mnt -o cachefile=/etc/z
Been happy with nginx ever since it wasn't 1.0 yet.
Curious about YAWS :)
On Sun, May 24, 2015 at 12:07 PM, behrouz khosravi
wrote:
>> I dont know i3wm
>
> Its a tiling window manager. I have used it and I recommend it to anyone
> interested in tiling window managers.
What's your take on xmonad?
+1 for irssi
midnight commander anyone?
On Tue, May 19, 2015 at 3:44 PM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> Hmm. Looks like I'm hijacking Nuno's thread. Apologies if that's ruffled any
> feathers, but I think I'm still on-topic, more or less, and he may still be
> interested in the conversation.
No sweat, i intend to get an SSD for my laptop. It
On Mon, May 18, 2015 at 2:08 AM, Rich Freeman wrote:
> On the other hand, both btrfs and zfs will get you a level of data
> security that you simply won't get from ext4+lvm+mdadm - protection
> from silent corruption.
That's one of the advantages i see in ZFS. Do you use it frequently?
Can anyone
btrfs... ZFS... dunno... we'll see ;)
On Sun, May 17, 2015 at 11:08 PM, Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
>
> As you ordered 2 ssds right now this seems a perfect opportunity to
> start over and test something "new" (btrfs is in the linux kernel since
> 2009).
SSDs? Nope... not yet, maybe when i use t
On Sun, May 17, 2015 at 8:36 PM, Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
> tl;dr ... maybe you listed some reason to stick with mdadm/lvm2/xfs etc
> ... sorry in that case
I didn't. 2 disks with RAID1/LVM, 2 disks (maybe) with ZFS. Pairs
because by board has 2 SATA channels, otherwise i'd go RAID5 and gain
a
Hello Gentoo World,
TL;DR warning
I've tested Gentoo and liked it, tried to tune it a bit and borked it. :)
I want to use mdadm to create a RAID1 with 2 SATA disks. From what i
gather, i'll need (bootable) 0xFD partitions, i'll use full disk for
them and no separate /boot (unless required). Is
Greetings gents.
I may have missed it, but i haven't seen this suggested yet: RAID+LVM.
If you already have a 3TB drive, buy another (or two more) and build a
RAID1 or 5 array on them. Then build your LVM on top of /dev/md0 (or
whatever device your raid is).
Another approach is ZFS with RAID-Z or
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