Ah yeah that should be good. I’ve never had issues with NFS
Ah yeah that should be good. I’ve never had issues with NFS
What method are you using to mount the nas for immich. I ran into issues trying to mount my Nas using docker volume+sshfs but ran into zero problems using docker volume/cifs. With sshfs, immich would run until it suddenly stopped working and backups would constantly fail. Restarting the server would cause it to run for a little time longer.
I think the issue might be that the config changes haven’t been properly committed. Docker container won’t just update based on docker compose config.
docker container stop
docker container rm
You might want to delete and reset any settings which have been set
docker volume ls
docker volume rm (IDs from docker volume ls)
(This will also wipe out any backups/accounts made on immich already tho)
But once you have deleted the old containers, running docker compose up -d
will start the containers with the new config.
You can use docker compose logs -f
to see the server logs and check if everything is working.
Okay wow. I looked into your repo and its a really interesting implementation of a DSL. I think I get what the code is trying to do? You run shimky through bash and it turns into python code? meta programming stuff! I think its a regular language? its hard to tell.
So I’ve actually been studying DSLs for a few months and I can recommend some ways for you to improve this code if you want.
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Rage bait post
+1 ai tools are fine if you already know what you want to write and it speeds up the process of coding. But when ai tools are writing code you don’t understand, you cannot verify that any of the code is actually correct and doesn’t introduce bugs. Ditto for copy-pasting.
I wouldn’t want to sully my repo with something as useful as a gitignore.
My code is so bad good, GitHub thinks I’ve uploaded an API key.
Me when I’m about to sneeze
Love it but I can’t get over the gap between the debian logo and rainbow
Can’t you just build from source of you want it? Like kde has pretty good docs for this.
Feel like this should be included here. I’m pretty sure I found the original pr. I couldn’t find an associate issue so I’m not sure where the miscommunication about waiting happened.
I understand the frustration get how annoying it is but I also can see it from leah perspective. Honestly I think this is a misunderstanding and I don’t think anyone is trying to be toxic (at least not initially. The your work was shit comment is rude af)
This may not be what you want to hear but I think you should consider whether all this argument and feeling bad is worth the potential upside. What happened was shitty but you shouldn’t let this ruin your day.
Might even say they ran like A55
You are running fedora which is using the dnf package manager. The commands you mentioned (apt/ppa) are part of the apt (aptitude) package manager which is comes with Ubuntu.
Apt is the command to install/manage packages on Ubuntu (and other distros that use apt). A ppa is a special way to tell apt where it can download packages from. It lets you a install 3rd party packages not provided by your distros default selection. It is specific to apt and will not work for dnf.
This isn’t the end of the world and you can still install the package. Because these packages are open source, you can build the package from source. The instructions for which can be found on the github readme. Hopefully this cleared some things up!
[Edit] done some poking around, and I managed to get it running on fedora. I had weird issues building it from scratch, so I did it in a janky way by downloading and extracting the deb (it had precompiled bin inside). Looks to be working tho I couldn’t test it because no qemu
This isn’t really guide. More a tool for finding what makes your system look like a VM. pafish is a good tool for detecting vms. It also tells you what gave it away. You can use pafish to find out what is giving you away and fix it.
Bottom is also good.
I think both nix-env and flakes are designed with making package management easier. Nix-env tries to make it intuitive and familiar for new users. Flakes improve package management by simplifying the configuration.
Personally I would love to see syntax highlighting, language server, code completion. Maybe all in a dedicated application which is configured to give the easiest experience for new users. If nix is intended to be managed through config files, then the experience of writing a config should be as easy as possible.
Pixel sorting!