It’s on lemmy.ca, which is a different instance than sh.itjust.works, surprisingly. That’s probably your mistake.
It’s on lemmy.ca, which is a different instance than sh.itjust.works, surprisingly. That’s probably your mistake.
Luckily that hasn’t happened to me yet, though I’d say pacman is still far better than something like apt, even if you have to untangle dependencies.
Literally never heard of paru before now, I just went with yay, since it’s better than manually git clone
-ing the aur package and also manually reviewing the PKGBUILD and then building it.
I’ll try it out and see how it is.
Pacman + yay is superior. pacman for most packages, and yay to use the AUR, where you can get pretty much anything that can be downloaded online, but as a package so that you can more easily manage what shit you’ve downloaded before but no longer need.
Years ago, when I was around 13-14, I wanted a “cool” sounding username, since I was also sick of coming up with usernames for websites. I did some thinking, and came up with “Mr.Champion”. Used it ever since.
I’m pretty sure there’s only been one time I broke my install, which was on an Ubuntu distro. This was on my old laptop, and it’s partitions are interesting because I have 1 main partition and 2 others (the first was my windows partition, before it stopped working for whatever reason and I thought it couldn’t be fixed. The second was the install that I broke).
Anyways, I remember I was trying to run some command, I can’t remember what, but I knew it kept eventually saying “Permission Denied” at some point. This was like 4-5 years ago, so again I don’t remember the details, but I’m certain I would’ve known to try sudo, but that didn’t work for whatever reason. I remember trying really hard to get this command to work, but it wouldn’t, so I got so frustrated that I just went to /usr and ran
chmod -R 777 ./
. I honestly didn’t think this would break anything. Why would it? Surely relaxing the permissions on some files won’t break anything? I mean, the only time an error could occur is if I restricted the permissions, so relaxing them shouldn’t do anything.At the time, I didn’t know about setuid, which is a permission flag that is important for allowing one user to run a command as a privileged user (like root, for example). So, what probably happened was I removed the setuid on /usr/bin/sudo, effectively breaking sudo. At the time I didn’t know what I had done, though, so hence I didn’t know how to fix it, so I just reinstalled Ubuntu.