I have not been in this forum in a while, but I installed KDE Neon on my machine. Can I come to this forum for support?
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Of course. That's what this sub-forum is for.Windows no longer obstructs my view.
Using Kubuntu Linux since March 23, 2007.
"It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data." - Sherlock Holmes
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Welcome!
You chose the best Linux non-distro ever made! I'm running the User Edition. What are you running? And, by chance, did you use the Btrfs fs?"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Originally posted by woodsmoke View PostI dunno...the folks here were novices back in the thousands but...generally they try to point you right...it all depends on whether you are for or against tank grown knee caps.
woodsometimeslaughsatwhatwethoughtbackthensmoke
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Thank you, yes I am also using the user edition. Thanks for the welcome.
BTW, I think I am using BTRF, don't remember sing EXT4. It is also encrypted.
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Originally posted by Snowhog View PostOf course. That's what this sub-forum is for.
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Originally posted by pookito View PostThank you, yes I am also using the user edition. Thanks for the welcome.
BTW, I think I am using BTRF, don't remember sing EXT4. It is also encrypted.
btrfs fi df /
On my box it gave:
Data, single: total=197.00GiB, used=134.20GiB
System, single: total=32.00MiB, used=48.00KiB
Metadata, RAID1: total=4.00GiB, used=1.37GiB
GlobalReserve, single: total=241.25MiB, used=0.00B"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Originally posted by GreyGeek View PostIn a Konsole issue:
btrfs fi df /
On my box it gave:
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Originally posted by pookito View PostI guess not, the code out that I got from my terminal is; ERROR: not a btrfs filesystem: /
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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Originally posted by GreyGeek View PostYou can convert an EXT4 to Btrfs if you want. Btrfs is too good not to use!
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Originally posted by pookito View PostSure, what are the benefits compared to ext4? And cons as well. If not I'll search it online.
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1) Nearly instantaneous backup (snapshot).
2) 3 minutes to roll back to the last/favorite backup.
Those two alone are worth their weight in gold.
Example #1: the update says 400+ packages are waiting and you aren't sure you want to do the update? Take a snapshot. Do the update. Reboot and test. If things are OK then delete the snapshot and take a fresh snapshot. If not, rollback to the snapshot and 3 minutes later you are running as things were before the update. No need to do a reinstall, or worse yet, putz around for two or three days or more trying to recover/restore what you lost.
Example #2: You made some changes to a file or directory (edited it, overwrote it, or accidentally deleted it). Mount the snapshot it resides in (/ in @ or /home in @home) and navigate to the file. Copy it back to the location where it was. Umount @ and @home.
Special Note: Examples 1 & 2 were performed on the LIVE system. No need to shut down and access the system from a LiveUSB or such. That, too, is worth its weight in gold.
Other cases: You want to have more than one Linux distro installed. Btrfs is your tool. Consult posts by Oshunluver on this topic. He is the Btrfs master. He wrote a nifty little extension to Dolphin (no, as far as I know he is not a programmer) to do backups and recoveries. I used to use a tool called snapper but it was snapshot happy and I found that for my needs "sudo -i" and using the up arrow to recover previously used commands was sufficient.
I eventually ended up installing three 750Gb HDs in my Acer V3-771G laptop and after adding the second I switched the first from a single to a RAID1 using the two drives. After a while I took out my CDROM drive and replaced it with an HD Caddy and stuck in my third 750Gb HD. It is my backup storage device. I converted the two drives configured as RAID1 back to a singleton using both drives, doubling my usable disk space. The backups and third disk storage are enough redundancy for me. Note: I did not use compression or encryption. I've been using Btrfs for two years and without any problems. I've read where even RAID 5 & 6 are now usable on certain kernels. On Neon using stock kernels and what ever I've loaded from repositories or certain PPA's I've never had problems. I did a test a few months ago of various P2P technologies and while testing FreeNet I had over 600 peers connected to this laptop and each one had 200Mb webpages installed on my HD. I took a pic of the graph produced by EtherApe. It humbled my 100Mbps fiber optic connection and used almost all of my eight cores. This got slow. But Btrfs never broke a sweat.
Here's some Btrfs info, last updated on Dec 8th : https://wiki.debian.org/BtrfsLast edited by GreyGeek; Dec 28, 2017, 04:37 PM."A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
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