And it's not. SELinux is much more secure, however much more complex. Although AppArmor also do the job, despite being easier to workaround it. But I don't think this is a good argument against Debian.
BaalInvoker
I like Tesseract the most! It's exactly a balance between Alexandrite and Photon
Because I don't even knew that this kind of tool exists. And it was precise AF. I just got surprised/scared haha
About systemd-homed, I guess that liveusb will not work... I suggest you to try in a VM and everything going ok, you may try on another user on your pc
Are the detectors part for real or were you just kidding? 😲
You were probably trying to format it nice, but I've only read this phrasing from AI.
Yes, I was, because I like to put my text well formated... I feel pain when I have to read bad formated texts, so I try to be as clean as possible
But thanks for the answer, the home folder would probably be best. I don't want to think about it after setting it up. All my downloads and docs are there. I also feel like the whole filesystem would take forever for me to unlock/boot.
For home folder I think there is a better alternative, like systemd-homed or something like that
Well, looks like now we cannot be helpful and polite that people call you ChatGPT
Doesn't alsamixer
work?
Anyway, you may wanna try pactl set-default-sink [sink-name]>
as well
Encrypting and decrypting are complex operations that requires a lot from the hardware. The resources needed to encrypt and decrypt is proportionally correlated with the amount of files you're encrypting and decrypting.
That said, there are some alternatives
- Encrypt the whole filesystem
- Encrypt only your home folder
- Encrypt only the files you wanna
There is an app, Vaults, that allows you to create vaults to easily encrypt and decrypt folders. Take a look on this app
It depends on your goals with linux.
If your goals are on devops, you may find a good idea learn about docker, ansible and other tools to make your life easier. If you're a home user, maybe it's a good idea try flatpaks, for example. And there is much more, but you need to define your goals.
“If you don't know where you want to go, then it doesn't matter which path you take.”
― Lewis Carroll, Alice in Wonderland
That's true... But once you get used to it, you don't even notice that you write run0
I misunderstood your post. This command I told you is to make things better, not worse haha
If you really wanna make your Arch unstable, you may wanna install every single package with pacman -Sy <packagename>
Also maybe you wanna install everything from AUR
I was waiting for this moment 😹😹😹
But I actually am using run0
I'm not sure, but looks like you're denying all .htaccess files. Laravel depends on .htaccess to make things work properly
Take a look on Laravel docs - Deployment to make sure your configs are right