Strange, I’ve never seen that. Have you rebooted the system to make sure it has nothing to do with open files?
I did find one thread that seems related:
https://www.reddit.com/r/btrfs/comments/lip3dk/unreachable_data_on_btrfs_according_to_btdu/
Strange, I’ve never seen that. Have you rebooted the system to make sure it has nothing to do with open files?
I did find one thread that seems related:
https://www.reddit.com/r/btrfs/comments/lip3dk/unreachable_data_on_btrfs_according_to_btdu/
btdu is an excellent tool for finding out what’s taking up space in btrfs


Counter-proposal: you get to opt-out of advertising by signing up to automatically buy all the products they advertise.


Sorry for the duplicate replies. Lemmy server drama…
That’s a tricky one if you’re getting no info from the kernel. I think the reply above about system instability under load sounds promising. Throttling things down to test seems like a good idea.


Were you running dmesg on another screen or over ssh or something? I’d look in journalctl -b-1 after a reboot.
Is it completely frozen or does it respond to pings etc?


Were you running dmesg on another screen or over ssh or something? I’d look in journalctl -b-1 after a reboot.
Is it completely frozen or does it respond to pings etc?


deleted by creator
Unfortunately X forwarding doesn’t work (as far as I can tell) with vulkan.
What I’ve been doing is using waypipe (which seems very stable), with xwayland-satellite (which is not so stable) on the remote end.
I’d also love persistent sessions, so I’ve been following wprs, but it doesn’t seem to support GPU drawing at all.
Lots of interesting tech, but it’s still pretty immature.
export WAYLAND_DISPLAY=wayland-1
Like with X it’s not guaranteed to be that value, but same idea.

This was on my mind, but then I just watched it yesterday.


There’s a film that covers how they named Gleemonex:


It’s well worth reading the entire paper. It’s one of the funniest things I’ve ever read.


Zero chance this company replaced him with an AI that actually does anything useful.


I had pretty much the same experience finding the virtual memory settings on a win11 machine the other day. Same 20 year old dialog, now buried 5 more layers deep.


It’s such a good idea. I can’t believe they didn’t think of it sooner.
I don’t disagree exactly, but I’d argue that you’re contributing to the project even if you’re just reporting bugs or helping others with it on e.g. Lemmy.
I could see avoiding all of that pragmatically in order to use some obscure, critical software, but not something you use every day and for which there are reasonable alternatives.


This is what I came here to say. This is a sovereignty issue they could solve with a miniscule portion of their defense budgets.


It’s kind of absurd. When you buy a TV, the bloated adware at least helps lower the price. Imagine paying extra for it.


If it makes a sound you don’t recognise, use the gun.
‘bite down’ is also a lie