this post was submitted on 13 Sep 2023
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Linux
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Linux is a family of open source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991 by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged in a Linux distribution (or distro for short).
Distributions include the Linux kernel and supporting system software and libraries, many of which are provided by the GNU Project. Many Linux distributions use the word "Linux" in their name, but the Free Software Foundation uses the name GNU/Linux to emphasize the importance of GNU software, causing some controversy.
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I don't understand what you did that means you have to reinstall. Most issues can be solved in system.
One thing that made me switch back from Arch to Debian Sid was third party support.
The Arch wiki is great but for some things, I read through the 30-step process with multiple links to other wiki articles and then see there's a preconfigured installer for .Deb available...
Huh? The debian wiki is horrendous compared to Arch. You are better off reading the manuals and trying to get a grip on it yourself.
yes I know. (Besides, Debian's official documentation isn't the wiki, but the Debian handbook).
The point is, on Debian you don't need the wiki. Things that are a long manual process on Arch (best example: Nextcloud) are already preconfigured or there's a ready made solution available.
Kind of weird example. When most new software is not even available on debian or heavily outdated due to point release model.
I'm talking about third party software, not what's in the repository.
It's usually available as .deb or .rpm and nothing else.
On Arch someone may or may not have converted it and put it in the AUR, and it may or may not be maintained.
Besides, I run Sid, which isn't point release nor outdated.
Oh then I misunderstood, sorry.
The Debian 12 installer creates only 1GB of swap by default which I believe was new behaviour from when I install Debian 11 the first time around. Apparently it's to make it easier for server users but what a pain. Anyway the easiest way to fix that is to just reinstall, since most of my stuff lives on Nextcloud and Gitea it shouldn't be too hard
I still don't understand what the problem is, but if you want more swap just get more swap. You can resize the partitions if you want but you can also just add swap as files instead of partitions.
dd
.mkswap
.swapon
./etc/fstab
so it mounts automatically:/swapfile swap defaults 0 0
So fixing it is literally just what you'd have to do before reinstalling anyway. Reduce your root partition from a live system, increase swap partition, re-initialize swap. Done.
Also, the Debian installer tells you how big a swap partition it creates and asks you if that is what you want twice.
Are you talking about the Graphical Installer?
I've installed it on other machines since and it only confirms stuff for you if you decide to deviate from the defaults
Oh yeah, I always use the graphical expert installer. If the normal installer defaults to 1GB of swap without telling you, that's pretty bad.
1GB swap is pointless IMO. Either make the swap space twice your RAM or don't bother.
Still don't know how that could fuck up drivers though. On a normal system, I don't even use swap anymore.