I'm using both of them:) zoxide comes with a zi
command which lets you search through your recent directories
maor
Okay, you may not gonna like it but I rented a 1TB storage box from Hetzner for 3 euros a month, just to get that foot off my neck. It's omega cheap and mountable via CIFS so life is good for now. I'm still interested in what I described in the OP, and I even started scribbling some Python, but I'm too scared of fucking anything up as of now.
The annoying part in writing that script was discovering that the filenames on disk don't match the filenames in the URLs. E.g., given this URL:
https://lemmy.org.il/pictrs/image/e6a0682b-d530-4ce8-9f9e-afa8e1b5f201.png.
You'd expect that somewhere inside volumes/pictrs
you'd find e6a0682b-d530-4ce8-9f9e-afa8e1b5f201.png
, right...? So that's not how it works, the filenames are of the exact same format but they don't match.
So my plan was to find non-local posts from the post
table, check whether the thumbnail_url
column starts with lemmy.org.il
(assuming that means my instance cached it), then finding the file by downloading it via the URL and scanning the pictrs
directory for files that match the exact size in bytes of the downloaded files. Once found, compare their checksums to be sure it's the same one, then delete it and delete its post entry in the database.
When get close to 1TB I'll get back here for this idea... :P
Haha I'm literally on it right now. My instance crashed a couple of hours ago because of it, so I emptied ~/.rustup
to get some time, but idk how to go about it from here. LPP didn't do anything. That seems really curious, does literally everyone use S3?
Thanks a lot, I was looking for this exact kind of community. Posted there <3
I should've mentioned it in the post, but I already tried deleting pics modified more than X days ago. The catch is that I don't wanna delete pics uploaded to my server, I just want to delete pocs cached from other instances :(
Yep, I manage my servers and local machine with Ansible so I abstracted it with a role. This is indeed not that bad of a con because it's still plaintext so automation is easy, but it's still a minor issue ;)
I really liked unity 😞
Love me some systemd timers. Much more fun than cron.
- Sane handling of environment variables with
EnvironmentFile=
- Out of the box logging. Especially useful is the ability to
journalctl -f
to watch long-running processes, which I'm not sure whether possible with cron - The ability to trigger the service manually rather than setting the timer to
* * * * *
, then forgetting it's supposed to run in a minute, get distracted, come back in 15 minutes
My only complaint is it's a bit verbose. I'd rather have it as an option inside the .service
file. The .timer
requires some boilerplate like [Unit].description
(it... uh... triggers a service. that's the description), and WantedBy=timers.target
. But these are small prices to pay
Was it unofficial? I thought it was merely opt-in, but still official
Yessss I love how the algorithm here isn't tailored towards sucking me in
Same. Specifically I use it as a GUI to organize them; for the actual reading, I wrote a script that compiles an E-mail digest periodically: https://github.com/it-is-wednesday/miniflux-mail-digest
I'd be scared to perform POST/PUT with LLM-generated commands. For immutable calls I agree though