# here is where my aliases go yo
alias alias-edit="vim ~/.local/config/alias_config && source ~/.local/config/alias_config && echo 'Alias updated. \n'"
## Modern cli
alias ls="exa"
alias find="fdfind"
## System 76
alias battery-full="system76-power charge-thresholds --profile full_charge"
alias battery-balanced="system76-power charge-thresholds --profile balanced"
alias battery-maxhealth="system76-power charge-thresholds --profile max_lifespan"
## Maintenance
alias update-flatapt="sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade -y && flatpak update --assumeyes"
## Misc
alias tree="exa --tree"
## Incus
alias devi-do="sudo incus exec dev0 -- su -l devi"
## Some programs
alias code="flatpak run com.visualstudio.code"
~
I’d like to one day have the confidence to do upgrade -y
If you haven’t special requirements then just use Debian stable, and never be worried about an update again.
Or if you like beating your head against a brick wall constantly NixOS is really hard to brick. Any update that fails can just be reverted with a reboot.
Of course the downside is poor documentation, and nothing at all works like you expect it to work. It’s like hey, you want to learn Linux again from scratch? And by the way no two things work the same.
Headline: MAJOR EXPLOIT FOUND IN NEW LINUX KERNEL VERSION!
Debian: business as usual…
TBH I don’t even remember the last time some actually important bug came out on the kernel, long gone are the days of ptrace-kmod.c and hatorihanzo.c
I always do that. Is that bad on pop os/fedora? I wouldn’t know any different. Selectively choose what to update?
Apparently apt has a stroke sometimes. I don’t think I’ve had an update fuck up this bad but it’s better to read the output so you know what changed in case something stops working.
That’s by no means a routine upgrade though, the guy just “upgraded to” backports which you’re not even supposed to do. Not comparable to the soothingly boring apt upgrade of Debian stable.