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Try ntpsec, use it the same way...
The file /etc/rc.conf maybe the file you need to set the config for cgroups.
A quick web search, (Brave-browser) gives all kinds, v1 & v2 as well as hybrid examples.
(I get an error in my boot logs about cpu and mem flags...)
I used the fstab line but my system stalls at startx, it does recover but I generally have given up before then... still learning.
there was a lot more info there...here's the top.
cgroup Mode
The primary setting is rc_cgroup_mode, which determines the cgroups version used:
rc_cgroup_mode="unified" – Uses cgroups v2 only (default in Alpine Linux since v3.19).
rc_cgroup_mode="legacy" – Uses cgroups v1 only.
rc_cgroup_mode="hybrid" – Uses both cgroups v1 and v2.
Note: To enable cgroups v2 exclusively, set rc_cgroup_mode="unified" in /etc/rc.conf and reboot for changes to take effect. Seems this is related more to openrc service manager. I hope this helps.
I find the info in this post positive and descriptive. I'm still learning.
Hi, I've been seeing some quirky behaviour with opensnitch as well, but only that the gui with it's notifications did not start, I ended up setting it to start with plasma settings (I use KDE plasma, with xorg on Daedalus, again).
I had to leave excalibur because it lead to dep-hell.
I remember finding a python package for opensnitch and that helped my system a bit... ymmv
I could be wrong, but I think the term amd64 refers to the 64bit architecture as opposed to 32bit for PC's.
When they stopped using the ia64 archi. name...
I think it will work... you'll findout during boot. :-)
Happy new year to you all.
Thank you for letting us know the outcome of your problem.
I hope it goes well, my laptop just died a few weeks ago after a long and eventful life.
Great work, thank you for your efforts.
Nice one greenjeans :-)
I realise I am surfing the rim here, but...
system service hwclock allows changes to or from system time.
Set the Hardware Clock to the current System Time.
# hwclock --systohc
Set the System Time from the Hardware Clock.
# hwclock --hctosys
# hwclock --set --date="8:20:05"
But, generally I set the bios to UTC and the system takes care of the rest.
All the best.
I often disconnect drives I want to preserve during installation of an unknown OS (like when testing install of a new release).
I often do this when tidying up the start process... for services I use and not everything available, especially for accessability services.
rc-update del sudo default
rc-update add sudo off
rc-update add ssh off
rc-update del ssh default
rc-update del saned default
rc-update add saned off
rc-update add nethack-common off
rc-update del nethack-common default
rc-update del fetchmail default
rc-update add fetchmail off
rc-update add exim4 off
rc-update del exim4 default.... (plus a whole lot more where I profer to start them myself when required.)
If you type rc-update you'll get a complete list for your system. (I'm using open-rc)
This is saying line 5 is a duplicate
/etc/apt/sources.list:5
you may put that line anywhere under the standard info (head), but anywhere will work.
If there is a duplicate you may see error complaints, but it (the update and/or installations) should still work.
As for the su changes, I add an entry in to ~/.bash. Generally I put the line with other alias' in the file.
/home/glenn/.bashrc
alias su='su -'This way I don't get problems if there's an update/upgrade that changes the way su (substitute user) is invoked.
Hi, thank you for all your efforts, Excalibur is installed and running quite well. I have Excalibur installed on a separate partition so I can study it with my customisations and it seems to be working well. So far I have found it quite workable (but I have not tested it with the vpn and proxy systems or steam-games).
libc6 is upgraded with excalibur. BPO kernel here. Daedalus backports is on 6.12.43-1~bpo12+1 (2025-09-06)
Hi, I often partition drives myself with gparted.
I set a small bios (grub2 core.img) between 8 and 100Mb (non-EFI, unsigned kernel)
/(root), usr, var, tmp, swap & home.
Almost all of my personal(non-system) files/data are on a separate harddrive that I setup with links (ln -s) back to the /home/local directory.
Like... documents, music, video, bin (bash scripts) & build (directions and configs). Including a partiton for system backups, and home backup too on a separate partition.
This way I may access those files from any OS, most of the time.
I have tried the installer "automatically set up partitions" to give me an idea of the minimum sizes currently being used. But usually find it unsatisfactory.
My system is setup for daily-drive entertainment system, not a webserver or multi user.
I tried a "apt dist-upgrade" (adding excalibur to my sources.list) to excalibur, but got stuck with usrmerge problems, like /bin is not a link...
I tried to correct that, the folders and contents copied to the relevant directories manually from another OS.
But that hack didn't work for me.
I had installed usrmerge before-hand in preparation but it never finished the install scripts, after --reconfig (dpkg --configure -a) a few times.
I don't know why, but I have read somewhere that usrmerge has problems with separate harddrive partitions for /usr. I generally have separate partitions for /, /boot, /usr, /tmp, /var, swap and /home
So I did a quick backup of /root and /etc and started a clean install.
I had to install seatd to get a login screen
I run kde, and found sddm virtual keyboard fullscreen... I'm using slim to keep the login screen neat looking
I wish there was an "accessabillity" toggle switch/meta package we could switch off all the brail, virtual keyboards and speaking tools from the install process.
But other than those 2 things, My system is running quite nicely, thank you for your efforts.
wow! That helps to explain a few things, Thanks EDX-0.
Hi, for those who must tinker, I have used a script to convert systemd to sysvinit programs, look for
sysd2v.sh search on this forum and others.
https://dev1galaxy.org/viewtopic.php?id=4865
It does not fix package dependencies, only start|stop services...
I hope this helps.
I see Devuan gets a mention at The Register...
hi, as a side - note, with "ping" use -c (n) for the number of times to "ping".
I generally use,
ping -c 4All the best.
Oh Yeah! That's "Really Cool".
Yes, I agree as well for newbies it is important.
I was really thinking about before you install, usually a one liner repeated 2 or 3 times with out too much real info describing what the app does/provides.
I see your point, Nice work.
Nice work greenjeans, My first thought... how come the package managers don't have this kind of info(?).
Nice, really nice. Thank you.