- Nah. Set the frequency to weekly or monthly or something you don’t need to do daily. I do monthly.
- Yeah, there’s a lot of updates and that’s a good thing
- Probably
- Yes
linuxguy
- 0 Posts
- 7 Comments
- linuxguy@piefed.cato
Linux@lemmy.ml•How to diagnose a complete system freeze (no REISUB, no mouse/kb, have to hard reset)?English
5 daysSetting up a watchdog and crash kernel might help or let you diagnose it
- 14 days
Why not a tor relay? If you’re not an exit it is pretty darn safe. How about a tor snowflake proxy too? Even easier and safer.
Wahoo! Best of luck!
I didn’t intend and don’t think the stick bit stuff will or could be a complete solution for you. You’ve got some oddly specific and kinda cruddy restrictions that you’ve got to workaround and when they get that nonsensical one ends up solidly in “cruddy hack” territory.
From the article:
group + s (pecial)
Commonly noted as SGID, this special permission has a couple of functions:
If set on a file, it allows the file to be executed as the group that owns the file (similar to SUID) If set on a directory, any files created in the directory will have their group ownership set to that of the directory owner
You could run something like https://pypi.org/project/uploadserver/ in
screenor run a cron every minute that just recursively sets the correct permissions.
Maybe some sticky bit https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/suid-sgid-sticky-bit



Settings -> Software Update or something like that. You can also set it to auto-apply. Mostly, I ignore the popup and run
dnf update -y && snap refresh && flatpak update -yas root every once in a while when I think about it.