Right, this seems better:
root: /$ ls | xargs stat --printf "$(pwd)/%n %U %G %A \n"
your-mom everybody world -rwxrwxrwx
Right, this seems better:
root: /$ ls | xargs stat --printf "$(pwd)/%n %U %G %A \n"
your-mom everybody world -rwxrwxrwx
Ten seconds to fully comprehend the help lines and execute it on the first try.
There is a reason I have macros for that.
Edit: Oh wait. ANY Tar command… Clever solution
The thing is, at first I actually, responded with “you are right”. See, humans make errors. Also, this isn’t a competence competition. (At least I hope so.)
Shoot, you are right wrong. They are processes.
Yeah, also each query request was a human beeing. Such an unrealistic comic.
That could be it.
Thanks, and understood. Do you also know why this topic is trending right now? Systemd isn’t some brand new thing, so why the sudden outcry?
I’m not a linux power user but have some servers running on linux and honestly wouldn’t change it with anything else, as everything runs smooth and maintainance is easy and straight forward. Even if something gets fucked there is a great online community which helped me out everytime.
That said, and sorry for the long introduction:
I read a lot systemd memes in the last weeks: What is the problem with it and why is it trending now?
You don’t “use” the domain for reverse proxy but a server. Where the server is located at matters. While you can get a domain and a server from the same hoster both still are different things.
Think of a telephone number (domain) and a phone (server).
It would have print if it was previously declared as function.
Also, js is as dirty as you want it to be. Keywords are indeed not necessary for declaring variables.