Oh no, you!

  • 2 Posts
  • 17 Comments
Joined 3 months ago
cake
Cake day: November 3rd, 2024

help-circle









  • …og apoteket er fortsatt åpent om du ikke har opprutet ribbe. Skalpell er desidert beste verktøy til dette.

    Dampes: Vann + tett folie, 230 grader, lengst mulig. Jeg bruker fire timer, da blir den ekstra saftig og mør. Angivelig er det nok med en time eller to, men det har jeg valgt å drite i.
    Stekes: 200 grader uten folie. Halvannen time til to, slik at den ser bra ut.
    Hviles: En halvtimes tid på kjøkkenbenken.
    Deles: I passe serverings-stykker
    Varmes: (etterstekes) mens man ordner rødkål og saus. Her har du mulighet til å bruke varmluft eller grillfunksjon for å fikse eventuelle stykker uten sprø svor.
    Serveres: Kokvarm rett fra ovnen
    Spises: Svoren skal være sprø nok til at man helst skulle hatt hogstmaskin. Kjøttet kan deles med skje.



  • neidu3@sh.itjust.workstoLinux@lemmy.mlGRUB is confusing
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    1
    ·
    edit-2
    1 month ago

    You have one per installed kernel. Not sure what (if any) automagic is common for removing old kernels, I guess this varies between distros, but at least on my computers, old kernel remain. At least the previous one, maybe more. It comes in handy in case a kernel upgrade breaks something, which it actually did recently on one of my laptops - makes it easier to boot from old kernel and revert.

    EDIT: I just checked. I have just one on my daily driver. It’s quite new, and I don’t think I’ve had a kernel upgrade on that one, so it makes sense.

    On my work laptop (the one with borked kernel upgrade) I have two.

    So what you most likely have is one or more vmlinuz-version-numbers, and then simply a symlink named just vmlinuz to the version you boot from.


  • neidu3@sh.itjust.workstoLinux@lemmy.mlGRUB is confusing
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    0
    ·
    edit-2
    1 month ago

    Short answer to your last paragraph:
    vmlinuz is the kernel. It ends with z instead of x, because it’s z-compressed to save space. (I’ve heard that it’s possible to use an uncompressed kernel for that 1ms faster boot time)
    Initramfs (not intramuscular, which my autocorrect thinks is appropriate) is a small filesystem blob, “initial ram filesystem”, meant to be loaded directly into ram to allow the kernel to talk to your hardware via drivers. It also has a lot of binaries needed to perform other tasks that need to run before the root filesystem is mounted.