deleted by creator
deleted by creator
Create a dir in a place you like
mkdir
(If it is in a dir where you have no write access, you need to sudo
or doas
)
Unmount the automounted /dev/sda1
umount /dev/sda1
Then mount sda1 to the newly created dir
mount /dev/sda1
Then you can use genfstab to create a fstab entry.
(You maybe need to sudo pacman -S arch-install-scripts)
genfstab /
This will write a fstab file to stdout (the terminal). Look for the line with , copy it and sudo open the /etc/fstab file with your prefered editor. Add the line at tge bottom and add the flags rw,user,noauto
to the entry.
This way you have to manually mount sda1 every time you boot with
mount /dev/sda1
You can add that to your .bashrc
or equivalent. (If you don’t plan to remove the disk, you can skip the noauto and the drive will be loaded automatically, but if it is unplugged your system won’t boot normally). Maybe there is a better way, but this way works for me good enough.
I’m not in reach of a pc to test, but I think the problem is that the partition is mounted temporary. Try making a new mountpoint and adding it to fstab (with noauto iirc, so that your system does not hang when you start with the drive unplugged).
Which distro? What does lsblk
in the terminal say?
And how do you know that number? Let alone the numbers of other distributions?
what about the minecraft rcon console? Or op’ing yourself and issuing /stop from ingame?
It’s the onion, right? Right? Please say it’s the onion!
Might be overkill (or underkill), but Tiny Core Linux is the most lightweight I know. While having an up to date kernel (6.1.2) and glibc (2.3.6).
What are the minimum requirements? An absolute minimum of RAM is 46mb. TC won’t boot with anything less, no matter how many terabytes of swap you have. Microcore runs with 28mb of ram. The minimum cpu is i486DX (486 with a math processor). A recommended configuration: Pentium 2 or better, 128mb of ram + some swap
Whoops, i was wrong