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Joined 17 days ago
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Cake day: November 14th, 2025

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  • It sounds like you’re trying to learn but have an “all or nothing” mentality to going about it. Nothing is mastered all of a sudden and expecting mastery out the gate is a recipe for burn out. If you’re goal is absolute perfection then you’ll never even start.

    Go through the online docs and training resources first to gain an understanding of how to assemble playbooks without a direct implementation target attached.

    Once you have a sense of what Ansible is and what it can do for you, pick something small to do for yourself. For example, create a playbook that sets up nginx for a single purpose.  When there are a 100 different ways to do something, you’ll never do it right. You’ll do it acceptably, then you’ll do it again better and then you’ll do it again more flexibly, etc.  If you know or pick up Python then you’ll start being able to dive into custom modules and plugins.

    A toolkit is something you build over time. You build it over time because it’s impossible to know what you’ll need before you start. If you do end up pulling together a toolkit that you think it appropriate and complete before you start working then you’ll have a mess of configurations that are not applicable and mostly inappropriate that you’ll end up debugging forever.

    Start small. Start where you are.






  • aarch0x40@piefed.socialtoLinux@lemmy.worldLinux Antivirus?
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    7 days ago

    ClamAV is probably the way to go. While there are UIs available in various states of maintenance, it’s not really necessary. The way ClamAV works is that runs a scan on daemon (re)start then continually monitors the system from there. One of it’s best features is that you don’t really need to worry about it.




  • Full disclosure, I’ve never actually used mint specifically and I’m providing guidance from a more generalized perspective that would be applicable to any Linux distribution.  You may have to research the specifics for your OS.

    Before I get into all of this, I should start by saying that it may be easier at your present skill level to perform an new installation over top your existing (no formatting).  Your best bet though is booting to the previous kernel.

    The bootloader is a tiny program installed on the first bits of your bootable disk slice.  It can often present a menu to select different kernel / initrd (also called a initramfs) combinations that are available on that bootable slice.  This menu can be hidden and only display if a key is pressed on what is typically a completely blank screen or perhaps just a small flash on the screen before kernel messages start displaying.

    It’s not so much that a backup of a kernel / initrd gets made but rather a new bootloader menu configuration, kernel and initrd image are added.   This leaves the previous boot setup available for just this kind of scenario.  The bootloader menu may also have a “Rescue” or similar option available.  If you’re unable to access this menu, it adds to the complexity of booting to the existing installation.

    If you’re booting to a rescue image on a USB stick hopefully there’s a repair or rescue process available on it.  What you’d be looking to accomplish once booted to a workable space is to have a recovery process detect your hardware, generate the proper boot configuration with initrd containing all the appropriate supporting software.  While it is possible to do this by hand that is a bit much to explain in comments.








  • This is interesting.  It looks like a gift card program.  They allow you to create a card and fund it using crypto up to $1,000 USD.  Once a funded card account is depleted it cannot be reloaded (this is how they skirt KYC).  Their accounts cannot be used for cash withdrawal (covers AML).  They do have a mechanism for moving funds between card accounts though.  The FAQ was able to answer all the questions I thought of regarding the program.

    Seems worth a measured explore.  I used to work in a job that encouraged playing around with payment and money transfer networks a bit though.