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shreevatsa.wordpress.com
| | tty1.blog
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| | For any Linux enthusiast, administrator, developer, systems engineer, or overall neck-beard, the terminal is the meat and potatoes of a good chunk of day-to-day work and interaction with Linux. Your terminal's shell is a powerful tool to make your work easier and more fun to work with. Configuring your shell to work for your needs is a useful skill to have and is at the heart of automation in your terminal environment. We computer nerds are lazy and love tweaking computer environments to do work for us.
| | brandont.dev
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| | zwischenzugs.com
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| | Continuing in the series of posts about lesser-known bash features, here I take you through seven variables that bash makes available that you may not have known about. 1) PROMPT_COMMAND You might already know that you can manipulate your prompt to show all sorts of useful information, but what fewer people know is that you...
| | gabevenberg.com
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| I've been using Arch Linux for several years now. Of course, my first installs were... blunderous, as i wanted to do full disk encryption from the get-go, and I didn't know what I was doing. After those first one or two installs, I generally settled on LVM on LUKS with a GRUB bootloader and my swap on an LVM volume, mostly because it makes it much easier to setup hibernation/suspend to disk vs, say, a swap file.