Post uptime and OS
>Gentoo
>31 days
Post uptime and OS
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>linux mint
>157 days
Gentoo
2.5 days
Updated recently, had 3 weeks before
>gentoo
>31 days
seems about right
Anons who have 50+ or 100+ uptimes, you don't reboot after a kernel update?
100+ days*
>Gentoo
>31 Days Uptime
I think you meant 31 days to emerge 1361 packages
Can compile this entire system in about 18 hours. Would be far less if I didn't have
>ungoogled-chrome
>multiple versions of Firefox
>Palemoon
>Libreoffice
installed. There is a lot of bloat on this install because it's my main desktop and I try out a lot of different shit in the repos. I don't care about the bloat. I have a modern (post 2001) CPU. Portage can just go in the background and I don't even notice it. I don't even allow portage full use of my CPU(s). It's limited to no more than 4 logical / 2 real cores.
I'm surprised no one has cried about RAM usage. You can always tell who doesn't use *nix seriously when they bitch about RAM. Anyone that keeps a system up for longer than a few days knows it'll eventually use all the RAM.
You can patch it without rebooting.
To be fair I cheated because I literally didn't use this laptop for like five months. Decided to stop being a lazy nigger, updated it yesterday, and will probably update the kernel and reboot soon.
>You can patch it without rebooting.
Redpill me on this. Is it trivial? If not I probably don't care enough to bother but if it is then no reason not to
>A note of caution: Kernel live patching is risky. Count on hard freezing or panics to become normal...
What's your experience been like?
it is still debian. too lazy to experiment with distros anymore
KDE neon up 4 hours 19 minutes since I installed it because GNOME IS GETTING RID OF THE BUTT FANGS
I have to reboot thanks for reminding me.
Depends on the patch. As you can see in OP I don't really care about lagging behind the latest version of the kernel. I don't chase security like some dumb faggot. I accept my devices are botnet by default and focus on stability.
That said I have had no problems using it on my home servers, VPSs, and dedicated servers. Thought I typically prefer OpenBSD for those tasks.
>sid
hahahaha
dumb question but what would be the issue with just kexecing into an updated kernel
whats so funny? the new graphics libraries provide a big performance boost