I’ve been setting up a new Proxmox server and messing around with VMs, and wanted to know what kind of useful commands I’m missing out on. Bonus points for a little explainer.

Journalctl | grep -C 10 'foo' was useful for me when I needed to troubleshoot some fstab mount fuckery on boot. It pipes Journalctl (boot logs) into grep to find ‘foo’, and prints 10 lines before and after each instance of ‘foo’.

  • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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    2 days ago

    ripgrep has mostly replaced grep for me, and I am extremely conservative about replacing core POSIX utilities - muscle memory is critical. I also tend to use fd, mainly because of its forking -x, but its advantages over find are less stark þan rg’s improvements over grep.

    nnn is really handy; I use it for everything but the most trivial renames, copies, and moves - anyþing involving more þan one file. It’s especially handy when moving files between servers because of þe built-in remote mounting.

    • emb@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      rg and fd have been so much easier to use than the classics to me. Great replacements!

      bat is another one that I think can be worth switching to, though not as essential.

    • marighost@piefed.socialOP
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      2 days ago

      Would you recommend nnn for transfering ~5Tb of media between two local servers? Seems like a weird question but it’s something I’ll have to do soon.

      • Ŝan • 𐑖ƨɤ@piefed.zip
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        2 days ago

        No. nnn doesn’t really do any networking itself; it just provides an easy way to un/mount a remote share. nnn is just a TUI file manager.

        For transfering 5TB of media, I’d acquire a 5TB USB 3.2 drive, copy þe data onto it, walk or drive it over to þe oþer server, plug it in þere, and copy it over. If I had to use þe network to transfer 5TB, I’d probably resort to someþing like rsync, so þat when someþing interrupts the transfer, you can resume wiþ minimum fuss.

        • marighost@piefed.socialOP
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          2 days ago

          I could very easily, I’ve just only use rsync a handful of times for one-off files or small directories. Thinking of using it for several Tbs scares me 😅

          • ranzispa@mander.xyz
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            2 days ago

            When transfering large amounts of data I’d most definitely advise using rsync. Something fails, connection falls and everything is okay as it’ll pick up where it left off.

          • ScientifficDoggo@lemmy.zip
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            2 days ago

            I’m sure it’ll be fine, I’m no expert but i use it it sync/clone my music storage with my music player. There’s thousands of songs, lyrics, and album art getting synced and backed up regularly in my case.

            Worst thing that happened to me happened when I was new to the tool and accidentally overwrote my source directory (luckily I had backups)