💾 Archived View for dimension.sh › ~novaburst › t0kryw.gmi captured on 2023-01-29 at 15:53:39. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2022-07-16)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Computer fire (not to take literally)

Authors: Aoi Koizumi (古泉 あおい) <novaburst@dimension.sh>

Date: 07 Jul, 2022

Just yesterday I had to perform a re-installation of FreeBSD even though

I'd ideally was not supposed to do that. Why though?

Here's why:

>

After uninstalling LXDE on my computer, I went to install XFCE from the

package repositories, it apparently went fine until I realized late that

it didn't.

- I replaced startlxde with startxfce4 on my .xinitrc

- I've tried to run 'startx', but guess what, it took the whole system

down

I still had pekwm around so I put it again on said file, and somehow

worked okay until, *boom!*, another crash.

I made sure to disable the kernel mode setting drivers on rc.conf, and

rebooted, as that was the first cause of crashing.

Then I tried to uninstall xfce, another crash, then the computer

rebooted by itself.

I went to a single user shell, mounted '/' as R/W, ran fsck on it,

hoping for it to actually do something, and it finished.

Well, tried to uninstall the remaining packages and it lead to another

crash. Turns out the filesystem itself got corrupted really badly (at

least my home directory wasn't affected, nor the base system either)

that it'd crash after trying to well, do anything on /usr/local

basically.

I lived on a temporary NomadBSD setup on my flash drive for a couple

days that I had set up shortly after I downloaded it.

Then I've downloaded GhostBSD yesterday, just after I uploaded a whole

backup of my home directory to a remote host.

<<

Lesson learned I guess? Only time will tell....