I first discovered Timeshift through Garuda, which had it set up by default. It mitigates the issue of bleeding-edge updates breaking your system.(Although they use Snapper now, which is supposedly better with BTRFS.)
Can you explain the usecase for timeshift? I am interested in the idea however I have never needed something like this in many years of using Linux on many different platforms.
Other then giving piece of mind, How is timeshift useful in real life? How has it saves you?
When you install or update something that breaks something, like has happened to me many times, to the point that the system cannot boot, you can pick a snapshot from the grub menu from before those changes occurred, allowing you to recover your system to a working state without the use of a live boot usb.
It’s also been useful when some program or other stops working due to some change in a dependency somewhere, like OBS sometimes does. Then you can just hop backwards in time to a point where it works and get to actually using your system, instead of spending hours tracking down exactly where an error is occurring right then and there. “fixing it later” becomes a valid way of dealing with problems with your system, when just pressing a button lets you make it temporarily go away.
It works however you like, you can define which parts of the system get snapshotted.
The default leaves your home folder untouched, meaning downgrading your system to an earlier point in time should never meany our user files are affected.
timeshift saved my ass when wine installation removed xorg. rewind one day back, note to self: wine is probably badly broken, do not use, and you’re good to go
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This is the first I’m hearing of timeshift. I will be looking into this.
I first discovered Timeshift through Garuda, which had it set up by default. It mitigates the issue of bleeding-edge updates breaking your system.(Although they use Snapper now, which is supposedly better with BTRFS.)
timeshift supports btrfs snapshots tho
yolo
I’m the
echo "sudo pacman -Syu" >> .bashrc
Timeshift has saved my stupid ass way too many times
Can you explain the usecase for timeshift? I am interested in the idea however I have never needed something like this in many years of using Linux on many different platforms.
Other then giving piece of mind, How is timeshift useful in real life? How has it saves you?
When you install or update something that breaks something, like has happened to me many times, to the point that the system cannot boot, you can pick a snapshot from the grub menu from before those changes occurred, allowing you to recover your system to a working state without the use of a live boot usb.
It’s also been useful when some program or other stops working due to some change in a dependency somewhere, like OBS sometimes does. Then you can just hop backwards in time to a point where it works and get to actually using your system, instead of spending hours tracking down exactly where an error is occurring right then and there. “fixing it later” becomes a valid way of dealing with problems with your system, when just pressing a button lets you make it temporarily go away.
Does it work across a system or dist update?
It works however you like, you can define which parts of the system get snapshotted. The default leaves your home folder untouched, meaning downgrading your system to an earlier point in time should never meany our user files are affected.
timeshift saved my ass when wine installation removed xorg. rewind one day back, note to self: wine is probably badly broken, do not use, and you’re good to go
Alias yolo=yes 😂 I know what new alias I’m creating on my laptop and rasp pi’s 😂
consider then https://github.com/nvbn/thefuck
thank you!!
fuck
is still 3 less characters thansudo !!
Omg 😂😂😂 well, look w"tf" I have been mossing, that is gold