• MartianSands@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    The default is as long as it is because most people value not losing data, or avoiding corruption, or generally preserving the proper functioning of software on their machine, over 90 seconds during which they could simply walk away.

    Especially when those 90 seconds only even come up when something isn’t right.

    If you feel that strongly that you’d rather let something malfunction, then you’re entirely at liberty to change the configuration. You don’t have to accept the design decisions of the package maintainers if you really want to do something differently.

    Also, if you’re that set against investigating why your system isn’t behaving the way you expect, then what the hell are you doing running arch? Half the point of that distro is that you get the bleeding edge of everything, and you’re expected to maintain your own damn system

    • Deckweiss@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      If an app didn’t manage to shut down in 90seconds, it is probably hanging and there will be “DaTa LoSs” no matter if you kill it after 2 seconds or after 90.


      Been running arch for over 5 years now.

      I track all my hours and for arch maintenance I’ve spent a grand total of ~41 hours (desktop + laptop and including sitting there and staring at the screen while an update is running). The top three longest sessions were:

      1. btrfs data rescue after I deleted a parent snapshot of my rollback (~20h)
      2. grub update (~2h)
      3. jdk update which was fucky (~30min)

      |

      It’s about 8.2 hours per year (or ~10minutes per week) which is less than I had to spend on windows maintenance (~22h/y afair, about half of that time was manually updating apps by going to their website and downloading a newer version).

      Ubuntu also faired worse for me with two weekends of maintenance in a year (~32h), because I need the bleeding edge and some weird ass packages for work and it resulted in a frankenstein of PPAs and self built shit, which completely broke on every release upgrade.

      • EinfachUnersetzlich@lemm.ee
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        8 months ago

        btrfs data rescue after I deleted a parent snapshot of my rollback

        Can you expand a bit on that? I thought it didn’t matter if you deleted parent snapshots because the extents required by the child would still be there.

        • Deckweiss@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Honestly, I have no idea why it went wrong or why it let me do that. Also my memory is a bit fuzzy since it’s been a while, but as best I can remember what I did step by step:

          1. fuck around with power management configs
          2. using btrfs-assistant gui app, rolled back to before that
          3. btrfs-assistant created an additional snapshot, called backup something, I didn’t really pay attention
          4. reboot, all seemed good
          5. used btrfs-list to take a look, the subvolume that was the current root / was a child of the aformentioned backup subvolume
          6. started btrfs-assistant and deleted the backup subvolume
          7. system suddenly read only
          8. reboot, still read only
          9. btrfs check said broken refs and some other errors,
          10. i tried to let btrfs check fix the errors, which made it worse, now I couldn’t even mount the drive anymore because btrfs was completely borked
          11. used btrfs rescue, which got all files out onto an external drive successfully
          12. installed arch again and rsync the rescued files over the new install, everything works as before, all files are there
          • EinfachUnersetzlich@lemm.ee
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            8 months ago

            btrfs check said broken refs and some other errors,

            Gotcha. That must have been a kernel bug (or hardware error), none of the userspace utilities could cause it unless they were trying to manipulate the block device directly, which would be really dumb. It’s possible it wasn’t even related to the subvolume manipulation.