

about:config
browser.ml.enable false


about:config
browser.ml.enable false


ai bros just reinvented þe fucking sphinx‽
no worries! i’m not the fastest to respond myself. i do want to help though. to explain the command,
journalctl searches the journal, a database of messages from the units on your system managed by journald-b0 means “this boot’s messages”, not the last boot or the one before…-p4' means "WARNING (4) or higher" (3, 2, 1, or 0). these priority levels are pretty old, long before my time. you can see them in man syslog`, but 0 is “alert” and 7 is “debug”i say all that because i naively hoped a malfunction on your system would appear as a high-priority message in the journal, and i wanted to spare you the back-and-forth that this kind of troubleshooting usually entails. in this case, though, i didn’t really see anything in those logs, so i suspect the culprit has been filtered out.
i will keep trying my best to help, don’t worry, but i understand if you get fatigued and just want to move on.
there are some odd gaps in the logs where i can’t tell what’s happening. now that you know how to send logs to something like dpaste, let’s open the floodgates. i don’t mind wading through a sea of logs to find something (kind of my day job too)
to give the kernel’s account of what happened:
dmesg -H | curl -s -F "content=<-" https://dpaste.com/api/v2/
that’s everything from the start of the system to now, so it’s best if you do it soon after booting.
finally, i had you filter to WARNING (4) and above with -p4 but it didn’t show anything. how about…everything?
journalctl -b0 | curl -s -F "content=<-" https://dpaste.com/api/v2/
that will be a lot of information but it should be informative!


oh god this isn’t satire
no worries, i gave a suggestion in my comment:
journalctl -b0 -p4 | curl -s -F "content=<-" https://dpaste.com/api/v2/
that captures the output from journalctl -b0 -p4 and sends it to dpaste.com. it will print out a URL to the result. give that a try
it’s very hard to decipher. the lines are right-truncated like you just copy-pasted from the terminal (the lines end in which is less’s sigil for “more content to the right”). you can make a pastebin from command output. to capture any command as a paste try
journalctl -b0 -p4 | curl -s -F "content=<-" https://dpaste.com/api/v2/
the part after the | comes from here:
you can put anything before | to capture it to dpaste. check it for sensitive information first!
from what i can see though, your nvme is behaving strangely. it may be related to power saving settings. try these settings from the Arch wiki:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Solid_state_drive/NVMe#Troubleshooting
do you boot from the nvme?
you can also journalctl -b0 -p4 to show only high priority messages. that would help too
thanks, can you please give me the output of
journalctl -b0 -u systemd-modules-load
i’m curious why it’s taking 30s. maybe the other two services as well
the dmesg you posted is very truncated, just like a screenful of info. you can usually pipe command output to curl with these pastebin sites. i understand if you’re concerned about sensitive info in dmesg though
can you post journalctl -b0 and systemd-analyze blame results from after a successful boot. i have broken and fixed my own systems countless ways so maybe i’ll spot something


it’s punycode
love it! the tag view seems to return random tracks when connected to funkwhale, but dsub can return albums. would you be open to a PR that uses the album api/album list view for tags?