• alias_qr_rainmaker@lemmy.worldOP
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    18 hours ago

    didn’t let me remove root. i ran the command with sudo and it just kept saying “can’t remove root”. i’m using UTM on macOS tahoe

      • alias_qr_rainmaker@lemmy.worldOP
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        17 hours ago

        i’ve been a macbro for 8 years but i just got into linux, what…two days ago? so i don’t know any of the lingo. but i just googled strace,looks like it’s good for debugging shit. neat! i try to do as much as i can from the terminal as possible

    • lurch (he/him)@sh.itjust.works
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      18 hours ago

      if it just says that and doesn’t do anything, there’s some extra safety added, maybe in sudo or the shell.

      otherwise, it can’t remove “/”, because it’s a mount point in use. the point is that the recursive switch removes all subdirs, which are not mount points, leaving just empty disks an a handful dirs behind.

      • alias_qr_rainmaker@lemmy.worldOP
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        17 hours ago

        after i ran it, none of my commands worked. well of course they didn’t work, everything but root got wiped, so goodbye /usr/bin and all that

        • caseyweederman@lemmy.ca
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          4 hours ago

          I did that on purpose once to test Timeshift’s restore. I had to boot to a live image to run the restoration, but it worked great! Very impressed.
          Only applies if the Timeshift directory is not in the removed path.