I accidentally untarred archive intended to be extracted in root directory, which among others included some files for /etc directory.
I went on to rm -rv ~/etc, but I quickly typed rm -rv /etc instead, and hit enter, while using a root account.


Reusing names of critical system directories in subdirectories in your home dir.
Oh, my! Perfect use of that scene. I don’t always lol, when I say lol. But I lol’ed at this for real.
I agree with this take, don’t wanna blame the victim but there’s a lesson to be learned.
except if you read the accompanying text they already stated the issue by accidentally unpacking an archive to their user directory that was intended for the root directory. that’s how they got an etc dir in their user directory in the first place
Could make one archive intended to be unpacked from /etc/ and one archive that’s intended to be unpacked from /home/Alice/ , that way they wouldn’t need to be root for the user bit, and there would never be an etc directory to delete. And if they run tar test (t) and pwd first, they could check the intended actions were correct before running the full tar. Some tools can be dangerous, so the user should be aware, and have safety measures.
they acquired a tar package from somewhere else. the instructions said to extract it to the root directory (because of its file structure). they accidentally extracted it to their home dir
that is how this happened. not anything like what you were saying
I dunno, ~/bin is a fairly common thing in my experience, not that it ends up containing many actual binaries. (The system started it, miss, honest. A quarter of the things in my system’s /bin are text based.)
~/etc is seriously weird though. Never seen that before. On Debians, most of the user copies of things in /etc usually end up under ~/.local/ or at ~/.filenamehere
It should be ~/.local/bin
~/bin is the old-school location from before .local became a thing, and some of us have stuck to that ancient habit.
I think the home directory version of etc is ~/.config as per xdg.
I use ~/config/* to put directories named the same as system ones. I got used to it in BeOS and brought it to LFS when I finally accepted BeOS wasn’t doing what I needed anymore, kept doing it ever since.
So, you don’t do backups of /etc? Or parts of it?
I have those tars dir ssh, pam, and portage for Gentoo systems. Quickset way to set stuff up.
And before you start whining about ansible or puppet or what, I need those maybe 3-4 times a year to set up a temporary hardened system.
But may, just maybe, don’t assume everyone is a fucking moron or has no idea.
Edit Or just read what op did, I think that is pretty much the same
Well, OP didn’t say they used Arch, btw so it’s safe to assume.
(I hate that this needs a /s)