My only gut ‘guess’ is that your original mirror was out of date, then you happened to switch to one mid sync potentially.
My only gut ‘guess’ is that your original mirror was out of date, then you happened to switch to one mid sync potentially.
well… thats a good sign at least. hopefully it finally latched on to some working mirrors then. I’d surely think it should find that library now lol
this is very, very strange behavior you’re seeing then.
I have the following in my /etc/pacman.conf
[core]
SigLevel = PackageRequired
Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
[extra]
SigLevel = PackageRequired
Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
[multilib]
SigLevel = PackageRequired
Include = /etc/pacman.d/mirrorlist
Does yours look like that?
and for mirror list, I have the following mirrors:
Server = https://mirror.stephanie.is/archlinux/$repo/os/$arch
Server = https://nocix.mm.fcix.net/archlinux/$repo/os/$arch
Server = https://ohioix.mm.fcix.net/archlinux/$repo/os/$arch
Server = https://mnvoip.mm.fcix.net/archlinux/$repo/os/$arch
Server = https://arch.mirror.ivo.st/$repo/os/$arch
these settings yield me the python library just fine
Edit: the multilib repo is optional in the pacman.conf, as the package you want is in the extra
repo.
Entertain me, what’s the output of pacman -Qi python| grep Architecture
?
I suppose you could also clean out cached packages with pacman -Scc
and then delete the package database files in /var/lib/pacman/sync
so that you know for a fact that you are getting a fresh sync and it not depending on anything cached.
but the package is certainly there, are you able to directly download it from https://arch.mirror.constant.com/extra/os/x86_64/python-polib-1.2.0-2-any.pkg.tar.zst from a browser so we can rule out any weird dns fuckiness?
Well for the arch.mirror.constant.com mirror at the top, its certainly there.
so doing pacman -Syyu python-polib
Should find the package.
For sanity’s sake, you are on a X86_64 system, right?
What mirror entry ended up in at the top after running reflector? I can just check the mirror directly.
The package comes up for me just fine on whatever I have for a mirror currently. I’ll have to look in a bit what mirror I use
I would check that your pacman mirror is not out of date and sees the new package.
You’ll be shocked to know that bluesky is open source then and PDS is well on its way to allowing you to host your own instance.
If a job asks you to rate your own morality, 9/10 times it’s a shit job as jobs worth having don’t ask this kind of bullshit.
So any firing would be sparing someone from a shitty employment.
Lol. I wonder if his followers on truth social not being happy with him backing out of debating a woman had anything to do with it.
Either that or his handlers think he needs to do this to attempt to be relevant again.
You don’t need the server. It happily works with storing notes as files and syncing them with syncthing.
Joplin server is a separate product that is for if you want to run a web server to sync and collaborate on notes.
The ‘block element’ picker is the big one that can not be implemented in the lite version.
Also included block lists can’t update unless the extension itself updates.
If you’re not stuck on chrome due to workplace policy or something, now is the time to switch to Firefox
It’s not something that can be worked around. It’s specifically a design feature of manifest v3 to restrict these types of things.
Your options are to accept this or use a different browser.
The ‘block element’ picker is the big one that can not be implemented in the lite version.
Also included block lists can’t update unless the extension itself updates.
It certainly will after it kills Manifest v2 entirely soon. goodbye good version of ublock
If you’re planning for this type of failure, what you probably want instead is Aurora from the Universal Blue project. Since it’s fedora silverblue underneath, your OS either updates all at once or doesn’t.
So what I’m hearing is install Linux-LTS and pacsnap
The problem is discord never deletes files, no matter how old they are. So they have a perpetually growing storage need