boy I wou'd be really screwed if I lost my data. Luckily I backed up my
most important data friday night.
On Tue, Aug 24, 2021 at 10:21 PM Michael Butash via PLUG-discuss <
plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org> wrote:
> As much as you randomly blow up your system Mike, you should embrace a
> separate nas (network attached storage) solution. If you want something
> simple, get a qnap or synology nas device, at least a 2 disk system, and
> use something like unison/rsync to replicate important data over cifs/nfs.
> You can buy cheaper nas systems on ebay, usually random chinese hardware
> suited to running freenas or like, but however you do it, have a copy of
> your data when experimenting and deleting anything.
>
> If I wiped out my home directory without a backup, I'd lose 20+ years of
> 100+ different companies I've worked at since late 90's (ie. my
> livelihood), not to mention almost 30 years of personal data, and just not
> an option. I replicate my data hourly between 2 laptops, 1 desktop, and 2
> synology nas systems that real-time replicate data directly. If I did
> screw up that bad, I'd just kill replication and move a copy of the data
> back from my nas.
>
> Last time I did something like that almost 20yr ago, I was moving files
> around, I accidentally started moving all files from /sbin into another
> directory, fubar'd the system (at the time, a monitoring server that I ran
> Cox Business Services off of), but learned real quick the importance of
> thinking before doing. Slow. It. Down. Think about what you're doing
> before hitting that enter button. It's much the same when I'm doing
> network deployments to enterprise devices, or just mucking around with my
> workstation. Don't be that guy if you're ever in a position to admin
> business systems.
>
> -mb
>
>
> On Tue, Aug 24, 2021 at 2:12 PM Michael via PLUG-discuss <
> plug-discuss@lists.phxlinux.org> wrote:
>
>> OOPS. I hit return after typin rm -rf it deleted everything in /home. So
>> I restored my system and now this happens:
>> bmike1@bmike1-desktop:~$ sudo apt install gparted
>> [sudo] password for bmike1:
>> Reading package lists... Done
>> Building dependency tree
>> Reading state information... Done
>> The following additional packages will be installed:
>> gparted-common
>> Suggested packages:
>> gpart reiser4progs udftools
>> E: Could not get lock /var/cache/apt/archives/lock. It is held by process
>> 84872 (synaptic)
>> N: Be aware that removing the lock file is not a solution and may break
>> your system.
>> E: Unable to lock directory /var/cache/apt/archives/
>> bmike1@bmike1-desktop:~$
>>
>>
>> it happened before and as a solution killed the roces. It happened again
>> so I must find a solution. WIll someone share their wisdom?
>>
>> --
>> :-)~MIKE~(-:
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