start new:
tmux
start new with session name:
tmux new -s myname
So, with credit to the Factorio wiki and cbednarski's helpful gist, I managed to eventually setup a Factorio headless server. Although, I thought the process could be nailed down/simplified to be a bit more 'tutorialised' and also to document how I got it all working for my future records.
The specific distro/version I'm using for this guide being Ubuntu Server 16.04.1 LTS
. Although, that shouldn't matter, as long as your distro supports systemd
(just for this guide, not a Factorio headless requirement, although most distros use it as standard now).
The version of Factorio I shall be using is 0.14.20
, although should work for any version of Factorio 0.14.12
and higher.
Just a note to newcomers: If there are any issues with the installation steps, people in the comments are doing a good job
I have a pet project I work on, every now and then. CNoEvil.
The concept is simple enough.
What if, for a moment, we forgot all the rules we know. That we ignore every good idea, and accept all the terrible ones. That nothing is off limits. Can we turn C into a new language? Can we do what Lisp and Forth let the over-eager programmer do, but in C?
/* touch -- change modification and access times of files | |
Copyright (C) 1987, 1989-1991, 1995-2005, 2007-2011 Free Software | |
Foundation, Inc. | |
This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify | |
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by | |
the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or | |
(at your option) any later version. | |
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, |
See imgur / linked pastebin and github mirror for 1-8 → 1-8 balancers. Creator: raynquist, github mirror linked in Balancers Illustrated: 1 through 8 balancers explained, imgur album linked in Balancer Book Update (Summer 2019)
There was a reddit post about installing Arch on NTFS3 partition. Since Windows and Linux doesn't have directories with same names under the /
(C:\
), I thought it's possible, and turned out it was actually possible.
If you are not familiar to Linux, for example you've searched on Google "how to dualboot Linux and Windos" or brbrbr... you mustn't try this. This is not practical.