In this scenario we are configuring two Pi-holes running on the same network. pihole0
is the main DNS server while pihole1
is the secondary.
pihole0
192.168.1.4
http://pi.hole0/admin/
pihole1
192.168.1.5
http://pi.hole1/admin/
This should make True Color (24-bit) and italics work in your tmux session and vim/neovim when using Alacritty (and should be compatible with any other terminal emulator, including Kitty).
Running this script should look the same in tmux as without.
curl -s https://gist.githubusercontent.com/lifepillar/09a44b8cf0f9397465614e622979107f/raw/24-bit-color.sh >24-bit-color.sh
#!/bin/bash | |
sudo sed -i "/\[org\/gnome\/desktop\/interface\]/a\clock-format=\'24h\'" /etc/gdm3/greeter.dconf-defaults | |
gsettings set org.gtk.Settings.FileChooser clock-format 24h | |
gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.interface clock-format 24h |
From the comments: "These exact instructions are not working on Ubuntu 24.04. Ubuntu has changed the naming of ZFS partitions, partition 2 and 3 are switched around, and the boot/efi folder is now different."
I don't have my dual-disk test system any longer, and so can't adjust these steps myself.
Ubuntu Desktop 20.04 supports a single ZFS boot drive out of the box. I wanted a ZFS mirror, without going through an entirely manual setup of Ubuntu as described by OpenZFS in their instructions for Ubuntu 20.04 and instructions for Ubuntu 22.04
javascript: Promise.all([import('https://unpkg.com/turndown@6.0.0?module'), import('https://unpkg.com/@tehshrike/readability@0.2.0'), ]).then(async ([{ | |
default: Turndown | |
}, { | |
default: Readability | |
}]) => { | |
/* Optional vault name */ | |
const vault = ""; | |
/* Optional folder name such as "Clippings/" */ |