In this article, I will share some of my experience on installing NVIDIA driver and CUDA on Linux OS. Here I mainly use Ubuntu as example. Comments for CentOS/Fedora are also provided as much as I can.
To remove a submodule you need to:
- Delete the relevant section from the .gitmodules file.
- Stage the .gitmodules changes git add .gitmodules
- Delete the relevant section from .git/config.
- Run git rm --cached path_to_submodule (no trailing slash).
- Run rm -rf .git/modules/path_to_submodule (no trailing slash).
- Commit git commit -m "Removed submodule "
- Delete the now untracked submodule files rm -rf path_to_submodule
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
#!/bin/bash | |
# | |
# rotate_desktop.sh | |
# | |
# Rotates modern Linux desktop screen and input devices to match. Handy for | |
# convertible notebooks. Call this script from panel launchers, keyboard | |
# shortcuts, or touch gesture bindings (xSwipe, touchegg, etc.). | |
# | |
# Using transformation matrix bits taken from: | |
# https://wiki.ubuntu.com/X/InputCoordinateTransformation |
This process requires that you are able to ssh OR log in locally using the root user account and that no services be running as users out of /home on the target machine.
The examples are from a default installation with no customization-you NEED to know what you're working with for volumes/partitions to not horribly break things.
By default, CentOS 7 uses XFS for the file system and Logical Volume Manager (LVM), creating 3 partitions: /
,/home
and swap.
NOTE: If you want to be sure that nothing is writing to /home
you can either modify the host to boot into single-user mode OR try to use the
systemctl isolate runlevel1.target
command to switch (not tested! should work).