Wouldn’t that be getting rid of the libs?
I think this would be ‘owning’ the libs:
chown -R $(whoami) /usr/libchown -R nobody:nobody /usr/lib
Ain’t nobody owning these libs
only if
chown -R nobody:nobody /usr/lib
returns a nonzero status code right?
Chowning the libs.
For best results, use: clown
No I’m pretty sure that would be chown
[main@nixos-laptop:~]$ ls /usr/lib
ls: cannot access ‘/usr/lib’: No such file or directory
…success?
Why does that shift key say delete?
Also that usually doesn’t execute a typed in line.
I’m confused.
Looks like a perfectly normal “Enter” key on an ANSI keyboard. Why the confusion?
Looks like the return key, must be an AI keyboard.
Must be some obscure keyboard layout.
This is the Enter key, Shift is right below
For the sake of memes, Enter is commonly replaced with something like “delete” or “destroy” or “ban” or whatever, illustrating the decisive action. It has nothing to do with the actual Delete key.
elon would probably do this for real if you told him it owned the libs
Out of the loop ? Let me explain :
The text in the image is a computer command that can run on Unix Linux computers and it removes an important part of the operating system that is called “lib”.
After running this successfully, part of the operating system would have to be reinstalled.
Ahem…
chown [OWNER] /usr/lib
serious: how important is that to the system? and how destructive is it?
Those are libraries used by user space applications. Most distros won’t boot without them, but you can still get into a recovery shell.
One one will set my defaults but myself