The y
is dangerous to be used without u
. Do not follow the advice above unless you know what you are doing. Instead, do pacman -Sy
u
jellyfin-server
The y
option tells pacman to update its package database.
In your case, your local database got out of sync with the database from the mirrors. This normal, newer versions of software are released all the time. Pacman then tried to get the latest locally known version of jellyfin from the mirrors, but they no longer have it, as a newer one replaced it.
By updating the database, pacman becomes aware of the newer version and can request it from the mirror. But there is now a subtle problem: the new package and some installed package could require incompatible versions of some dependency. When pacman decides to update the dependecy package, the other package is broken. This is called a "partial upgrade", which can seriously break your system if you are not careful.
The u
option upgrades all installed packages to the latest version, so the packages and their dependencies don't get out of sync with each other.
See Arch Wiki, System_maintenance for more explanation.
I should have specified, singular they. When part of a group, of course he feels addressed as part of the group
There is this one odd case of my friend, who uses she/her and he/him, but decidedly not they/them.
See also: Penis is OK, Vagina is a Content Violation
Edit: no idea why i was recommended a 3 year old post...
Did you set the modem to bridge mode/DMZ, or alternatively set it to port forward to the router. The router should then port forward to the server.
Are you sure the IP address in duckdns is correct? Do you have a static or dynamic public IP, and if dynamic, how are you updating it?
I don't quite understand what you mean by "controlling the loop parts." If you mean you have a giant loop() and want to split it into parts, i suggest you first extract these parts into seperate functions, which you can then move into other files. This allows you to keep your main file and it's loop intact, and have descriptively named functions.
@gratux
@lemmy.blahaj.zone