I navigated to the directory and clicked run in konsole. Clicking on deck-tailscale.sh in the directory itself and clicking run in konsole results in it saying could not find /home/deck/documents/github/deck-tailscale.sh.
I navigated to the directory and clicked run in konsole. Clicking on deck-tailscale.sh in the directory itself and clicking run in konsole results in it saying could not find /home/deck/documents/github/deck-tailscale.sh.
I ran it from the local folder, literaly clicked on tailscale.sh and clicked run in konsole. still says it doesn’t exist when I’m fucking looking at it.
I literaly gave the output in my message “no such file or directory”
step one clone repo
step two Run sudo bash tailscale.sh to install Tailscale
result no such file or directory
You have to setup a sudo password originally to install things in desktop mode but that has been done, sudo is not the issue. literally copy and pasted from this article https://github.com/tailscale-dev/deck-tailscale. It fails on step 2 claiming the directory does not exist.
That does not work, thats why I came here to ask. It fails at step 2.
Ah yes, in that context I would agree.
“powerful” LOL it’s a turd
but yeah my current setup also happens to play games and adding storage is much easier cuz I can just throw whatever in there instead of making sure the drive conforms to some arbitrary crap.
I have an old dell power edge that I got from work that I used as a NAS for a while, it sucked down more juice than the old PC I was using and was stupidly loud all the time. I ended up transferring everything back to my old PC and now that turd just sits there waiting for someone else to be dumb enough to buy it from me. I wouldn’t waste the money personally.
Is there a reason you don’t want to use an old PC and install a giant drive or series of mid sized drives? You could keep some e-waste out of the bin that way and save tons of money not buying hardware you might not even need.
Well super that worked! Thanks. Now I just gotta figure out how to configure it.