i had the same question so I went through the source code and, for now, doesn't seem like it has implemented such option.
brunacho
The site is sort of outdated, but one important missing aspect there is accesibility. Here are some notes that gather links and following on the discussions on the matter in case you're interested.
My distribution (archlinux) notifies of critical vulnerabilities that require user action. There's a news mailing list.
After that I rely on social network (Mastodon mostly) or lemmy for news, as vulnerabilities often get some conversation. Apart from that, software i'm really interested in I also follow through RSS so I get news when they update for their vulnerabilities -that is when the vulnerabilities are not self inflicted as the xz case-.
Gonna take a bit. The dudes been doing the releases for over a year, everything they touched is suspect now even if nothing earlier is known. Also some other associated accounts have been doing shady stuff too.
gonna take even a bit more now. Github closed the account and project making it really difficult to see their commits and merges and analyze them.
don't have any idea what i'm doing to the video but i'm watching it over and over again, worth it.
Great news for nvidia users.
Not sure if this affects my Pascal card at all (probably not as it's specifically not mentioned). I barely use the dedicated GPU anyway.
That looks like the grub file that's put in /boot to make the menu to boot the system.
Are you sure you've never run "grub2-mkconfig -o /etc/default/grub"? Because making the grub file you may have overwritten the config file.
By the look of things I would reinstall grub with my package manager to forcing to overrun config files. Keep in mind this would return the file to your distribution defaults.
Definitely not for my use case which is just having a desktop where I can write documents and surf the net. So I just don't go for it.
It appears it is not for your usecase either. I would second going for all binary distros like arch or void.
it's just a link to systemd-run which is a part of systemd, i doubt it works separately.
but, if you use s6 as an alternative init system, s6-sudo is a somewhat equivalent aproach to how run0 works (instead of systemd-run it calls s6-ipcclient)