On 2022-07-26, Richmond wrote:
> Curt writes:
>
>> On 2022-07-26, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>>> On Tue, Jul 26, 2022 at 05:03:09PM +0300, Antti Talsta wrote:
On Tue, Jul 26, 2022 at 12:40:53PM +0100, Richmond wrote:
> I am trying to take a screenshot of a selected area.
> I think somet
Curt (12022-07-27):
> I've Imagemagick installed, so
>
> import image.png
This is my go-to solution too. Except when I want to capture the mouse
pointer too, in this case I use “ffmpeg -f x11grab”.
I would advise to add -depth 8; otherwise the PNG needlessly uses 16
bits per component.
> from
Can you post the output of
systemd-cgls
OpenPGP_signature
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
On 2022-07-27, Nicolas George wrote:
>
> Curt (12022-07-27):
>> I've Imagemagick installed, so
>> import image.png
>
> This is my go-to solution too. Except when I want to capture the mouse
> pointer too, in this case I use =E2=80=9Cffmpeg -f x11grab=E2=80=9D.
>
> I would advise to add -depth 8;
On Tue, 26 Jul 2022 21:54:18 +0200
Erwan David wrote:
> ssh-agent is usually started by your session manager. I do not know
> wether all DE use this, but you can find it in
>
> /etc/X11/Xsession.d/90x11-common_ssh-agent
True. The snippet in that file is nested in a conditional, though:
if ha
Le 27/07/2022 à 08:49, Thiemo Kellner a écrit :
My favorite is flameshot for its capabilities for annotation, marking
and such.
+1
On 7/26/22 04:40, Richmond wrote:
I am trying to take a screenshot of a selected area. The Wiki here:
https://wiki.debian.org/ScreenShots
I find it curious that only Gnome, Xfce, and KDE are listed on that page...
someone should step up and flesh it out for the other common desktops,
Please!
On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 09:08:59AM -0300, Chris Mitchell wrote:
> On Tue, 26 Jul 2022 21:54:18 +0200
> Erwan David wrote:
>
> > ssh-agent is usually started by your session manager. I do not know
> > wether all DE use this, but you can find it in
> >
> > /etc/X11/Xsession.d/90x11-common_ssh-age
On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 09:08:59AM -0300, Chris Mitchell wrote:
> On Tue, 26 Jul 2022 21:54:18 +0200
> Erwan David wrote:
>
> > ssh-agent is usually started by your session manager. I do not know
> > wether all DE use this, but you can find it in
> >
> > /etc/X11/Xsession.d/90x11-common_ssh-age
Jul. 26, 2022 17:00:46 Greg Wooledge :
> On Tue, Jul 26, 2022 at 03:40:48PM -0300, Chris Mitchell wrote:
>> Here's my service file:
>>
>> $ cat /etc/systemd/user/ssh-agent.service
>
> According to systemd.unit(5) this directory is for "User units created
> by the administrator".
Yup, that's me!
On Wed, 27 Jul 2022 11:04:49 +0200
Michael Biebl wrote:
> Can you post the output of
> systemd-cgls
First, for context:
$ systemd-cgls --user-unit ssh-agent.service
Unit ssh-agent.service
(/user.slice/user-1000.slice/user@1000.service/app.slice> └─3166
/usr/bin/ssh-agent -D -a /run/user/1000/s
On Mon, 11 Jul 2022 13:40:32 -0600
Charles Curley wrote:
> On Mon, 11 Jul 2022 21:01:48 +0200
> Maurizio Caloro wrote:
> >
> > # cat /lib/systemd/system/named.service
>
> First mistake: you should not be editing files in /lib/systemd/.
> Instead copy the file to edit into /etc/systemd/, and
Have the running linux system on the machine. Run lsblk to locate the
name of the boot partition. Once you have the name run blkid and copy the
uuid for use in the end of /etc/fstab and put in the path to the boot
device, the disk format ext4, defaults,nofail 1 2 on an fstab entry.
Next, run upda
On 7/27/22 08:02, tony wrote:
Hi,
I turned on my main home server after a few weeks absence, and got
smoke from its power supply. Fortunately, I have a backup system, which
does work; both are running Debian 10, so I swapped use to that machine.
and am able to work with that, but some of the fi
On 7/27/22 04:37, tony wrote:
Hi,
I turned on my main home server after a few weeks absence, and got
smoke from its power supply. Fortunately, I have a backup system, which
does work; both are running Debian 10, so I swapped use to that machine.
and am able to work with that, but some of the fi
HP printers have aself check.
You push the button and there is a check page.
Regards
Thank You
Von: Charles Curley
Gesendet: Dienstag, 26. Juli 2022 16:13
An: Debian Users
Betreff: Re: Three unsolvable Problems PRINTER SELFCHECK
On Tue, 26 Jul 2022 14:19:25 +00
tony composed on 2022-07-27 12:37 (UTC+0100):
> I turned on my main home server after a few weeks absence, and got
> smoke from its power supply. Fortunately, I have a backup system, which
> does work; both are running Debian 10, so I swapped use to that machine.
> and am able to work with that,
I would look at the UEFI vs BIOS boot options in the "backup" server and
compare it to the "broken" server and make sure they are the same. Also
check for BIOS updates and such.
-Erik-
On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 7:59 AM tony wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I turned on my main home server after a few weeks abse
On Wed Jul 27 10:30:05 2022 tony wrote:
> I turned on my main home server after a few weeks absence, and got
> smoke from its power supply. Fortunately, I have a backup system,
> which does work; both are running Debian 10, so I swapped use to that
> machine. and am able to work with that, but
On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 16:51:19 (+), Schwibinger Michael wrote:
> HP printers have a self check.
Yes, and sometimes several (printing, wireless, fax, etc).
> You push the button and there is a check page.
I don't think HP printers have a button that you can just press
and get a test page. Ple
On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 14:04:55 -0500, David Wright wrote:
> On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 16:51:19 (+), Schwibinger Michael wrote:
> > HP printers have a self check.
>
> Yes, and sometimes several (printing, wireless, fax, etc).
>
> > You push the button and there is a check page.
>
> I don't think
I googled: "mount solid state drive" Linux, and I got very few hits
(like 16?) which were mostly totally irrelevant.
I got a laptop with Windows installed on which I installed WSLg.
WIndows and WSLg both seem to detect the SSD just fine, but in ways
that are not totally clear to me.
What I care
https://wiki.debian.org/SSDOptimization
~
Albretch Mueller wrote:
> I got a laptop with Windows installed on which I installed WSLg.
> WIndows and WSLg both seem to detect the SSD just fine, but in ways
> that are not totally clear to me.
> What I care about is using the SSD for my data intensive code in
> Linux, but when I boot that co
Folks:
I'm running an Intel Core i3, model 10100. According to Intel's spec
sheet on their site, this CPU has VT-x (virtualization) support. From
what I've read, this shows up in "lscpu" as the "vmx" flag. When I run
lscpu on this chip, that flag doesn't show up. As a result, I can't run
any of th
pa...@quillandmouse.com (12022-07-27):
> Folks:
>
> I'm running an Intel Core i3, model 10100. According to Intel's spec
> sheet on their site, this CPU has VT-x (virtualization) support. From
> what I've read, this shows up in "lscpu" as the "vmx" flag. When I run
> lscpu on this chip, that flag
> On 25 Jul 2022, at 13:03, Schwibinger Michael wrote:
>
>
> Hello
> Ist the best way to repair
> the self check?
>
> HP 600
Hi Sophie, please would you confirm the exact model - eg Deskjet 600, OfficeJet
600, something else?
If you can't tell from looking at the machine, then running the
On Wed, 27 Jul 2022 23:17:33 +0200
Nicolas George wrote:
> Have you checked if virtualization is disabled in the setup? IIRC many
> systems disable it by default because it is supposed to make rootkits
> more dangerous or something.
Can you clarify "in the setup"?
Paul
--
Paul M. Foster
Perso
On Wed 27 Jul 2022, at 22:28, Gareth Evans wrote:
>> On 25 Jul 2022, at 13:03, Schwibinger Michael wrote:
>>
>> Hello
>> Ist the best way to repair
>> the self check?
>>
>> HP 600
>
> Hi Sophie, please would you confirm the exact model - eg Deskjet 600,
> OfficeJet 600, something else?
>
>
On Sun, Jul 24, 2022 at 01:37:34PM -0400, Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
> All,
>
> I am not getting any sound through HDMI. I have an AMD Ryzen 7 4700U CPU
> with integrated Renior Graphics. I checked the device and it is not muted.
> Does anyone have any ideas?
>
> inxi -F
> Audio:Device-1: A
On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 22:39:56 +0100, Gareth Evans wrote:
> On Wed 27 Jul 2022, at 22:28, Gareth Evans wrote:
> >> On 25 Jul 2022, at 13:03, Schwibinger Michael wrote:
> >>
> >> Hello
> >> Ist the best way to repair
> >> the self check?
> >>
> >> HP 600
> >
> > Hi Sophie, please would you c
An easy way to locate an ssd is to have it unplugged from the system and
run lsblk and save that to a file then plug the ssd in and run lsblk again
saving its output to another file. The line in the second file that's
missing from the first file is the ssd.
On Wed, 27 Jul 2022, Dan Ritter wrote:
> On 27 Jul 2022, at 23:42, Brian wrote:
> On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 22:39:56 +0100, Gareth Evans wrote:
>
>> On Wed 27 Jul 2022, at 22:28, Gareth Evans wrote:
On 25 Jul 2022, at 13:03, Schwibinger Michael wrote:
Hello
Ist the best way to repair
the self check?
HP
> On 28 Jul 2022, at 00:36, Gareth Evans wrote:
>
> [blah blah blah]
I would like Sophie to confirm the exact model so further checksg can be
suggested if indicated. There may be a solution of sorts.
Best wishes,
Gareth
On Thu, 28 Jul 2022 at 07:35, wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2022 23:17:33 +0200 Nicolas George wrote:
> > Have you checked if virtualization is disabled in the setup? IIRC many
> > systems disable it by default because it is supposed to make rootkits
> > more dangerous or something.
>
> Can you clarif
I just noticed I have over a million files lurking in
$HOME/.gnome2/keyrings/ with names of the form
login.keyring.temp-n
where n is a nine digit number.
Literally over a million:
ls ~/.gnome2/keyrings/ | wc
1695549 1695549 50118672
>From the names, I assume these are temporary fi
> On 28 Jul 2022, at 00:36, Gareth Evans wrote:
>
>>> [...] unless the [driverless] queue was added via lpadmin.
Just to correct the point, i keep forgetting, it seems even this fails with the
latest cups version on Bullseye where fax printers are concerned.
On Thu, 28 Jul 2022 09:41:51 +1000
David wrote:
> On Thu, 28 Jul 2022 at 07:35, wrote:
> > On Wed, 27 Jul 2022 23:17:33 +0200 Nicolas George
> > wrote:
>
> > > Have you checked if virtualization is disabled in the setup? IIRC
> > > many systems disable it by default because it is supposed to m
On 7/27/22 20:25, Gareth Evans wrote:
On 28 Jul 2022, at 00:36, Gareth Evans wrote:
[...] unless the [driverless] queue was added via lpadmin.
Just to correct the point, i keep forgetting, it seems even this fails with the
latest cups version on Bullseye where fax printers are concerned.
.
On Wed, 27 Jul 2022 17:50:42 -0600
Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
> I just noticed I have over a million files lurking in
> $HOME/.gnome2/keyrings/ with names of the form
> login.keyring.temp-n
> Is there an accepted way to
> keep them from accumulating like this?
You can probably cobble something
On Thu 28 Jul 2022, at 02:56, gene heskett wrote:
> [...] The driverless stuff DOES NOT work [...]
Hi Gene,
The reports from you, myself and Hans (and the lack of complaints from
non-fax-printer users) seem to suggest the problem affects only fax-capable
printers. This remains to be seen in S
Charles Curley writes:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2022 17:50:42 -0600
> Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
>
>> I just noticed I have over a million files lurking in
>> $HOME/.gnome2/keyrings/ with names of the form
>> login.keyring.temp-n
>
>> Is there an accepted way to
>> keep them from accumulating like this
On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 03:06:47PM -0500, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> I googled: "mount solid state drive" Linux, and I got very few hits
> (like 16?) which were mostly totally irrelevant.
First of all, you don't mount a drive. You mount a file system.
This may sound like an unimportant nit to pic
On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 06:54:32PM -0400, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> An easy way to locate an ssd is to have it unplugged from the system and
> run lsblk and save that to a file then plug the ssd in and run lsblk again
> saving its output to another file. The line in the second file that's
> missing f
On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 15:06:47 (-0500), Albretch Mueller wrote:
> I googled: "mount solid state drive" Linux, and I got very few hits
> (like 16?) which were mostly totally irrelevant.
> I got a laptop with Windows installed on which I installed WSLg.
> WIndows and WSLg both seem to detect the SS
On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 20:22:08 (+0100), Brian wrote:
> On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 14:04:55 -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 16:51:19 (+), Schwibinger Michael wrote:
> > > HP printers have a self check.
> >
> > Yes, and sometimes several (printing, wireless, fax, etc).
> >
> > >
On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 21:56:44 (-0400), gene heskett wrote:
> On 7/27/22 20:25, Gareth Evans wrote:
> > > On 28 Jul 2022, at 00:36, Gareth Evans wrote:
> > >
> > > > > [...] unless the [driverless] queue was added via lpadmin.
> > Just to correct the point, i keep forgetting, it seems even this f
On Thu 28 Jul 2022 at 06:33:18 (+0200), to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 06:54:32PM -0400, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> > An easy way to locate an ssd is to have it unplugged from the system and
> > run lsblk and save that to a file then plug the ssd in and run lsblk again
> > saving its
to...@tuxteam.de (12022-07-28):
> To add one to the toolbox: do "tail -f /var/log/messages" while plugging
> in the device: you'll watch your OS pondering on what to do about it.
>
> Or do "dmesg | tail" right away after having plugged it in. In both cases
> you'll see which name the device was re
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