On Sunday, March 22, 2020 2:28:13 PM CET Piscium via arch-general wrote:
> Before Arch I used Fedora for 7 years. I found Fedora far more stable
> than Arch when upgrading to a new Fedora version 3 months after
> release when most bugs have been fixed. With Arch there is always
> something that doe
On Wednesday, July 3, 2019 2:59:01 PM CEST Genes Lists via arch-general wrote:
> On 7/3/19 3:58 AM, Bennett Piater wrote:
> > To clarify: I did not find an upstream bug, and I don't know that this
> > is an upstream issue.
>
> It is an upstream bug - peraps my previou
On 2019-07-03 10:24, Ralf Mardorf via arch-general wrote:
Hi,
since I didn't follow this thread close enough, I don't know if this
is an Arch or upstream related issue. However, it's crass if you
consider it to be most likely an upstream bug and you think somebody
else should do your job.
"O
On 2019-07-03 09:51, Ralf Mardorf via arch-general wrote:
On Wed, 03 Jul 2019 09:25:46 +0200, Bennett Piater wrote:
I opened an Arch bug so we can track it:
https://bugs.archlinux.org/task/63079
The maintainers can report it further upstream, they know where -
that's what they ar
On 2019-07-03 06:38, Oliver Jaksch via arch-general wrote:
Glad that this (4.19 in your case) works for you, too.
Good idea in general. But where? Seems that this is Intels' thing again
and
their list of open bugs is already extensive :(
I opened an Arch bug so we can track it:
https://bu
On Tuesday, July 2, 2019 9:59:57 AM CEST Oliver Jaksch via arch-general wrote:
> There are *some* issues with intel gpu's and recent kernels. I can't use
> multiple monitors in most of the cases as the i915 module misinterpret
> possible resolutions, for example.
>
> https://bbs.archlinux.org/view
Have you checked the troubleshooting options on
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Intel_graphics. I also recall an
intel
issue with recent kernels, but can't put my hand on a link. The
problems
experienced with some are listed in the wiki.
There are *some* issues with intel gpu's and recen
Hi,
I'm using a Thinkpad T450s with Intel graphics.
Yesterday, I could no longer connect external monitors via miniDP.
They were not detected at all, either by xrandr in i3 or by sway
(wayland).
I didn't have time to dig out a VGA cable and try that, so I cannot rule
out physical damage yet - I
On 2019-06-25 12:11, Ralf Mardorf via arch-general wrote:
Six words are just six words out of an assessable vocabulary.
"This level of unpredictability assumes that a potential attacker knows
that Diceware has been used to generate the passphrase, knows the
particular word list used, and know
On 2019-06-25 11:09, Ralf Mardorf via arch-general wrote:
On Tue, 25 Jun 2019 09:35:53 +0100, Ralph Corderoy wrote:
Are you familiar with https://xkcd.com/936/ ?
Too funny, that is the method I described and while I was writing my
email, you posted that cartoon. However, even this suffers from
On Saturday, March 23, 2019 6:05:59 AM CET David C. Rankin wrote:
> In the past there was a wonderful "Beginner's Guide" with detailed a
> detailed install procedure with expanded explanations for each step. When
> the arch installer went away, it was removed shortly thereafter. It would
> be worth
>Perhaps there is something provided by
>e.g. KDE, that allows to access an Android filesystem.
I recommend Dolphin - or KDEConnect, which works outside of KDE.
--
GPG fingerprint: 871F 1047 7DB3 DDED 5FC4 47B2 26C7 E577 EF96 7808
On 06/04/2018 12:41 PM, David C. Rankin wrote:
> That is the tarball generated by:
>
> $ makepkg --printsrcinfo > .SRCINFO
> $ makepkg -S --sign -f
>
> That results in the two untracked files:
>
> console-blanking-0.0.1-4.src.tar.gz
> console-blanking-0.0.1-4.src.tar.gz.sig
>
> The ta
On 06/04/2018 11:39 AM, David C. Rankin wrote:
> On 06/04/2018 04:30 AM, Bennett Piater wrote:
>> This is a different error, is it not?
>> Does your most recent commit contain the LICENSE file, or did you only
>> add PKGBUILD and .SRCINFO?
>
> Oh, it's there...
On 06/04/2018 11:27 AM, David C. Rankin wrote:
> Well I tried without `-a` and no changes to .SRCINFO or PKGBUILD were
> incorporated.
Did you add the files before committing?
> remote: error: missing source file: LICENSE
This is a different error, is it not?
Does your most recent commit contain
On 06/04/2018 10:49 AM, Tinu Weber wrote:
>> $ git commit -am "console-blanking-0.0.1-2"
>>
> On Mon, Jun 04, 2018 at 03:38:08 -0500, David C. Rankin wrote:
>
> It appears you've committed also the built package files into the repo.>
never git commit -a.
always manually track files using git
On 05/19/2018 10:40 AM, Jens John wrote:
> On Fri, May 18, 2018 at 11:39:05PM +0200, Jeanette C. via arch-general
> wrote:
>
> You may want to use something like
>
> tell () { dict "$@" | colorit | less -R
> }
>
> to get a coloured output, which is much more practical for long result
>
On 04/10/2018 12:44 PM, Hunter Jozwiak via arch-general wrote:
> I do not have a spare laptop or network card. Everything was working
> perfectly fine before I installed Windows, so I have no idea what is
> going on here.
Interesting. Maybe windows turned something off? Broken power saving
featu
On 04/10/2018 12:10 PM, morganamilo via arch-general wrote:
>
>
> On 10/04/18 10:45, Hunter Jozwiak via arch-general wrote:
> Campus wifi is usually wpa enterprise which I've always had trouble
> with. I don't know how installing windows could cause this or how to fix
> this but I would recomme
On 02/13/2018 06:13 AM, Shridhar Daithankar wrote:
> On Tuesday 13 February 2018 8:33:09 AM IST you wrote:
>
> kde plasma wayland to be specific :( It all works under kde plasma Xorg.
Yes, do definitely file a bug upstream.
Also, plasma wayland is still considered experimental, so don't expect
i
On 02/06/2018 11:08 PM, Giovanni Santini via arch-general wrote:
> Good evening,
> I am writing here since I do believe people here might have found
> solutions already to my problems.
>
> Sadly, I am the problem, as I love GNOME Shell (ops).
> Jokes aside, I love its interface and behaviour; alth
> Quick tip or link of a howto? It's been ages since I set anything up
> with GPG and co.
cat ~/.gnupg/gpg.conf:
[...]
# auto-key-retrieve : automatically fetch keys as needed from the
keyserver when verifying signatures or when importing keys that have
been revoked by a revocation key that is n
> I know this can be circumvented by editing the pkgbuild file and
> removing the verification option, but that feels wrong. Is there a
> systematic way to update the relevant keys?
You are supposed to manually download the keys, ideally from a trusted
source.
Another option would be to configure
> > Where can I get this "downgrade" command?
> I don't want to put any words in Ralf's mouth, but I don't know of any other
> way to do it :)
There is a downgrade package in AUR which does that automatically :)
On July 24, 2017 9:36:39 AM GMT+02:00, Junayeed Ahnaf via arch-general
wrote:
>All fine and good but I don't see arch being installed on something
>other than desktop/laptop. Of course there are niche cases as arch
>server I do not doubt but how much of arch install base is traditional
>desk
On 06/27/2017 04:15 PM, Francesco Porro via arch-general wrote:
>
> I'm having another trouble, but this time is about QT-apps looks on
> Gnome, so maybe it's better discussing to a new mail-thread.
I assume you mean that QT5 apps don't use any theme?
There are several ways to fix that, you can f
On April 2, 2017 7:06:59 AM GMT+02:00, Rijul Gulati via arch-general
wrote:
>Hello,
>I have recently installed Arch on my desktop machine (KDE).
>I want to access android device (MTP) from terminal. The device is
>accessible from file manager (Dolphin). This means it has to be mounted
>somewher
Reply-To is not what you are supposed to look into; look at In-Reply-To!
On 03/07/2017 11:06 AM, fnodeuser wrote:
> test
>
--
GPG fingerprint: 871F 1047 7DB3 DDED 5FC4 47B2 26C7 E577 EF96 7808
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
On 03/06/2017 10:03 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> I did not wrote about the NSA. I only pointed out that even the NSA
> doesn't get all the data as a gift. Why should a researcher get such
> data as a gift? You are seemingly already that used to data mining and
> offended privacy, that it's good and
Have a look at aurutils :)
On 03/01/2017 05:45 PM, Robert Wong via arch-general wrote:
> But I'm not meaning disappealing, I just felt uncomfortable when I
> see the packages from the AUR can't be updated by the pacman and I
> don' feel like using yaourt... Probably it's my obsessive compulsive
>
On 02/02/2017 07:28 PM, Leonid Isaev wrote:
> I already described an approach when one always runs browsers, pdf readers,
> etc, inside an lxc container, as an unprivileged user. That container resides
> on a filesystem mounted with nosuid (so things like ping, su, sudo won't
> work),
> and has a
On 12/23/2016 03:17 PM, Mauro Santos via arch-general wrote:
> There is an LTS kernel in the repos, which you
> can have installed exactly for things like this.
Exactly. I never actually needed it, but I have linux-lts installed and
configured in systemd-boot for cases like this.
Keeping old kerne
> Other than that, I don't like gentoo's way of dealing with this
> problems other than the fact they ship tooling to actually deal with
> the 3-way merge pacman expects from the user. I'd welcome suggestions
> on this and actually was not smart enough up to now to somehow have a
> script dig up th
>> Is there any voting system that we have so that we can also
>> democratically vote for stronger hashes?
>
> The Arch developers decide this, not a democratically vote ;).
Arch is not a democracy, that has been said many times.
--
GPG fingerprint: 871F 1047 7DB3 DDED 5FC4 47B2 26C7 E577 EF96
> You are partly right. For a checksum CRC would be best. Fast and
> simple, as its meant as checksum, not as a hash.
You misunderstand something. Every checksum is also a hash (a mapping to
another domain), and cryptographic hash functions always produce checksums.
> So possibly we should get o
On 12/07/2016 11:17 AM, Gregory Mullen wrote:
> If the argument left is, I don't want (better checksum) because it's
> shouldn't be thought of as a security check, and I want a security check.
>
> Why can't the requirement be PGP sig's are now required, and we drop the
> checksum completely?
Won'
> In fact, I am making CRC the default.
I assume this to be sarcasm.
In any case, this may not be a good idea because the younglings will
have never heard about it and don't know how insecure it is ;)
Cheers,
Bennett
--
GPG fingerprint: 871F 1047 7DB3 DDED 5FC4 47B2 26C7 E577 EF96 7808
signa
> It was in the news today. At CERN by accident a black hole was
> produced. It expands, Switzerland already is lost, now the black hole
> eats words from emails, since it has got impact on German Internet
> nodes. If we don't stop replying, the black hole will grow by eating
> word by word and soo
I prever ancient greek, so here you go:
τῇ καλλίστῃ :)
I knew it would pay of to learn that :D
Cheers,
Bennett
On 12/02/2016 06:53 PM, Martin Kühne via arch-general wrote:
> Wait a minute, wait a minute.
> I just realized some crucial aspect of your fnord.
> You stripped the context yourself, ad
> Another very useful case would be using containers as a chroot replacement
> for having clean (only what's in the recipe), reproducable build environments
> for building arch packages. It would also allow installing makedeps only in
> the container/chroot or make cross-compilation easier to manag
> o...@ubuntu.com is deeply involved in working on snappy.
> ^^
> ^^
>
> Date: Sun, 09 Oct 2016 14:40:32 +0200
> Subject: Re: Question about Snaps
> To: ubuntu-us...@lists.ubuntu.com
> From: o...@ubuntu.com
>
> [snip]
>
> snaps are the future in the ubuntu e
> Ralf, exactly, and that is to what I'm attracted.
That they maintain it doesn't necessarily mean that they will also make
sure that it works with new library versions. It sounded more like bug-
and security fixes to me.
Arch is not like Debian or even Ubuntu. Most libraries get updated as
soon
On 11/01/2016 12:40 AM, Allan McRae wrote:
> I would like some bourbon.
>
> Allan
I like your sense of humor :)
>
> * It might appear unrelated, but I can spend time on pacman/makepkg if I
> don't have to work for bourbon. Then again, bourbon reduces the quality
> of my coding after a point...
> Any PKGBUILD kept in git can already optionally have this feature. See
> git-commit(1), specifically, its --gpg-sign option.
I know that, I have
[commit]
gpgsign = true
in my ~/.gitconfig.
It would be nice if more people did that and if makepkg checked that,
though.
It would probabl
On 10/31/2016 06:04 PM, Levente Polyak wrote:
> On the other side we have a dev/TU authenticating the buildscript.
> Both cover certain areas but are still independent and one does not make
> the other futile.
Since this thread is helpfully on arch-general now, I want to quickly
chime in and say t
> Not using fprint, but merely an idea (you have possibly already checked
> that): maybe the PAM-file for the screenlocker has a higher priority for
> passwords than for the fingerprint sensor while the rest has it the
> other way around.
>
> iirc this depends on the ordering of the corresponding m
> Unfortunately I can't help you, I'm just curious.
Well, you did anyway!
> If you type no password at all, just push enter, does the fingerprint
> check allow you to unlock the screen? Or doesn't it appear, if you just
> push enter without typing a password?
I tested it with kscreenlocker and x
Hi all,
I have been trying to get fprint working properly with screen lockers
for months and have yet to find a working solution.
I am using i3wm without DM.
Login on the TTY and sudo work properly: They ask me to swipe the finger
and then ask for my password if that didn't work.
However, every s
On 09/24/2016 11:59 AM, Andrea Scarpino wrote:
> Hi everybody,
>
> I'm happy to announce my tiny project named arch-audit[1].
>
> It parses the CVE wiki page[2] and reports which packages on your system are
> affected by a vulnerability and if a fixed version for that package is
> already
> av
Oh, that looks promising. I'll read through those issues tomorrow.
Thank you! :)
Cheers,
Bennett
On 09/11/2016 09:08 PM, Martin Kühne via arch-general wrote:
> Oh, this stuff might all be related to the issue: [0], [1], [2]
>
> cheers!
> mar77i
>
> [0]
> https://faq.i3wm.org/question/4631/dont
> No freeze since the one I told you about! I will definitely
> investigate further if/when I get a new one.
Very weird...
I had another one yesterday, but again, no clue what caused it.
$(killall -CONT i3) fixed it again, so be sure to try that if you get
another freeze :)
Sadly, the logs contai
> Comparing your pacman.log with mine (mine taken from 2016-08-23 to
> 2016-09-05), here is the list of common packages we both have either
> installed or upgraded:
>
> - man-db
> - mariadb
> - mariadb-clients
> - mediainfo
> - nano
> - networkmanager
> - openvpn
> - pacman-mirrorlist
> - python2-
> .xsession-errors contains the output of every GUI app you are running,
> as if you would launch all those apps in terminals.
That's good to know, thank you :)
I'm very curious as to what I will (or won't) find next time the freeze
happens. It hasn't happened this boot, ever since I sent SIGCONT
> Regarding
>
> https://www.google.de/?gws_rd=ssl#q=+linux+no+.xsession-errors
> https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=143068
> http://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/slackware-14/where-is-~-xsession-errors-log-867498/
>
> $ startx 2> ~/.xsession-errors
>
> should do the job.
Thank you, I
I do not have that file.
Cheers,
Bennett
On 09/09/2016 05:17 PM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Fri, 9 Sep 2016 16:11:48 +0200, Bennett Piater wrote:
>> I've had a very elusive and frustrating problem this week and don't
>> know where to look anymore.
>
> Where did
> (I think I managed to trace them back to Sept 1st and Sept 5th).
My last update before the apparently breaking one was 2016-08-24.
So, maybe some upgrade between 2016-08-24 and 2016-09-04 doesn't play
well with i3...
Would you mind cross-checking your upgrades between 2016-08-24 and
2016-09-01
Hi all,
I've had a very elusive and frustrating problem this week and don't know
where to look anymore.
Maybe one of you has an idea? :)
Since 2016-09-04, i3wm freezes every once and a while; often after
waking the screen (even if it wasn't locked), a few times also directly
or a few minutes after
On 08/06/2016 03:40 PM, pelzflorian (Florian Pelz) wrote:
> Thank you. I now tend towards pacbub; bubblepac seems too long. pacbub
> is similar to pacman and pacpak. It is also a pun on pacman because in
> German “der bub” is “the boy”.
I like that too :)
Cheers,
Bennett
--
GPG fingerprint: 871
> I will need a new name for a pacpak without Flatpak (bpac and pacwrap
> are already taken; maybe bubblepac) but I will continue working on it
> slowly…
Thanks for letting us know!
I like bubblepac, it sounds good :)
Cheers,
Bennett
--
GPG fingerprint: 871F 1047 7DB3 DDED 5FC4 47B2 26C7 E577
> fakeroot is part of core,
> https://www.archlinux.org/packages/core/x86_64/fakeroot/ .
Oh, I completely missed that.
Thanks, that makes perfect sense :)
Cheers,
Bennett
--
GPG fingerprint: 871F 1047 7DB3 DDED 5FC4 47B2 26C7 E577 EF96 7808
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signatur
Hi,
I have a quick question.
Makepkg, which is provided by pacman, doesn't work without fakeroot.
Is there a reason why pacman doesnt opdep on it?
Cheers,
Bennett
--
GPG fingerprint: 871F 1047 7DB3 DDED 5FC4 47B2 26C7 E577 EF96 7808
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Description: OpenPGP digital signature
On 07/10/2016 10:43 PM, pelzflorian (Florian Pelz) wrote:
> pacpak is not meant to redistribute already packaged containers from
> upstream. Instead it can be used to create containers from existing Arch
> packages. Basically, a copy of Arch is installed into a container
> runtime. Then different
On 07/10/2016 02:18 PM, pelzflorian (Florian Pelz) wrote:
> The intention is that, once implemented, `pacpak -Syu` or maybe `pacpak
> -Su` will install a current version of all apps and runtimes. Old
> versions of apps and app runtimes that are not used by any app could be
> cleaned by `pacpak -S
> A specter is haunting the GNU/Linux ecosystem: the specter of per-user
> containerization. Software like Flatpak and Snappy promise fully
> sandboxed GNU/Linux application bundles (instead of merely launching an
> application with fewer privileges but without hiding the operating
> system, like B
> Unsubscribe
To unsubscribe, use the request address instead of the main one.
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> It's a PITA that even users who don't use GNOME, KDE or similar crap
> nowadays get broken environments, because even apps that are not from a
> bloatware DE break.
FWIW, I'm using a lot of KDE apps in i3WM and don't have any problems.
I have the GTK problems of course, but all my QT things beha
On 03/15/2016 06:26 PM, Zachary Kline wrote:
> Hi Murari,
>
> Thank you for this suggestion. It seems to have worked as expected. My laptop
> defaults to Arch, but I can boot Windows with the second entry.
> I hope I remember to upgrade the renamed image when systems-boot changes. I
> don’t an
Ksnapshot doesn't exist anymore. It was replaced by spectacle.
Did you read the logs after the upgrade?
On 02/16/2016 03:16 PM, Maykel Franco wrote:
> Hi, after update archlinux system, ksnapshot not work fine... Te key impr
> pet sys not work...
>
> Anybody with the same problem?
>
--
GPG fi
> Where ? I couldn’t find any. The only critical bug I was aware of is
> about old Intel GFX, but it has been solved in 4.3.3-2.
Simple, maybe naive search [0]. But you are right, I misread - there is
no critical bug left.
> No problem here, with HD4600 on one and 945GM on another one. ;)
Thanks
Hi everyone,
I just saw that 4.3.3-2 hit stable.
There are still open bugs, one of them critical, about the 4.3 series on
the bug tracker.
I heard of a lot of issues around this kernel on the dev-public mailing
list. Does anyone have problems with this update?
Also, does anyone have problems usin
I'm another extremely satisfied i3wm user.
Dmenu is amazing, and everything about i3 is so clean.
The config file syntax, the design principles, the container system, the
looks...
I use ranger as a (text-mode) file manager and dolphin when I want a
graphical one. Gwenview as image viewer. I tend
> I believe you can find extra icons either in the repos or in the AUR. If
> nothing else, then you can also try http://kde-look.org/
He was talking about *system tray* icons.
A lot of "generic" system tray things didn't show up in Plasma 5 because
they changed to a new spec and completely dropp
Hello,
I cannot connect to wifi networks using netctl or netctl-auto.
Some journalctl -xe output is attached for the two types of errors I
encountered.
The only action I could remember that could have had anything to do with
this was an upgrade of wpa_supplicant, so I googled and found [0].
Howeve
Hello,
I cannot connect to wifi networks using netctl or netctl-auto.
Some journalctl -xe output is attached.
The only action I could remember that could have had anything to do with
this was an upgrade of wpa_supplicant, so I googled and found [0].
However, unlike the commenters on that bug, it s
> I've been searching if rerunning the bootloader from an initramfs is
> possible but my searches have come up empty.
>
> Anyone here knows how to do it or if it is possible? I would be happy if
> someone could provide me with some pointers.
I'm afraid I can't help you, but now I'm curious as to
> Well, it depends on whether wlan0 and eth0 are on different networks. If
> they are, then the answer is yes, and you are screwed.
>
> If both interfaces get the same ip, then you can maintain persistent
> connection. For example, let's assume that you constantly switch between
> different interf
> Say you start out on wifi, and open an ssh connection. Then you plug in
> ethernet. The ssh session will remain on the wifi route until it is
> closed. There's no way* to make an existing connection "jump ship" from
> one route to another. If you were to disable the wifi connection as soon
> as t
> I don't use netctl, but you can usually see what default route it uses with
>
> ip route
Thanks for that, I didn't know that command.
The LAN is shown above WIFI, which (I assume) means that it takes
precedence.
>
> I have made the experience that newly configured interfaces "steal" the
Hello!
I installed Arch on my new Thinkpad T450s over the weekend.
Everything works well, but I have a question:
I use systemd-networkd to manage my network interfaces and netctl for
the connections. I set everything up according to (this)[0] and
(this)[1] to get automatic activation of wifi via n
On 06/15/2015 07:39 PM, Javier Vasquez wrote:
> Do you know if it works under a firewall? Does it support http_proxy env var?
Sorry, I do not know either. Just ask (the maintainer)[0], he's really
helpful and friendly.
Cheers,
Bennett
[0]: od...@ualberta.ca
--
GPG fingerprint: 871F 1047 7DB
On 06/14/2015 01:46 AM, Javier Vasquez wrote:
> I was looking for a way to mount google drive as a FS, and found [1] and [2].
[...]
> If someone is using whether fuse-google-drive or gdrivefs, please
> share any drawbacks, pitfalls, how to make it work in teh case of
> fuse-google-drive, and som
> In my opinion wpa_supplicant is an important tool, so is it possible to
> add it to the group 'base'?
I strongly disagree. wpa_supplicant is pretty huge and unnecessary for
many people, and it also introduces a large additional surface area for
exploits.
Bennett
--
GPG fingerprint: 871F 1047
On 03/27/2014 10:06 PM, Florian Pritz wrote:
> On 27.03.2014 21:59, Bennett Piater wrote:
> First lesson which also applies to a bunch of other people in this
> thread: only quote what you need. 129 lines of quoted text before your
> reply is bad.
Thanks for the tip, I
I am a complete noob and only follow the lists out of interest. I am
also very young, so please forgive my impertinence. Thanks Thomas for
your work!! Just my 2c:
On 03/27/2014 08:34 PM, Nicolas Iooss wrote:
> 2014-03-27 16:31 GMT+01:00 Bigby James :
>> On Thu, Mar 27, 2014 at 09:07:23AM +0100, Ni
Just as another FYI:
I wanted to credit Sébastien Luttringer, who is well known to anyone
following the Arch mailing lists, for running the A.R.M. ;)
Merci Séblu!
--Bennett
On 02/24/2014 03:46 AM, Kyle Terrien wrote:
> On 02/23/2014 06:30 PM, Mark E. Lee wrote:
>>
>> Salutations,
>>
>> I downgrad
Personally, I fell in love with AwesomeWM. It's quick to set up, and
i've never looked back. Everything works well automagically!
B
On 01/25/2014 04:46 AM, David Rosenstrauch wrote:
> On 01/24/2014 09:24 PM, David C. Rankin wrote:
>> On 01/21/2014 04:43 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
>>> I'm experimenti
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