noowner 1026965
thanks
I don't have the laptop at my disposal any longer. Please someone else take
ownership of the bug.
Albert.
Package: foot
Version: 1.6.4-1
How to reproduce:
1. Make sure that two different-resolution monitors are connected.
2. Start gnome with wayland from gdm3 and ensure that the high-resolution
monitor is the primary one.
3. Open a uxterm window on the high-resolution monitor.
4. Put initial-window-
Package: evince
Version: 3.38.2-1
I run an up-to-date Debian GNU/Linux 11 “bullseye” with wayland.
This is how to reproduce the crash from a terminal emulator (I tried xterm,
gnome-terminal, and foot):
root@host:/tmp# rm mwe.ps
root@host:/tmp# echo "test" > mwe.ps
root@host:/tmp# chmod g-rwx,o-rwx
Btw., the number after “found [Package]” in the dmesg output might
change depending on the boot (now the date and time are different and
the docking station is not attached). Now this number is 10f955a8.
Below you find a portion of the output of system information from Windows 11
concerning the hardware of the laptop (in German; please feel free to ask for
translation into English if needed):
Systemhersteller LENOVO
Systemmodell 20T1S8EJ00
Systemtyp x64-basierter PC
System-SKU LENOVO_MT_20T1_BU_T
Typo:
… As many updates have been installed in the past, …
As many updates were installed in the past, …
tags 1026965 - moreinfo
thanks
--
Thanks for a quick reaction!
The kernel.org report you've mentioned concerns a somewhat different error
message.
As of the submission time and right now, no updates are available for my
computer in Windows. Both "System Update" of Lenovo (cf. the screenshot in t
Package: linux-image-5.10.0-20-amd64
Version: 5.10.158-2
How to reproduce:
1) Boot Debian GNU/Linux 11 (bullseye), which is „stable“ now, on Lenovo
ThinkPad T14s Gen 1 with Intel Core i7-10610U.
2) Search for „Error“ in the output of dmesg.
3) Find
ACPI Error: Needed [Integer/String/Buffer], found
Package: gnome
Version: 1:3.38+3
My laptop is connected to the Internet via an Ethernet cable, which is what I
currently want. Connections via WiFi are in general possible but today, they
fail (probably because too many clients try to connect to a public wireless
network), cf. the screenshot i
Simon, thanks, this worked for me:
Workaround: also upgrade samba-libs to the version from testing …
It pulled, I think, also a new version of libc6. Now I finally have control
:-). And also thanks for cleaning up the “Package:” mess I inadvertently
created.
Cheers!
Albert
severity 1021371 important
affects 1021371 - control:
affects 1021371 - severity:
affects 1021371 - important
affects 1021371 - affects
affects 1021371 - version:
affects 1021371 - -1
affects 1021371 - 1:3.38.4-1
thanks
Some more data:
$ sudo aptitude show libsmbclient | grep Version
Version: 2:4.1
Package: gnome-control-center Version: 1:3.38.4-1 Severity: important Control:
affects -1 samba-libs
The control center starts neither from gnome (Alt+F1 > Settings) nor from an
xterm. In the last case, we get some (hopefully, useful) output:
$ gnome-control-center
gnome-control-center: /lib/x86_
12 matches
Mail list logo