Hi,
We have several HP Proliant DL3xxx servers running Debian.
We are monitoring the hardware using Nagios Core 3.5.1. and the special
hp-health package.
linutr:~# aptitude show hp-health
Package: hp-health
New: yes
State: installed
Automatically installed: no
Version: 8.7.0.1.2-5
Priority: optio
Ric,
BAD MIC! ;o(
i was mislead into thinking it was good. i was using the mic with
windows skype and skype was picking up my voice so i assumed the mic
was working. wrong! skype was picking up my voice from the
computer's internal mic.
i had reinstalled pulse after my previous response to yr
On Mon, Jul 28, 2014 at 04:08:44PM -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> On 7/28/2014 3:51 PM, Brian wrote:
> > You never really answered my questiom. If you place something in a
> > public place, a mailserver, for example, why should it be a criminal
> > offence to look at it. If you did not want it to be
Does anyone know if the browser elinks has a function that will produce a
trace diagnostic file the way lynx will?
how about links?
Thanks,
Karen
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On 07/29/2014 04:24 PM, Joe wrote:
> On Tue, 29 Jul 2014 14:32:10 -0400 Haines Brown
> wrote:
>
>> My / usage is still huge, 258 Mb, but at least the "full" problem
>> is gone.
>
> If you follow the common practice of keeping the previous kernel
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On 07/29/2014 05:30 PM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Ma, 29 iul 14, 08:36:48, The Wanderer wrote:
>
>> root@apologia:/home/wanderer# apt-cache show removal-prevention
>> Package: removal-prevention
>> Status: install ok installed
>> Priority: require
On Mon, Jul 28, 2014 at 11:52:51PM +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Lu, 28 iul 14, 08:41:39, Chris Bannister wrote:
> > On Sun, Jul 27, 2014 at 11:20:13AM +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> > >
> > > You are aware of course that:
> > > - it's also possible to scroll *back* (surprise, surprise)
> >
>
On Jul 29, 2014, at 2:05 AM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> Sure, it's a tmpfs, and the penalty for updating atime is probably much
> lower than any other conventional storage (though /tmp contents might
> end up being swapped), but is there any software that actually relies on
> atime for files in /
Mark Carroll a écrit :
> Mike McClain writes:
>
>> I've run into a difficulty with iptables in that both GRC.com and
>> PCFlank.com's firewall scans show ports 137-139 and 445 as blocked but
>> not stealthed in spite of the fact that I have these statements in my
>> firewall script:
You can safe
David Baron a écrit :
> Disk has one region (that I know of) with errors.
> I can partition so this region is not used.
>
> Is there some utility to repair it?
Badblocks, for example. But success is not guaranteed. It may damage the
disk even more.
> Is this sickness like to spread?
Possibly.
On Ma, 29 iul 14, 19:45:44, bruninksb...@posteo.de wrote:
> Dear Andrei,
>
> Thank you very much for your response.
>
> # dpkg -l firestarter
...
> rc firestarter 1.0.3-8 amd64 gtk
> program
> for managing and observing your firewall
>
> # dpkg -s firestarter
Haines Brown:
>
> […] I suppose the only correction if so is to boot the system to
> single user and run fdisk on /dev/sdb1. Not sure of the specifics.
You can run this to force an fsck of the root filesystem on the next
reboot:
touch /forcefsck
J.
--
I lust after strangers but only date peopl
On Ma, 29 iul 14, 08:36:48, The Wanderer wrote:
> root@apologia:/home/wanderer# apt-cache show removal-prevention
> Package: removal-prevention
> Status: install ok installed
> Priority: required
> Section: misc
> Installed-Size: 26
> Maintainer: Andrew Buehler
> Architecture: all
> Version: 1.0
>
Mike McClain writes:
> I've run into a difficulty with iptables in that both GRC.com and
> PCFlank.com's firewall scans show ports 137-139 and 445 as blocked but
> not stealthed in spite of the fact that I have these statements in my
> firewall script:
(snip)
> Suggestions?
Use iptables --list-r
Mike McClain wrote:
> I've run into a difficulty with iptables in that both GRC.com and
> PCFlank.com's firewall scans show ports 137-139 and 445 as blocked but
> not stealthed in spite of the fact that I have these statements in my
> firewall script:
>iptables -A INPUT -p udp --dport 137:13
I've run into a difficulty with iptables in that both GRC.com and
PCFlank.com's firewall scans show ports 137-139 and 445 as blocked but
not stealthed in spite of the fact that I have these statements in my
firewall script:
iptables -A INPUT -p udp --dport 137:138 -j DROP
iptables -A INPUT
On 2014-07-27 00:48, Brian wrote:
On Sat 26 Jul 2014 at 20:32:32 +0200, Gregor Hoffleit wrote:
I tried different kernels. Same error. Only that the error message
is less specific on 3.2.0 than with 3.1.14: The later always says
"(error -8)".
3.14.1? Please see the date on the link below.
Ob
On Tuesday 29 July 2014 20:09:41 Brian wrote:
> When you reply threading is broken. Surely you can see that. Could be
> kmail of course.
Replying from the digest breaks threads. I eschew KDE 4, so I don't know
about KMail in KDE4, but KDE3 KMail does not break threads.
Lisi
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On Tue, 29 Jul 2014 16:16:44 +0100
Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Tuesday 29 July 2014 15:11:38 Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> > i also downloaded a creative cloud setup-exe. from photo shop and
> >
> > > it wont install
>
> You can't install Windows programs directly on Linux - nor Linux ones
> on Windows!
On Tue, 29 Jul 2014 14:32:10 -0400
Haines Brown wrote:
>
> My / usage is still huge, 258 Mb, but at least the "full" problem is
> gone.
If you follow the common practice of keeping the previous kernel as a
spare for troubleshooting purposes, then this is sadly normal these
days. There's 100MB
On Tue, 29 Jul 2014 10:27:08 -0400
Jerry Stuckle wrote:
>
> Yes, I know Exim can be configured to do a lot. But I have yet to see
> where it is advantageous to run a MTA on a residential connection, and
> know of a lot of reasons why it's bad.
>
> I do run Exim on several servers (actually I
I knew because you said that you had tried to backup some files to storage and
sdb13 was not mounted on storage. So where those files went was into /
partition. When you mounted sdb13 on top of /storage, all those files became
inaccessible but they were still there taking up stace.
This happened
On Tue 29 Jul 2014 at 21:44:36 +0300, David Baron wrote:
> On Tuesday 29 July 2014 16:23:21 debian-user-digest-requ...@lists.debian.org
> wrote:
> > system_notification is qualified by the mailname, dovidhalevi.homelinux.net.
> > dovidhalevi.homelinux.net is regarded as a local domain. The mail i
Haines Brown wrote on 07/29/2014 19:36:
> On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 05:06:22PM +0200, Jörg-Volker Peetz wrote:
>> Same problem was discussed recently on this list (e.g.,
>> https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/05/msg00665.html and
>> https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/05/msg00684.html )
>
No need to CC me. I am subscribed
Am Dienstag, 29. Juli 2014, 14:16:02 schrieb Haines Brown:
> On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 05:08:01PM +0200, Martin Steigerwald wrote:
[…]
> > I suggest something like
> >
> > merkaba:~> du -d 1 -hx / | sort -rh | head -10
> > 20G /
> > 16G /usr
> > 2,7G/va
On Tuesday 29 July 2014 16:23:21 debian-user-digest-requ...@lists.debian.org
wrote:
> system_notification is qualified by the mailname, dovidhalevi.homelinux.net.
> dovidhalevi.homelinux.net is regarded as a local domain. The mail is routed
> and transported by procmail.
>
>
> > Sure looks in o
>
> My / usage is still huge, 258 Mb, but at least the "full" problem is gone.
> I hope I can ignore the doubly mounted root partition.
>
> Haines
Hust a little hint:
If you have no encrypted partitions, you can resize your partitions using
"gparted". Best use is, to run it from a livefile cd
> > # df
> > Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
> > rootfs474440 474440 0 100% /
> > udev 102400 10240 0% /dev
> > tmpfs 830924 1572829352 1% /run
> > /dev/di
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 05:08:01PM +0200, Martin Steigerwald wrote:
> Hi Haines,
>
> Am Dienstag, 29. Juli 2014, 09:22:02 schrieb Haines Brown:
> > The / partition is 500 Mb. In the past I have
> > only used about 50 Mb.
>
> Why so little?
I forget why I made it so big, but perhaps because I was
Haines Brown wrote:
> What troubles me is that my root partition is nearly 500 Gb. df says:
>rootfs 474440 474440 0 100% /
>/dev/disk/by-uuid/ 474440 474440 0 100% /
Where do you see 500GiB? It says 474440 blocks of 1KB size or 463MiB.
> But
Haines Brown wrote:
> I ran:
> # find / -type f -size +100M -exec ls -lh {} \; | awk '{ print $9 ": " $5 }'
You are missing the option "-xdev" for find to prevent it from crossing
filesystem boundaries. This leads to:
> All files that were over 100 Mb were located in broken out directories
> e
Dear Andrei,
Thank you very much for your response.
# dpkg -l firestarter
Desired=Unknown/Install/Remove/Purge/Hold
|
Status=Not/Inst/Conf-files/Unpacked/halF-conf/Half-inst/trig-aWait/Trig-pend
|/ Err?=(none)/Reinst-required (Status,Err: uppercase=bad)
||/ Naam Versie
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 05:06:22PM +0200, Jörg-Volker Peetz wrote:
> Same problem was discussed recently on this list (e.g.,
> https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/05/msg00665.html and
> https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/05/msg00684.html )
I pursued this, but nothing had been deposite
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 11:08:41AM +0200, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
>
>
> Le 28.07.2014 22:36, Andrei POPESCU a écrit :
> >On Lu, 28 iul 14, 11:24:31, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
> >>Le 27.07.2014 01:42, PaulNM a écrit :
> >>
> >>>Inodes are files/folders, files/folders are in
On 7/29/2014 11:06 AM, Brian wrote:
> On Tue 29 Jul 2014 at 10:31:23 -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
>
>> On 7/29/2014 9:47 AM, Brian wrote:
>>>
>>> No, I do not think that. I think that if the remote MTA accepted the
>>> mail then the remote MTA accepted that mail and can prove it.
>>>
>>
>> This is
On Tuesday 29 July 2014 15:11:38 Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> i also downloaded a creative cloud setup-exe. from photo shop and
>
> > it wont install
You can't install Windows programs directly on Linux - nor Linux ones on
Windows! If you are for real, you really need to go back right to the
beginn
On Tue 29 Jul 2014 at 10:31:23 -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> On 7/29/2014 9:47 AM, Brian wrote:
> >
> > No, I do not think that. I think that if the remote MTA accepted the
> > mail then the remote MTA accepted that mail and can prove it.
> >
>
> This is where you are incorrect. All you know is
Hi Haines,
Am Dienstag, 29. Juli 2014, 09:22:02 schrieb Haines Brown:
> This is such a classic problem that I hesitate to raise the
> question. The df below shows that the usual suspects for root partition
> being full are broken out. The / partition is 500 Mb. In the past I have
> only used about
Same problem was discussed recently on this list (e.g.,
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/05/msg00665.html and
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/05/msg00684.html )
In short:
- to check space in the filesystem
du / -hx --max-depth=1
- to check for deleted files still not used by
Le 29.07.2014 16:27, Darac Marjal a écrit :
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 02:57:04PM +0200,
berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
Hello.
I tried the idea exposed by PaulNM here to fix an inode exhaustion:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/07/msg01588.html
My implementation seems to be wrong
On Mon 28 Jul 2014 at 19:01:16 +0300, David Baron wrote:
> > 'exim -bt ' might help.
>
> ~$ sudo exim4 -bt system_notification
> R: system_aliases for system_notificat...@dovidhalevi.homelinux.net
> R: userforward for system_notificat...@dovidhalevi.homelinux.net
> R: procmail for system_notifica
This is such a classic problem that I hesitate to raise the
question. The df below shows that the usual suspects for root partition
being full are broken out. The / partition is 500 Mb. In the past I have
only used about 50 Mb.
# df
Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Moun
On 7/29/2014 5:22 AM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Lu, 28 iul 14, 17:05:56, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
>>
>> But then if you have residential service, there really is no need to
>> have your own MTA (other than you want it).
>
> Running your own MTA can be beneficial even if it is not accessible from
> t
On 7/29/2014 9:47 AM, Brian wrote:
> On Mon 28 Jul 2014 at 19:16:08 -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
>
>> On 7/28/2014 6:36 PM, Brian wrote:
>>>
>>> You are guaranteeing the remote MTA will have 100% uptime and sends
>>> mails and non-delivery messages in a timely fashion? And yes, knowing
>>> the mail
On Tue, Jul 29, 2014 at 02:57:04PM +0200, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
> Hello.
>
> I tried the idea exposed by PaulNM here to fix an inode exhaustion:
> https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/07/msg01588.html
>
> My implementation seems to be wrong, and I was not smart enough to try o
> On Mon, Jul 28, 2014 at 1:59 AM, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
>> On 7/28/14, Stephen Pruitt wrote:
>> > hi i have 2 issues i would like your help with i just installed Debian
>> 7 i
>> > whose using microsoft windows 7 and i back up the files on to a USB and
>> > i
>> > would like to know how to rei
On Mon 28 Jul 2014 at 19:16:08 -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> On 7/28/2014 6:36 PM, Brian wrote:
> >
> > You are guaranteeing the remote MTA will have 100% uptime and sends
> > mails and non-delivery messages in a timely fashion? And yes, knowing
> > the mail was accepted by the destination MTA is
Le 27.07.2014 01:42, PaulNM a écrit :
On 07/25/2014 10:54 AM, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
First time I have exhausted inodes, but I never used apt-cacher-ng
previously, and it's quite obvious that a proxy+cache is very greedy
in
terms of inodes.
Not really. That's like saying t
Hello.
I tried the idea exposed by PaulNM here to fix an inode exhaustion:
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2014/07/msg01588.html
My implementation seems to be wrong, and I was not smart enough to try
on a normal desktop. Plus, I had to reboot it because of a kernel
version problem (the
Ahoj,
Dňa Tue, 29 Jul 2014 12:22:38 +0300 Andrei POPESCU
napísal:
> On Lu, 28 iul 14, 17:05:56, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> >
> > But then if you have residential service, there really is no need to
> > have your own MTA (other than you want it).
>
> Running your own MTA can be beneficial even if i
On 28/07/14 15:48:56, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
Thanks for your reply, Henrique. I don't really know if that was the
problem.
I thought I'd try the upgrades again, and noticed that it was slowly
upgrading - reducing the upgrade queue.
after a couple of repeated attempts running the up
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On 07/29/2014 04:53 AM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Lu, 28 iul 14, 22:47:56, The Wanderer wrote:
>
>> I just now tried that as well (in combination with 'Priority:
>> required'), and it produced the same result: apt-get wanted to
>> remove the metap
On 07/28/2014 05:20 PM, koanhead wrote:
> Here's a thread on it at the aMSN forums.
Derp. I forgot to include the link:
http://www.amsn-project.net/forums/index.php?topic=2954.0
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On Monday 28 July 2014 21:38:37 Brian wrote:
> > > You never really answered my questiom. If you place something in a
> > > public place, a mailserver, for example, why should it be a criminal
> > > offence to look at it. If you did not want it to be seen you have the
> > > solution at hand.
> >
>
On Tue, 2014-07-29 at 12:28 +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Ma, 29 iul 14, 00:47:21, Redalert Commander wrote:
> >
> > When specifying init=/bin/sh on the kernel command line in grub,
> > I can boot into a shell, remount the root filesystem as rw (it's
> > mounted ro when doing this),
> > and ed
On Ma, 29 iul 14, 00:47:21, Redalert Commander wrote:
>
> When specifying init=/bin/sh on the kernel command line in grub,
> I can boot into a shell, remount the root filesystem as rw (it's
> mounted ro when doing this),
> and edit /etc/fstab.
> After commenting out the array from fstab, systemd l
On Lu, 28 iul 14, 17:05:56, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
>
> But then if you have residential service, there really is no need to
> have your own MTA (other than you want it).
Running your own MTA can be beneficial even if it is not accessible from
the internet:
- queuing: some mail clients block while
On Mon, Jul 28, 2014 at 07:21:36PM -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> On 7/28/2014 5:27 PM, Brian wrote:
> > On Mon 28 Jul 2014 at 16:08:44 -0400, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
> >
> >> On 7/28/2014 3:51 PM, Brian wrote:
> >>> On Mon 28 Jul 2014 at 21:08:02 +0200, Slavko wrote:
> >>>
> Dňa Mon, 28 Jul 2014
Le 28.07.2014 22:36, Andrei POPESCU a écrit :
On Lu, 28 iul 14, 11:24:31, berenger.mo...@neutralite.org wrote:
Le 27.07.2014 01:42, PaulNM a écrit :
>Inodes are files/folders, files/folders are inodes. (1-to-1)
Anything
>that has a bunch of files/folders will use a bunch of inodes. Same
>n
On Lu, 28 iul 14, 16:34:14, Rick Thomas wrote:
>
> mode=1777 sets all accesses allowed (it is “/tmp” after all…) and also
> sets the “sticky bit” which (according to stat(2)) “on a directory
> means that a file in that directory can be renamed or deleted only by
> the owner of the file, by the
On Lu, 28 iul 14, 22:47:56, The Wanderer wrote:
>
> I just now tried that as well (in combination with 'Priority:
> required'), and it produced the same result: apt-get wanted to remove
> the metapackage on dist-upgrade.
Could you please post the full output for that and 'apt-cache show' and
'ap
On 07/29/2014 01:39 AM, tom arnall wrote:
Two weeks ago I installed Debian wheezy and was using pulse audio with
good results. Then suddenly the external mic wasn't working. I removed
pulse from the system and the process seemed to have made alsa the
sound system. I also added some alsa stuff. Th
On Jul 28, 2014, at 4:59 PM, Rick Thomas wrote:
>
> On Jul 28, 2014, at 3:16 PM, Michael Biebl wrote:
>
>> In this particular case that would mean creating a directory
>> /etc/systemd/system/tmp.mount.d/, then placing a .conf file in there
>> setting your custom options.
>>
>>
>> That all s
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