On 02/02/2015, Bret Busby wrote:
> On 02/02/2015, Dotan Cohen wrote:
>> Maybe the drive is formatted NTFS? NTFS drives won't automount under
>> my Ubuntu system, either. However, the older FAT partitions had a file
>> size limit that was too low for todays media so newer large drives
>> don't use
On Wed, 04 Feb 2015 18:00:03 +
Mark Carroll wrote:
> I'm moving a Debian mail server installation over to a different
> machine environment and I figure that I may as well take the
> opportunity for a fresh install and rethink. I've been using
> greylistd to good effect, but I'd be surprised
On Wed, Feb 04 2015,Bob Proulx wrote:
> Sivaram Neelakantan wrote:
>> How does one go about fixing broken packages?
>
> Double check every entry being used in /etc/apt/sources.list and any
> additional file /etc/apt/sources.list.d/*. You said you were using
> Wheezy. In that case you should have
On Wednesday 04 February 2015 20:20:10 Ric Moore wrote:
> On 02/04/2015 06:26 AM, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > On Wednesday 04 February 2015 07:35:29 Ric Moore wrote:
> >> As root user, apt-get install synaptic
> >> Let it install your programs for you. It's a great GUI package tool,
> >> that most use.
>
On 02/04/2015 04:35 PM, Bob Proulx wrote:
Welcome to Debian! But as with anything if you open the hood of your
car, remove the fuel injection system, partially replace it with
another, then your fuel economy may suffer. :-)
The standing rule is that if you break it, you get to keep both piec
Sivaram Neelakantan wrote:
> How does one go about fixing broken packages?
Double check every entry being used in /etc/apt/sources.list and any
additional file /etc/apt/sources.list.d/*. You said you were using
Wheezy. In that case you should have *only* these entries.
deb http://http.debian.
David Baron wrote:
> Ever since my 64-bit fresh install adventure, various things simple are not
> working, no idea why.
If you have done a fresh install then you will need to tell us what
you have done. We won't know unless you give details.
> I no longer get logcheck emails, for example.
Say
On Wed, Feb 04 2015,Dejan Jocic wrote:
[snipped 57 lines]
> aptitude why-not libcurl4-openssl-dev
> i task-kde-desktop Recommends system-config-printer
> i A system-config-printer Dependspython-cupshelpers (= 1.3.7-4)
> i A python-cupshelpersDependspython-pycurl
On 02/04/2015 06:26 AM, Lisi Reisz wrote:
On Wednesday 04 February 2015 07:35:29 Ric Moore wrote:
As root user, apt-get install synaptic
Let it install your programs for you. It's a great GUI package tool,
that most use.
And you have got your statistics from?? I would seriously query that mos
ATENCIÓN;
Su buzón ha superado el límite de almacenamiento, que es de 5 GB definidos por
el administrador, quien actualmente está ejecutando en 10.9GB, no puede ser
capaz de enviar o recibir correo nuevo hasta que vuelva a validar su buzón de
correo electrónico. Para revalidar su buzón de corre
On Wed, 04 Feb 2015 18:00:03 +
Mark Carroll wrote:
> I'm moving a Debian mail server installation over to a different
> machine environment and I figure that I may as well take the
> opportunity for a fresh install and rethink. I've been using
> greylistd to good effect, but I'd be surprised
On Wed, 4 Feb 2015 18:47:55 +0100
Jochen Spieker wrote:
> Florent Peterschmitt:
> >
> > But, in both cases (with or without instructions), you will not really
> > notice any difference even with a quite old processor, like core i2. You
> > may find it a little slower at machine's first boot. If
On Wed, 04 Feb 2015 16:36:16 +0100
Florent Peterschmitt wrote:
> On 02/04/2015 02:20 PM, Celejar wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I am preparing a USB external HDD for use with my T61 ThinkPad (Core 2
> > Duo CPU T7300 @ 2.00GHz). The disk will fulfill two, very different
> > functions: general backup for
On 2/4/2015 10:00 AM, Mark Carroll wrote:
I'm moving a Debian mail server installation over to a different machine
environment and I figure that I may as well take the opportunity for a
fresh install and rethink. I've been using greylistd to good effect, but
I'd be surprised if it keeps working s
I'm moving a Debian mail server installation over to a different machine
environment and I figure that I may as well take the opportunity for a
fresh install and rethink. I've been using greylistd to good effect, but
I'd be surprised if it keeps working so well long-term. I have long
lists of alias
Ever since my 64-bit fresh install adventure, various things simple are not
working, no idea why. I no longer get logcheck emails, for example. The other
one, also maybe around exim4, root, involves spamassasin.
That upgraded a couple of days ago and lo and behold, I began having the spam
stuff
Florent Peterschmitt:
>
> But, in both cases (with or without instructions), you will not really
> notice any difference even with a quite old processor, like core i2. You
> may find it a little slower at machine's first boot. If we speak about
> Desktop computers. Never tried to setup encryption
On Wed, Feb 04, 2015 at 09:57:50AM -0500, Gene Heskett wrote:
> convenience. This install is about the 6th I have done, and I am back to the
> only way that works, which it let the SOB use all the disk as it sees fit.
> And
> this is not a wheezy install as such, that install has self destruct
On 02/04/2015 02:20 PM, Celejar wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am preparing a USB external HDD for use with my T61 ThinkPad (Core 2
> Duo CPU T7300 @ 2.00GHz). The disk will fulfill two, very different
> functions: general backup for files (mail, documents, etc.) via
> rsnapshot (rsync type backup), and overf
On Wed 04 Feb 2015 at 02:16:48 +0300, Darren Baginski wrote:
> I have been installed Debian Jessie using pressed, after successful
> install and reboot I realized that eth0 is down and ifupdown package
> was missing. Why ?
> Same preseed file on wheezy installs ifupdown by default.
Please post th
On Wednesday 04 February 2015 14:57:50 Gene Heskett wrote:
> My point in all this is that the installer WILL NOT ALLOW you, in any mode,
> to just format and label a partition and use it. Try to skip the
> partitioner and go on to the next step it will NOT allow. The only way you
> can get past tha
On Tuesday, February 03, 2015 05:01:46 AM Darac Marjal wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 02, 2015 at 06:16:34PM -0500, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > Greetings;
> >
> > This time I just let it do its own multiple partition thing. When the
> > install was done, every other disk partitioner we have reports that the
>
Hi all
It's possible writing an image, build with Macrium Reflect, with another
programm, as: dd, partimage,
Thanks
Regards
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On Wed 04 Feb 2015 at 09:49:40 +, Darac Marjal wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 04, 2015 at 12:28:31PM +0300, Reco wrote:
> >
> > Simple. A menuentry like this is a legitimate menu entry, i.e. user can
> > try to choose it and press enter. IMO GRUB should do *something* in this
> > case.
>
> As Grub sup
On Tue, Feb 03, 2015 at 10:22:11AM +1100, Charlie wrote:
> On Tue, 3 Feb 2015 01:08:10 +1300 Chris Bannister sent:
>
> > HANG ON, this is bug #773806 -- did you not check the bts?
>
> Had a quick look while having a cup of coffee:
>
> https://www.mail-archive.com/debian-bugs-rc@lists.debian.org/
On Mon, Feb 02, 2015 at 06:16:34PM -0500, Gene Heskett wrote:
> Greetings;
>
> This time I just let it do its own multiple partition thing. When the
> install was done, every other disk partitioner we have reports that the
> partition boundaries are out of sync with the 4k sectors of this drive
On Thu, Jan 29, 2015 at 8:47 PM, David Christensen <
dpchr...@holgerdanske.com> wrote:
> On 01/29/2015 06:23 PM, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
>
>> There are lots of choices where the info in directed at Windows users, but
>> precious info available if you want to be sure the card will work on
>> Linux.
>
Hi,
I am preparing a USB external HDD for use with my T61 ThinkPad (Core 2
Duo CPU T7300 @ 2.00GHz). The disk will fulfill two, very different
functions: general backup for files (mail, documents, etc.) via
rsnapshot (rsync type backup), and overflow storage for my full main
HDD ("big" files such
On Wed 04 Feb 2015 at 09:28:23 +, Bhasker C V wrote:
> I did try the multiple-menu entries but the moment I put a dummy entry
> the menu entry does not appear at all !
>
> The only other way is painfully use the echo command
>
> echo
> echo
> ..
> sleep 5
>
> which will delay the boot by
On Wed, Feb 04 2015,Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Wednesday 04 February 2015 11:41:53 Sivaram Neelakantan wrote:
>> On Wed, Feb 04 2015,Dejan Jocic wrote:
[snipped 15 lines]
>
> Do you need libcurl4-openssl-dev? If not, have you tried just uninstalling
> it?
erm...yes, that's what I need to install
On Wednesday 04 February 2015 11:41:53 Sivaram Neelakantan wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 04 2015,Dejan Jocic wrote:
>
>
> [snipped 57 lines]
>
> > aptitude why-not libcurl4-openssl-dev
> > i task-kde-desktop Recommends system-config-printer
> > i A system-config-printer Dependspython-cupshelpers
On Wed, Feb 04 2015,Dejan Jocic wrote:
[snipped 57 lines]
> aptitude why-not libcurl4-openssl-dev
> i task-kde-desktop Recommends system-config-printer
> i A system-config-printer Dependspython-cupshelpers (= 1.3.7-4)
> i A python-cupshelpersDependspython-pycurl
On Wednesday 04 February 2015 07:35:29 Ric Moore wrote:
> As root user, apt-get install synaptic
> Let it install your programs for you. It's a great GUI package tool,
> that most use.
And you have got your statistics from?? I would seriously query that most
users, on this list anyhow, use synap
On Wednesday 04 February 2015 11:27:25 AM Rusi Mody wrote:
> On Wednesday, February 4, 2015 at 12:50:04 PM UTC+5:30, Sivaram
Neelakantan wrote:
> > How does one go about fixing broken packages? I've recently
started
> > using debian and apart some fiddling to get the latest emacs24.4
on
> > whe
On Wednesday, February 4, 2015 at 12:50:04 PM UTC+5:30, Sivaram Neelakantan
wrote:
> How does one go about fixing broken packages? I've recently started
> using debian and apart some fiddling to get the latest emacs24.4 on
> wheezy I have not done anything on the system. When I tried to
> instal
On Wed, Feb 04, 2015 at 12:28:31PM +0300, Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Tue, Feb 03, 2015 at 11:41:11PM +, Brian wrote:
> > > Try putting a disclaimer inside the menuentry, i.e.
> > >
> > > menuentry "" {
> > > echo 'You shouldn't be here'
> > > }
> >
> > This looks like a good idea; in fact,
Hi.
On Tue, Feb 03, 2015 at 11:07:37PM +, Michael Grant wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 3, 2015 at 6:16 PM, Reco wrote:
> > I don't know if this has anything to do with that:
> >
> > # systemctl enable sendmail
> > Synchronizing state for sendmail.service with sysvinit using
> update-r
On Wed, Feb 04 2015,Sivaram Neelakantan wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 04 2015,Ric Moore wrote:
>
>> On 02/04/2015 02:13 AM, Sivaram Neelakantan wrote:
>>>
[snipped 5 lines]
>> As root user, apt-get install synaptic
>> Let it install your programs for you. It's a great GUI package tool,
>> that most use.
Hi,
I have my config something like this
I am not sure what I am doing wrong but squid does allow access
during all hours irrespective of the allowedtime acl
below is my squid conf in full. Can someone help please by telling me
what am I doing wrong ? I am guessing squid uses the same serially
p
I did try the multiple-menu entries but the moment I put a dummy entry
the menu entry does not appear at all !
The only other way is painfully use the echo command
echo
echo
..
sleep 5
which will delay the boot by 5 seconds unconditionally.
One of the suggestions on IRC was to modify the code
Hi.
On Tue, Feb 03, 2015 at 11:41:11PM +, Brian wrote:
> > Try putting a disclaimer inside the menuentry, i.e.
> >
> > menuentry "" {
> > echo 'You shouldn't be here'
> > }
>
> This looks like a good idea; in fact, it may be the only way of getting
> close to what the OP wants. Hpwever,
On Wed, Feb 04 2015,Ric Moore wrote:
> On 02/04/2015 02:13 AM, Sivaram Neelakantan wrote:
>>
>> How does one go about fixing broken packages? I've recently started
>> using debian and apart some fiddling to get the latest emacs24.4 on
>> wheezy I have not done anything on the system. When I trie
On 2015-02-03, Darac Marjal wrote:
>
>
> If you like, you can make the partitioner dumber. If you partition the
> drive as you prefer BEFORE running the installer, then the installer
> will not move the existing partitions. This is a perfectly cromulent
> use-case for the installer (you might, for
I just updated my unstable system. It was set to not lock my screen upon
suspend/resume, and it still is. However, now it locks after resuming
anyway. I'm using xfce but am running Gnome screensaver for certain
reasons, which I suspect is related to the problem. I'm guessing
gnome-screensaver s
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