On Friday 25 August 2017 01:27:47 David Wright wrote:
> On Fri 25 Aug 2017 at 00:54:11 (-0400), Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Thursday 24 August 2017 22:15:53 David Wright wrote:
> > > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 20:58:18 (-0400), Gene Heskett wrote:
> > > > On Thursday 24 August 2017 12:30:37 Dan Ritter w
On Fri 25 Aug 2017 at 00:54:11 (-0400), Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Thursday 24 August 2017 22:15:53 David Wright wrote:
>
> > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 20:58:18 (-0400), Gene Heskett wrote:
> > > On Thursday 24 August 2017 12:30:37 Dan Ritter wrote:
> > > > On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 10:43:56AM -0500, Davi
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 23:00:19 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2017-08-24 at 12:40, David Wright wrote:
>
> > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:02:11 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
>
> >> On 2017-08-24 at 11:43, David Wright wrote:
>
> >>> There are plenty of ways that you, or Debian, can set a default.
On Thursday 24 August 2017 23:58:51 ardawan wrote:
> Hi,
>
> unfortunately i am not able to get Tilde character work properly on
> Debian OS. I am using macbook pro retina 2015 and tried to key the
> keyboard layout in the settings to any available English option but
> still i get >or< instead of
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 5:35 AM, Michael Lange wrote:
> Hi Raju,
>
> On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 02:37:41 -0400
> kamaraju kusumanchi wrote:
>
> (...)
>> The popsort.py utility is written by me. It can be downloaded from
>> https://gitlab.com/d3k2mk7/rutils/blob/master/bin/popsort.py and is
>> documente
Borden Rhodes writes:
> To answer an earlier question about why I don't report all the bugs I
> find in software: I choose my battles.
I don't recall anyone asking why you don't report all bugs you find in
software, that would be a fatuous question.
You were asked specifically about the bugs in
>> > Do you find checking for possible rootkits is useless, or you are just
>> > not happy how rkhunter performs that function?
>>
>> A well-documented case of rkhunter discovering a rootkit in the last
>> ten years (the 1000s of false positives do not count) would go a long
>> way to establishing
On Thursday 24 August 2017 22:15:53 David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 20:58:18 (-0400), Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Thursday 24 August 2017 12:30:37 Dan Ritter wrote:
> > > On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 10:43:56AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > > > The history of computing is littered with stat
Hi,
unfortunately i am not able to get Tilde character work properly on
Debian OS. I am using macbook pro retina 2015 and tried to key the
keyboard layout in the settings to any available English option but
still i get >or< instead of Tilde and seems nothing changed after
choosing different l
Sven Hartge:
systemd happily runs "legacy" LSB init scripts
... except when its one-size-fits-all approach does not work, of
course. Example:
* https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/386846/
This is the problem with even Mewburn rc scripts (as I can attest from
personal experience of wr
Tom Browder:
# systemctl enable postfix # systemctl daemon-reload
Minor note: enable incorporates a daemon-reload.
On 2017-08-24 at 12:40, David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:02:11 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
>> On 2017-08-24 at 11:43, David Wright wrote:
>>> There are plenty of ways that you, or Debian, can set a default.
>>> But it surprises me that so many people grumble about this
>>> change.
I'm seeing this in Tails when I refresh the package repositories:
Failed - 0B - InRelease - tor+http://vwakviie2ienjx6t.onion/ debian stretch
InRelease
Why is this happening and how may I fix it please?
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 20:58:18 (-0400), Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Thursday 24 August 2017 12:30:37 Dan Ritter wrote:
> > On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 10:43:56AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > > The history of computing is littered with statements like
> > > "virtually every computer has exactly one or t
When replying to a message in Thunderbird as packaged in Debian 9, the
date and time is automatically placed before the quote, like this: “On
22/08/17 17:31, $NAME wrote:”. How can I change the format used for the
date and time? In addition, I want to change the format of $NAME to
include his e-mai
On Thursday 24 August 2017 12:30:37 Dan Ritter wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 10:43:56AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 10:20:52 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
> > > There are, of course, five different ways to do this (at a
> > > minimum):
> > >
> > > 1. /dev/sda1 is based on
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 18:42:47 (+0100), Brian wrote:
> On Wed 23 Aug 2017 at 18:06:49 -0500, Mario Castelán Castro wrote:
> > On 23/08/17 14:11, Brian wrote:
> > > "Probably" is probably good enough. The probability of either of the two
> > > previous passwords being deduced from pure guessing is
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 04:39:13PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 10:21:04PM +0200, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> > Le 24/08/2017 à 11:30, Reco a écrit :
> > >
> > > Somewhat hackish, but straightforward way to achieve this is to redirect
> > > DNS requests from your LAN to corre
Hi Zoltan,
Thanks for all your suggestions
I looked at the .xcfe logs but they did not mention the keyboard or mouse.
Also, xfce4-goodies was already installed
Touching wood it seems the problem is fixed now.
Following
http://tutorialforlinux.com/2017/01/18/how-to-switch-from-gnomegnome3-to-xfc
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 11:35:25PM +0300, Reco wrote:
> On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 22:21:04 +0200
> Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>
> > Le 24/08/2017 à 11:30, Reco a écrit :
> > >
> > > Somewhat hackish, but straightforward way to achieve this is to redirect
> > > DNS requests from your LAN to correct DNS. So
On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:56:51 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
>
> > On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:31:55 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
> > >
> > > > On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > > > > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:16:26 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
> > > > >
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:56:51 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
> On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:31:55 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
> >
> > > On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > > > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:16:26 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > >
Hi.
On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 21:59:36 +0200
Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
> * Reco [2017-08-24 18:16 +0300]:
>
> [...]
> > vim(1) does not mention defaults.vim, so it must be a case of obsolete
> > documentation.
> > That, and I'm too lazy to view vim source.
>
> Read file:///usr/share/doc/vim
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 10:21:04PM +0200, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 24/08/2017 à 11:30, Reco a écrit :
> >
> > Somewhat hackish, but straightforward way to achieve this is to redirect
> > DNS requests from your LAN to correct DNS. Something like this should do
> > the trick:
>
> Not so straight
Hi.
On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 22:21:04 +0200
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 24/08/2017 à 11:30, Reco a écrit :
> >
> > Somewhat hackish, but straightforward way to achieve this is to redirect
> > DNS requests from your LAN to correct DNS. Something like this should do
> > the trick:
>
> Not so
I've had problems with my ThinkPad T61 Freezing on me (wouldn't respond
to keyboard, mouse, nothing). So I reinstalled Debian without the tlp or
sensors stuff. I was back to the old IRQ problems (which turned into
FIFO overrun errors if I put irqpoll in GRUB). It was just a constant
cycle of pr
Le 24/08/2017 à 11:30, Reco a écrit :
Somewhat hackish, but straightforward way to achieve this is to redirect
DNS requests from your LAN to correct DNS. Something like this should do
the trick:
Not so straightforward because you still need to get the ISP's DNS and
update the iptables rules w
Schrijf me maar uit, a.u.b.
* Reco [2017-08-24 18:16 +0300]:
[...]
> vim(1) does not mention defaults.vim, so it must be a case of obsolete
> documentation.
> That, and I'm too lazy to view vim source.
Read file:///usr/share/doc/vim-common/NEWS.Debian.gz
Elimar
--
Never make anything simple and efficient when a way
c
On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:31:55 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
>
> > On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:16:26 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
> > >
> > > > On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > > > > > The alternative would be to reconfigure rkhunter.
> > > > >
> >
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:31:55 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
> On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:16:26 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
> >
> > > On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > > > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 15:44:30 +0200, Rob van der Putten wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > Hi there
> > > > >
> >
On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:16:26 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
>
> > On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 15:44:30 +0200, Rob van der Putten wrote:
> > >
> > > > Hi there
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > On 24/08/17 15:39, Dan Ritter wrote:
> > > >
> > > > >As of
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 21:16:26 +0200, Dejan Jocic wrote:
> On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 15:44:30 +0200, Rob van der Putten wrote:
> >
> > > Hi there
> > >
> > >
> > > On 24/08/17 15:39, Dan Ritter wrote:
> > >
> > > >As of Stretch, the standard OpenSSH sshd does not supp
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:30:37 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 10:43:56AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 10:20:52 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
> > > There are, of course, five different ways to do this (at a
> > > minimum):
> > >
> > > 1. /dev/sda1 is based
On 24-08-17, Brian wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 15:44:30 +0200, Rob van der Putten wrote:
>
> > Hi there
> >
> >
> > On 24/08/17 15:39, Dan Ritter wrote:
> >
> > >As of Stretch, the standard OpenSSH sshd does not support
> > >Protocol 1, so there's no particular reason to enforce it
> > >by s
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 15:44:30 +0200, Rob van der Putten wrote:
> Hi there
>
>
> On 24/08/17 15:39, Dan Ritter wrote:
>
> >As of Stretch, the standard OpenSSH sshd does not support
> >Protocol 1, so there's no particular reason to enforce it
> >by stating Protocol 2.
>
> I assumed as much. It'
On 24/08/17 10:21, Dan Norton wrote:
> Oops - forgot to try GNU Stow. Another time maybe.
In this case, you used the package manager, so there is no need for
stow. GNU Stow is useful when installing manually, for example, when one
compiles from source.
> Thank you, Mario, for your help. Great dis
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:59:46 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 11:40:28AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:02:11 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
> > > On 2017-08-24 at 11:43, David Wright wrote:
> > >
> > > > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 10:20:52 (-0400), Dan Ritt
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 13:35:17 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 11:51:48AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> > For you, they wrote the last screenful of
> > https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/PredictableNetworkInterfaceNames/
>
> One of the bullet points on that pa
On Wed 23 Aug 2017 at 18:06:49 -0500, Mario Castelán Castro wrote:
> On 23/08/17 14:11, Brian wrote:
> >> As for the scenario where the password is compromised and that leads to
> >> somebody posting slander in one behalf, that can happen without any need
> >> for password cracking. Anybody can cr
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 11:51:48AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> For you, they wrote the last screenful of
> https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/PredictableNetworkInterfaceNames/
One of the bullet points on that page says:
* Stable interface names even if you have to replace broken
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 11:40:28AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:02:11 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
> > On 2017-08-24 at 11:43, David Wright wrote:
> >
> > > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 10:20:52 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
> > If things ever do reach a point where that is no longe
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 11:56:55 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
> At my workplace, we have over 4,000 computers, which run Windows most of
> the time but are occasionally booted to a bare-bones live-CD type of
> Linux environment (and not a particularly customizable one) for
> diagnostic and/or mainte
Thanks, that is a very helpful page. I send a response to your earlier email
to the list, and I'm going to do the same with this.
On Thursday, August 24, 2017 12:12:47 PM Wim Michels wrote:
> Hi,
>
> have a look at this webpage:
>
> https://wiki.debian.org/WiFi/HowToUse
>
> for usefull info.
On Wednesday, August 23, 2017 03:40:07 PM rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Sunday, August 20, 2017 03:00:28 PM Wim Michels wrote:
> > Hi,
> > all you need to install is the package:
> >
> > firmware-b43-installer
> >
> > from 'contrib' to get BCM4311 chip to work.
>
> Thanks, that worked!
Just wa
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:02:11 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2017-08-24 at 11:43, David Wright wrote:
>
> > On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 10:20:52 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
>
> >> Getting back to the original point, NIC names -- virtually every
> >> computer has exactly one or two NICs, and is best
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 10:43:56AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 10:20:52 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
> > There are, of course, five different ways to do this (at a
> > minimum):
> >
> > 1. /dev/sda1 is based on discovery order. Changes in discovery order
> > may indicate a sig
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 09:17:00 (-0400), The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2017-08-24 at 07:52, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
>
> > On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 01:11:27PM +0200, Hans wrote:
> >
> >> Hi folks,
> >
> >> I stumbled over the new network names (i.e. wl0p8 instead of wlan0), and
> >> of
> >> course I kn
On 2017-08-24 at 11:43, David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 10:20:52 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
>> Getting back to the original point, NIC names -- virtually every
>> computer has exactly one or two NICs, and is best served by eth0
>> and wlan0. The computers with 3-5 NICs are usually bes
On 2017-08-24 at 11:48, Darac Marjal wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 08:30:33AM -0500, Dave Sherohman wrote:
>
>> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 09:17:00AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
>>> To the best of my awareness, the rationale for calling this
>>> "predictable network interface names" is that, on a
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 08:30:33AM -0500, Dave Sherohman wrote:
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 09:17:00AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
However, I'll point out that machines with this many network interfaces
are *by far* the exception rather than the rule; indeed, even machines
with more than *one* interf
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 10:20:52 (-0400), Dan Ritter wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 08:30:33AM -0500, Dave Sherohman wrote:
> > This closely parallels the move from using /dev/sdXn to UUIDs for
> > referring to filesystems. Probably superior in theory and doesn't cause
> > any issues as long as y
On 08/23/2017 10:07 PM, Mario Castelán Castro wrote:
On 23/08/17 20:52, Dan Norton wrote:
Since borg is a self-contained binary, perhaps it does not need to be
formally declared as a package in Debian 8.
There is no relation between “is self-contained binary” and whether it
is in Debian. Aga
Hi.
On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 08:45:19 -0500
David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:37:45 (+0300), Reco wrote:
> > Hi.
> >
> > On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 03:38:10PM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
> > > On 21/08/17 05:31, Reco wrote:
> > > > In jessie and before that one could put neede
Hi.
On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 08:25:16 -0500
David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:30:35 (+0300), Reco wrote:
> > Hi.
> >
> > In-Reply-To: <20170824074515.y4z2ummdigk2fcbn@kazuki.local>
> >
> [...]
>
> If you type:
>
> :
> set edit_headers
>
> you should get the heade
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 08:30:33AM -0500, Dave Sherohman wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 09:17:00AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
> > However, I'll point out that machines with this many network interfaces
> > are *by far* the exception rather than the rule; indeed, even machines
> > with more than *
On 2017-08-24 at 09:30, Dave Sherohman wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 09:17:00AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
>
>> However, I'll point out that machines with this many network
>> interfaces are *by far* the exception rather than the rule; indeed,
>> even machines with more than *one* interface ea
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:37:45 (+0300), Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 03:38:10PM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
> > On 21/08/17 05:31, Reco wrote:
> > > In jessie and before that one could put needed customizations
> > > into /etc/vim/vimrc (and it works as of stretch)
> > > or
Hi there
On 24/08/17 15:39, Dan Ritter wrote:
As of Stretch, the standard OpenSSH sshd does not support
Protocol 1, so there's no particular reason to enforce it
by stating Protocol 2.
I assumed as much. It's just a simple way to keep rkhunter happy.
PermitRootLogin now defaults to "prohib
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 02:49:00PM +0200, Rob van der Putten wrote:
> Hi there
>
>
> On 22/08/17 21:16, Rob van der Putten wrote:
>
> > Upgrade from amd64 Jessie (insserv, bare ALSA).
> > I kind of miss xfce-mixer Alsamixergui works, but xfce-mixer looked
> > better.
>
> I use qasmixer now;
> h
On 8/24/17 3:45 AM, Mark Fletcher wrote:
> Hello the list!
>
> [I suppose this is a little bit OT -- but you guys are the best
> concentration of experts I know, so here goes anyway...]
>
> My local network consists of a bunch of Debian machines of various ages,
> various iDevices, and the odd Wi
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 09:17:00AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
> However, I'll point out that machines with this many network interfaces
> are *by far* the exception rather than the rule; indeed, even machines
> with more than *one* interface each of wired and wireless are reasonably
> rare.
In the
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Hash: SHA1
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 09:17:00AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2017-08-24 at 07:52, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
[...]
> However, I'll point out that machines with this many network interfaces
> are *by far* the exception rather than the rule [...]
I
On Thu 24 Aug 2017 at 12:30:35 (+0300), Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> In-Reply-To: <20170824074515.y4z2ummdigk2fcbn@kazuki.local>
>
[...]
If you type:
:
set edit_headers
you should get the headers included in your composition window,
and you can then stick the In-Reply-To: amongst its pe
On 2017-08-24 at 07:52, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 01:11:27PM +0200, Hans wrote:
>
>> Hi folks,
>
>> I stumbled over the new network names (i.e. wl0p8 instead of wlan0), and of
>> course I know, that this is obviously the newe standard (please correct me,
>> i
>> I am wr
Hi there
On 22/08/17 21:16, Rob van der Putten wrote:
Upgrade from amd64 Jessie (insserv, bare ALSA).
I kind of miss xfce-mixer Alsamixergui works, but xfce-mixer looked
better.
I use qasmixer now;
http://www.sput.nl/software/qasmixer.png
I removed the xfce4 meta package, since it insists o
On Wed, Aug 23, 2017 at 09:07:02PM -0500, Mario Castelán Castro wrote:
> There is no relation between “is self-contained binary” and whether it
> is in Debian. Again, borgbackup is available in Debian 8, but you have
> to enable backports.
Which, for those who don't know, you do by following the i
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 01:11:27PM +0200, Hans wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I stumbled over the new network names (i.e. wl0p8 instead of wlan0), and of
> course I know, that this is obviously the newe standard (please correct me, i
> I am wrong).
Relax.
No, this is not just debian, you'll find it on archlinux as well.
On Thu, 24 Aug 2017, Hans wrote:
Date: Thu, 24 Aug 2017 07:11:27
From: Hans
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Question to new network device names
Resent-Date: Thu, 24 Aug 2017 11:14:06 + (UTC)
Resent-From: debian-us
On 24-08-17, Hans wrote:
> Hi folks,
>
> I stumbled over the new network names (i.e. wl0p8 instead of wlan0), and of
> course I know, that this is obviously the newe standard (please correct me, i
> I am wrong).
>
> What I would like to know: Is this new naming scheme an international
> standa
Hi folks,
I stumbled over the new network names (i.e. wl0p8 instead of wlan0), and of
course I know, that this is obviously the newe standard (please correct me, i
I am wrong).
What I would like to know: Is this new naming scheme an international standard
on all linux distributions, or is this
Hi.
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 03:38:10PM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
> On 21/08/17 05:31, Reco wrote:
> > In jessie and before that one could put needed customizations
> > into /etc/vim/vimrc (and it works as of stretch)
> > or into /etc/vim/vimrc.local (and it's ignored in stretch).
>
> L
Hi Raju,
On Thu, 24 Aug 2017 02:37:41 -0400
kamaraju kusumanchi wrote:
(...)
> The popsort.py utility is written by me. It can be downloaded from
> https://gitlab.com/d3k2mk7/rutils/blob/master/bin/popsort.py and is
> documented at
> http://raju.shoutwiki.com/wiki/Sort_output_of_apt-cache_searc
Hi.
In-Reply-To: <20170824074515.y4z2ummdigk2fcbn@kazuki.local>
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 04:45:15PM +0900, Mark Fletcher wrote:
> Is there any clever way to pass through the name server settings
> the DHCP server provides, so that if the ISP should change its name
> server IP addresses i
> ciaoo
>
forse capito cosa faresti
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Hash: SHA1
On Thu, Aug 24, 2017 at 02:37:41AM -0400, kamaraju kusumanchi wrote:
[...]
> Long answer:
> I have been in this type of situation many times where I was looking
> for a recommended(?) tool to accomplish a particular task [...]
Thanks for this, it wa
Hello the list!
[I suppose this is a little bit OT -- but you guys are the best
concentration of experts I know, so here goes anyway...]
My local network consists of a bunch of Debian machines of various ages,
various iDevices, and the odd Windows machine connected either by wired
or wireless
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