>From the pmount manpage for stretch:
»
pmount device [ label ]
This will mount device to a directory below /media if policy is met
(see below). If label is given, the mount point will be /media/label,
otherwise it will be /media/device.
«
There doesn't seem to be an option for pmount to m
Hi,
Mark Fletcher wrote:
> root@kazuki:/home/mark# xorriso -indev
> ~mark/Downloads/Win10_1809Oct_v2_Japanese_x64.iso -report_system_area plain
> -report_el_torito plain
> ...
> Media summary: 1 session, 2591375 data blocks, 5061m data, 631g free
> Volume id: 'CCCOMA_X64FRE_JA-JP_DV9'
> xorri
On Sat, May 04, 2019 at 11:39:39AM +0900, Mark Fletcher wrote:
In Jessie and Stretch, gnome-disk-utility-3.22.1 (which labels itself
"Disks") sometimes balks at the instructions I give it. But that is
what happens when you use a GUI instead of the command line, and
particularly when the utility
On 03.05.19 18:01, Russell L. Harris wrote:
> P.S. Would someone kindly tell me how, while in Mutt and reading a
> message such as this, to launch a browser to open links such as [1]
> and [2] above?
A convenient alternative is to just double-click on a link in mutt's
display in an xterm, then pa
On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 12:54:17PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sat, May 04, 2019 at 01:50:31AM +0900, Mark Fletcher wrote:
> > it auto-mounted.
>
> > So as root I did:
> >
> > cp /dev/sdf
>
> You need the device NOT to be mounted when you do the cp. This may mean
> you have to turn off yo
HI,
short answer is yes,you can have both emacs displayed in GUI
i think the problem is when you switch to goo,the auth to DISPLAY is lost
it depends much on how you switch to goo from foo
btw,
i guess you login to foo with display-manager such as gdm or something
alike,and switch to goo with
On 05/03/2019 10:56 AM, David Wright wrote:
On Fri 03 May 2019 at 09:40:05 (-0700), Jimmy Johnson wrote:
On 05/03/2019 04:43 AM, Francisco M Neto wrote:
AFAIK in Stretch Mutt actually means Neomutt. There was a flamewar between the
package maintainer and the Mutt guy a while ago about that. It
hi. in debian 9 i start emacs as user foo from the terminal and the
gui start up. i start emacs from the terminal as another user goo and
the text version comes.
Can both users have their own gui emacs sessions ?
Alexandros
tomas wrote:
>> That's some heavy parsing, only I don't get
>> it to work. I get "no such file or directory:
>> " from the first, apt-cache-dump invocation.
>
> This is because it's spelt "apt-cache dump",
> I guess ;-)
No, then it says "zsh: command not found:" :)
--
underground experts united
On Thu, 18 Apr 2019 10:43:55 -0400
Michael Stone wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 18, 2019 at 10:41:18AM -0400, Celejar wrote:
> >> Alternatively, for internal-only stuff, you can use ULAs. IPv6
> >
> >The context of our discussion is seamless and collision-free host access
> >across a VPN, not "internal-onl
On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 03:56:43AM +, Russell L. Harris wrote:
On Debian 9 (amd64), I installed Mutt. The synaptic description says the
package is 1.7.2 and has neoMutt patches. But the "V" command in Mutt reports
the version as "NeoMutt 20170113 (1.7.2)".
I searched and read a number of l
On Thu 02 May 2019 at 23:33:06 +0200, Francesco Poli wrote:
> On Thu, 2 May 2019 20:49:28 +0100 Brian wrote:
>
> [...]
> > In #917569
> >
> > https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=917569
> >
> > Francesco Poli treats upgrading one buster Soekris net5501 installation
> > to another
Russell L. Harris wrote:
> On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 09:40:05AM -0700, Jimmy Johnson wrote:
> > On 05/03/2019 04:43 AM, Francisco M Neto wrote:
> > > AFAIK in Stretch Mutt actually means Neomutt. There was a flamewar...
>
> I found the war in the threads, but I did not find the outcome.
>
>
> > >
On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 09:40:05AM -0700, Jimmy Johnson wrote:
On 05/03/2019 04:43 AM, Francisco M Neto wrote:
AFAIK in Stretch Mutt actually means Neomutt. There was a flamewar...
I found the war in the threads, but I did not find the outcome.
In Buster, Mutt means Mutt, and Neomutt means
On Fri 03 May 2019 at 09:40:05 (-0700), Jimmy Johnson wrote:
> On 05/03/2019 04:43 AM, Francisco M Neto wrote:
> > AFAIK in Stretch Mutt actually means Neomutt. There was a flamewar between
> > the
> > package maintainer and the Mutt guy a while ago about that. It wasn't
> > pretty[1,2].
>
> It's
Hi,
Mark Fletcher wrote:
> Any suggestions of what I could do to diagnose the problem?
What do you get from this inspection run:
xorriso -indev ...path.to.iso.image... \
-report_system_area plain \
-report_el_torito plain
Have a nice day :)
Thomas
Hi,
I am inquiring about whether you may be interested in linking to our site
https://www.tutoo.com/ from your page;
http://user.it.uu.se/~embe8573/conf/bookmark.html
Our service makes it simple for students to search for all the tutors within
their local area. We are currently used by thousan
On 5/3/2019 7:29 PM, Paul Sutton wrote:
>
> On 03/05/2019 18:24, James Medeiros wrote:
>> I usually use dd; the following should also work (someone jump in if
>> I'm misunderstanding the question). Also second what Greg said, make
>> sure your USB isn't mounted.
>>
>> dd if= of=/dev/sdf bs=8M
>>
>>
On 03/05/2019 18:24, James Medeiros wrote:
> I usually use dd; the following should also work (someone jump in if
> I'm misunderstanding the question). Also second what Greg said, make
> sure your USB isn't mounted.
>
> dd if= of=/dev/sdf bs=8M
>
>
>
> On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 12:54 PM Greg Wooledg
I usually use dd; the following should also work (someone jump in if I'm
misunderstanding the question). Also second what Greg said, make sure your
USB isn't mounted.
dd if= of=/dev/sdf bs=8M
On Fri, May 3, 2019 at 12:54 PM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sat, May 04, 2019 at 01:50:31AM +0900, Mark
On Fri, 2019-05-03 at 10:51 -0400, Jim Popovitch wrote:
> On Fri, 2019-05-03 at 08:43 -0300, Francisco M Neto wrote:
> > AFAIK in Stretch Mutt actually means Neomutt. There was a flamewar between
> > the
> > package maintainer and the Mutt guy a while ago about that. It wasn't
> > pretty[1,2].
> >
On Sat, May 04, 2019 at 01:50:31AM +0900, Mark Fletcher wrote:
> it auto-mounted.
> So as root I did:
>
> cp /dev/sdf
You need the device NOT to be mounted when you do the cp. This may mean
you have to turn off your auto-mounter, or (better still) just log out of
your Desktop Environment entir
Hello
I'm trying to use Stretch to write a .ISO image to a USB device. The
image is the Windows 10 installer (please don't flame me! It's part of
an education project for my son!) which I downloaded from Microsoft, and
which they claim should be able to be written to a USB device. Microsoft
wo
On 05/03/2019 04:43 AM, Francisco M Neto wrote:
AFAIK in Stretch Mutt actually means Neomutt. There was a flamewar between the
package maintainer and the Mutt guy a while ago about that. It wasn't
pretty[1,2].
It's been blogged too. I think Neo is kind of in your face and it is
about the hat
On Fri, 2019-05-03 at 08:43 -0300, Francisco M Neto wrote:
> AFAIK in Stretch Mutt actually means Neomutt. There was a flamewar between the
> package maintainer and the Mutt guy a while ago about that. It wasn't
> pretty[1,2].
>
>
> In Buster, Mutt means Mutt, and Neomutt means Neomutt.
Is there
Hallo,
* David Wright [Sat, Apr 27 2019, 09:31:50AM]:
> > /var/cache/apt-cacher-ng/_xstore/rsnap/debrep/dists/unstable/45961554550630227606591
> >
> > I removed the file and it started complaining about other similar files.
> > After deleting a couple, the logs became even more unhelpful:
> >
> > M
On 5/3/2019 3:32 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 06:10:45AM +, Bonno Bloksma wrote:
>> I would like to understand why apt-get upgrade holds backup the upgrade of
>> the Linux kernel.
>
> Because the kernel ABI changed, and a new package has to be installed.
> It's not just a
On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 06:10:45AM +, Bonno Bloksma wrote:
> I would like to understand why apt-get upgrade holds backup the upgrade of
> the Linux kernel.
Because the kernel ABI changed, and a new package has to be installed.
It's not just an upgrade of an existing package.
By default, "ap
Hi,
I would like to understand why apt-get upgrade holds backup the upgrade of the
Linux kernel.
-
Calculating upgrade... Done
The following packages have been kept back:
linux-image-amd64 (4.9+80+deb9u6 => 4.9+80+deb9u7)
-
So I looked at the Debian changelog for the
On Fri 03 May 2019 at 03:46:50 (+0200), Emanuel Berg wrote:
> David Wright wrote:
>
> > $ apt-cache dump | grep -A 2 '^Package:' | grep -B 2 '^ File:' | sed -e
> > 'N;N;s/\n/ /g;s/ \+/ /g;N' | grep -v '^--' | sort >> "$Unique1"
> > $ dpkg-query -W -f '^Package: ${Package} \n' | grep --file=- "$Un
On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 03:46:50AM +0200, Emanuel Berg wrote:
> David Wright wrote:
>
> > $ dpkg-query -W -f '^Package: ${Package} \n' | grep --file=- "$Unique1" |
> > sort
> Also I don't understand where the argument
> goes? Where is ${Package} defined, even tho it
> didn't (for me) even get th
On Fri, May 03, 2019 at 03:30:13AM +0200, Emanuel Berg wrote:
> Optimally I'd like it like this:
>
> $ from-what-release w3m-el-snapshot
> testing
The problem here is the packaging system does not KNOW from which source
a package came, after it is installed.
The best you can do is try to
* On 2019 02 May 23:45 -0500, Russell L. Harris wrote:
> I searched and read a number of list threads on the matter of Mutt vs.
> neoMutt, but most of the threads I found were a few years old, so I do
> not know the outcome of the matter. I also found a web page which
> says that Debian 10 is goin
AFAIK in Stretch Mutt actually means Neomutt. There was a flamewar between the
package maintainer and the Mutt guy a while ago about that. It wasn't
pretty[1,2].
In Buster, Mutt means Mutt, and Neomutt means Neomutt.
I suppose if you want to use "Vanilla" Mutt in Stretch you need to get it some
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