On Wed, Jun 19, 2019 at 11:06:59AM +0700, Bagas Sanjaya wrote:
> Hello all Debian Users,
>
> Consider the hypothetical scenario below.
>
> I often encountered cases on systems in television stations when
> they configured sudoers like this snippet below:
>
> %remaja ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL
>
> The ra
On 6/19/2019 6:06 AM, Bagas Sanjaya wrote:
> Hello all Debian Users,
>
> Consider the hypothetical scenario below.
>
> I often encountered cases on systems in television stations when they
> configured sudoers like this snippet below:
>
> %remaja ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL
>
> The rationale for above is mos
Hello all Debian Users,
Consider the hypothetical scenario below.
I often encountered cases on systems in television stations when they
configured sudoers like this snippet below:
%remaja ALL=(ALL:ALL) ALL
The rationale for above is most programs on such systems can only be
accessed by user
On Tue, 18 Jun 2019, Felix Miata wrote:
The gods of security have decreed that instead of startx you
must use a display manager to login and start your X session.
This statement had such a clear veridical ring to it I realized
it would be foolish to submit myself, all of you, and the cat,
to
Quoting David Christensen (2019-06-19 03:38:56)
> On 6/18/19 5:26 AM, Erik Josefsson wrote: If the Teres-I is a "Do It
> Yourself Open Source Hardware and Software Hacker's friendly Modular
> Laptop", where are the downloads?
>
> https://www.olimex.com/Products/DIY-Laptop/
Olimex Armbian-b
On 6/18/19 5:26 AM, Erik Josefsson wrote:
This is another quite open question that I probably could research
myself, if I had the time.
As far as I understand, it is quite recent that SD cards are fast and
large enough to be able to carry and run an entire Debian instance.
If this is the cas
Quoting Erik Josefsson (2019-06-18 23:10:03)
> Because PureOS is a Debian Pure Blend, isn't it?
No, PureOS is Debian Blend (one of my main tasks in the company is to
work on that) but not a Pure Blend: It contains non-Debian parts and
will likely always due to a core aim of complying with both D
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 6:21 PM Felix Miata wrote:
>
> IMO it's OK to use to test that X works at all before choosing and
> installing a
> display manager. Future updates will undo the chmod (for your safety).
>
The conveniences you have demanded are now mandatory.
-- Jello Biafra
>
>
> Felix
Bob Bernstein composed on 2019-06-18 18:48 (UTC-0400):
> # startx
> Saints Be Praised! I had a colorful image in front of me, and my
> icewm had been neatly launched. No mouse problem. OMG!
> But it only works for root.
The gods of security have decreed that instead of startx you must use a d
So I think your next/last step will be to open X security to that display
for the non-root user you tried. The command is xhost, but it's possible
you may need to install it.
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019, 5:49 PM Bob Bernstein
wrote:
> I put this into google: "systemd X windows Debian" and was
> brought
I put this into google: "systemd X windows Debian" and was
brought here:
https://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-reference/ch07.en.html
I executed the suggested command:
# dpkg-reconfigure --priority=low x11-common
...and then decided to throw all caution to the winds:
# startx
Saints Be
Bob Bernstein composed on 2019-06-18 13:45 (UTC-0400):
> The mouse proves elusive:
> # dmesg |grep -i mouse
> [2.645218] mousedev: PS/2 mouse device common for all mice
> [3.225344] psmouse serio1: logips2pp: Detected unknown
> Logitech mouse model
> 90
> [3.722367] input: ImExPS/2 L
Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 18, 2019, 4:10 PM Erik Josefsson <
> erik.hjalmar.josefs...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > The Ubuntu version that Teres-I comes with feels almost as good, which is
> > why I still don't understand why running Debian from the SD-card doesn't.
> >
> Then I would be
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019, 4:10 PM Erik Josefsson <
erik.hjalmar.josefs...@gmail.com> wrote:
> The Ubuntu version that Teres-I comes with feels almost as good, which is
> why I still don't understand why running Debian from the SD-card doesn't.
>
Then I would be interested to know which release of Ubun
I don't know if this made it to the list.
-- Forwarded message --
From: Bob Bernstein
To: Debian User List
Subject: Re: Okay, let's get X workingg on my new Stretch
Date: Tue, 18 Jun 2019 14:45:01
User-Agent: Alpine 2.21 (DEB 202 2017-01-01)
More data:
-snip-
$ startx
X.Org
I was just reading the announcement that the Ubuntu folks are dropping
32-bit x86 support completely. Although Ubuntu is a downstream
derivative of Debian, Debian and Ubuntu have a lot of overlap in terms
of maintainers and developers, and certain developments between the two
projects tend to overl
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 04:21:31PM -0400, bw wrote:
> You usually would not need an xorg.conf do you have
> firmware-amd-graphics installed for the radeon board?
Here's what I show:
# dpkg -l |grep firm
ii firmware-amd-graphics 20161130-5
all Binary firmware for AMD/ATI graphics ch
On 6/18/19 9:04 PM, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
I need either to drop gui or figure out a way to make the Teres-I
laptop perform almost as good as a Lenovo N22-20 Chromebook model 80SF
(which is what the kids had last year).
Such a Lenovo Chromebook outperforms the Teres-1 on every way.
I know, th
Erik Josefsson:
>
> As far as I understand, it is quite recent that SD cards are fast and large
> enough to be able to carry and run an entire Debian instance.
The capacity is not a problem for quite some time, depending on your
space requirements. You can still run a minimal Debian on way less t
Quoting Erik Josefsson (2019-06-18 18:15:39)
> On 6/18/19 5:46 PM, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
> >
> > If the computer runs from the SD card, the memory you are
> > talking about is also on that same SD card, no?
> >
> > No. The SD card is analogous to the hard drive, not to the RAM.
>
> Tha
More data:
-snip-
$ startx
X.Org X Server 1.19.2
Release Date: 2017-03-02
X Protocol Version 11, Revision 0
Build Operating System: Linux 4.9.0-8-amd64 x86_64 Debian
Current Operating System: Linux debian.localdomain 4.9.0-9-amd64
#1 SMP Debian 4.9.168-1+deb9u3 (2019-06-16) x86_64
Kernel comman
The mouse proves elusive:
# dmesg |grep -i mouse
[2.645218] mousedev: PS/2 mouse device common for all mice
[3.225344] psmouse serio1: logips2pp: Detected unknown
Logitech mouse model
90
[3.722367] input: ImExPS/2 Logitech Explorer Mouse as
/devices/platform/i8042/serio1/input/inpu
On Mon 03 Jun 2019 at 21:07:51 (-0700), Patrick Bartek wrote:
> Unfortuanately, as all those ancillary components are not
> independent but interrelated, you're going to get unexpected
> systemd "gotchas" just as I did with wicd. I solved it by picking
> another wifi manager which really has no r
On Sun 02 Jun 2019 at 22:23:25 (-0700), Patrick Bartek wrote:
> On Sun, 2 Jun 2019 00:29:30 -0500 David Wright
> wrote:
> > On Wed 29 May 2019 at 11:01:58 (-0700), Patrick Bartek wrote:
> >
> > > Is Debian slowly becoming systemd proprietary? It would be a great
> > > loss to Linux and its phil
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 11:23 AM Richard Hector
wrote:
>
> If you never try setting it up, when do you expect to understand it? And
> I see IPv6 on my side of the modem; I suspect many others do too. I
> expect you'll get it sooner or later.
>
A few weeks ago a took a position in the world's lar
On 19/06/19 4:12 AM, David Wright wrote:
> On Mon 17 Jun 2019 at 10:38:27 (-0400), Gene Heskett wrote:
>> But that opens yet another container of worms. If I arbitrarily assign
>> ipv6 local addresses, and later, ipv6 shows up at my side of the router,
>> what if I have an address clash with som
Hi.
On Wed, Jun 19, 2019 at 04:17:55AM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
> On 19/06/19 2:11 AM, Reco wrote:
> > On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 11:47:08PM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
> >> On 18/06/19 10:32 PM, Reco wrote:
>
> >>
> >> Custom routes? When routing between 2 networks using the same range
On Tue 28 May 2019 at 14:13:42 (+0300), Sergey Belyashov wrote:
> As expected nothing is changed. I did not forget to run update-initramfs
> after change of fstab.
> Attached 3 photos: normal boot, recovery boot before pasword enter,
> recovery boot after password and Ctrl-D in recovery shell.
[I
Hi.
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 10:32:23AM -0500, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
> Guten Morgen,
>
>
> > But this RFC's "random" cannot mean "I start each day with selecting
> > new, custom /64 IPv6 ULA prefix for my site". ipv6calc fills this
> > nicely, try it some day.
> >
>
> By RFC 4193, it
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 04:45:59PM +0200, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 18/06/2019 à 16:11, Reco a écrit :
> > >
> > > Custom routes? When routing between 2 networks using the same range,
> > > either with a VPN or some kind of direct connection? It's going to need
> > > some evil double NAT sorcery
On 19/06/19 2:11 AM, Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 11:47:08PM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
>> On 18/06/19 10:32 PM, Reco wrote:
>>
>> Custom routes? When routing between 2 networks using the same range,
>> either with a VPN or some kind of direct connection? It's going to ne
On Sun 09 Jun 2019 at 18:07:11 (+0300), andreimpope...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Vi, 05 apr 19, 13:05:56, David Wright wrote:
> >
> > A solution might be to install over a serial link, but I don't
> > think you can do that with the d-i itself, only with 3rd-party
> > mangled versions.
>
> Sure it can
On 6/18/19 5:46 PM, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
If the computer runs from the SD card, the memory you are talking
about is also on that same SD card, no?
No. The SD card is analogous to the hard drive, not to the RAM.
Thanks! Now things start to make sense again :-)
That means there cou
On Sun 16 Jun 2019 at 22:50:28 (-0400), Felix Miata wrote:
> Richard Owlett composed on 2019-06-16 14:17 (UTC-0500):
> > David Wright wrote:
>
> >> or, even easier,
>
> >>Use a LABEL to indicate the swap partition in all your own
> ...> I can't parse that.
>
> I recommend learning to use L
On Mon 17 Jun 2019 at 10:38:27 (-0400), Gene Heskett wrote:
> On Monday 17 June 2019 05:59:52 am Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> > On Mon, Jun 17, 2019 at 10:05:11AM +0100, mick crane wrote:
> > >Without knowing anything about it I'm wondering if I should request
> > > an IPv6 range from my ISP to use lo
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Tuesday, June 18, 2019 11:21:51 AM Erik Josefsson wrote:
> > If the computer runs from the SD card, the memory you are talking about
> > is also on that same SD card, no?
>
> I should let Andy speak for himself, but, I believe the answer is no --
> earlier in the t
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 10:22 AM Erik Josefsson <
erik.hjalmar.josefs...@gmail.com> wrote:
> If the computer runs from the SD card, the memory you are talking about is
> also on that same SD card, no?
>
No. The SD card is analogous to the hard drive, not to the RAM.
> Thanks again!
>
> //Erik
>
On Tuesday, June 18, 2019 11:21:51 AM Erik Josefsson wrote:
> Hi Andy, thanks for taking time!
>
> On 6/18/19 3:14 PM, Andy Smith wrote:
> >> There is a very expensive 64GB SD card from SanDisk that is called
> >> Extreme Pro that costs twice as much as same size Extreme Plus. Specs
> >> say it is
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 9:11 AM Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
Guten Morgen,
> But this RFC's "random" cannot mean "I start each day with selecting
> new, custom /64 IPv6 ULA prefix for my site". ipv6calc fills this
> nicely, try it some day.
>
By RFC 4193, it must/should be pseudo-random genera
On Tue, 18 Jun 2019, Andy Smith wrote:
I'd be interested in seeing your routing table (the "ip route
show" command I mentioned before).
You must have your Jedi robes on. "These are the ip show
commands I mentioned before."
But you didn't mention 'ip route show,' else I would have
provided
Hi Andy, thanks for taking time!
On 6/18/19 3:14 PM, Andy Smith wrote:
There is a very expensive 64GB SD card from SanDisk that is called Extreme
Pro that costs twice as much as same size Extreme Plus. Specs say it is
"super duper blazing fast" for video in "Ultra HD 4K", but would Pro also be
f
Le 18/06/2019 à 16:11, Reco a écrit :
Custom routes? When routing between 2 networks using the same range,
either with a VPN or some kind of direct connection? It's going to need
some evil double NAT sorcery, especially if the same actual addresses
are in use on both.
As long as:
a) It's L3 V
On Thu, Jun 13, 2019, 12:11 PM Joe wrote:
> On Thu, 13 Jun 2019 17:28:10 +0200
> Hans wrote:
>
> > Am Donnerstag, 13. Juni 2019, 16:29:27 CEST schrieb k. jantzen:
> > Did you try "Evince" or "Okular"?
>
I like evince.
> >
> > > in general I do not have a problem reading a pdf file with either
Hi.
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 11:47:08PM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
> On 18/06/19 10:32 PM, Reco wrote:
> > Hi.
> >
> > On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 09:56:17PM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
> >> On 18/06/19 3:38 AM, Reco wrote:
> >>> Hi.
> >>>
> >>> On Mon, Jun 17, 2019 at 10:38:27AM -040
Le 17/06/2019 à 17:39, Curt Howland a écrit :
Yes, IPv6 does have such allocations. The first 64bits is network
block, then the last 64bits are your local machine.
Unless you want to enable SLAAC which requires 64+64, you can select
different sizes for the network the host parts. Your network
About the only thing I'd add to what others have said is that they now make
SSDs in a different form factor -- if you look for them, they start with an M,
iirc -- they are in the same size range as an SD card (well, a regular one,
not a micro).
You need a special socket to plug them into, a
Quoting Erik Josefsson (2019-06-18 14:26:57)
> This is another quite open question that I probably could research
> myself, if I had the time.
>
> As far as I understand, it is quite recent that SD cards are fast and
> large enough to be able to carry and run an entire Debian instance.
>
> If t
Hi Erik,
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 02:26:57PM +0200, Erik Josefsson wrote:
> As far as I understand, it is quite recent that SD cards are fast and large
> enough to be able to carry and run an entire Debian instance.
Not really recent. I've run Debian sarge on a 128MiB CompactFlash
card and I'm sur
Erik Josefsson wrote:
...
> I don't really know how swap works on a standard computer, even less how
> it works when the whole computer runs from/on a SD card.
>
> Swap is supposed to be make your computer pretend that you have more RAM
> than it actually has, but if the whole computer is running
Le 18/06/2019 à 14:46, Greg Wooledge a écrit :
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 02:39:53PM +0200, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Le 17/06/2019 à 19:00, Dan Ritter a écrit :
sudo apt remove avahi*
This may raise some dependency issues. Here :
The following packages will be REMOVED:
adwaita-icon-theme avah
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 02:39:53PM +0200, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Le 17/06/2019 à 19:00, Dan Ritter a écrit :
> >
> > sudo apt remove avahi*
>
> This may raise some dependency issues. Here :
>
> The following packages will be REMOVED:
> adwaita-icon-theme avahi-daemon bochs bochs-term bochs-x
Le 17/06/2019 à 19:00, Dan Ritter a écrit :
sudo apt remove avahi*
This may raise some dependency issues. Here :
The following packages will be REMOVED:
adwaita-icon-theme avahi-daemon bochs bochs-term bochs-x
ca-certificates-java colord default-jre default-jre-headless epdfview
firefox
This is another quite open question that I probably could research
myself, if I had the time.
As far as I understand, it is quite recent that SD cards are fast and
large enough to be able to carry and run an entire Debian instance.
If this is the case, maybe there is only theory available reg
Bonjour,
Je voudrais avoir des informations pour le référencement de 2 URL.
Les voici :
https://fr.mistergoodideas.com/facebook/
https://www.skyweb-agency.com/fr/facebook/
Est ce que l'implation des balises hreflang et canonique sont correctement mis
en place et sans erreure pour une stratégie
On 18/06/19 10:32 PM, Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 09:56:17PM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
>> On 18/06/19 3:38 AM, Reco wrote:
>>> Hi.
>>>
>>> On Mon, Jun 17, 2019 at 10:38:27AM -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
But that opens yet another container of worms. If I arbitrari
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 11:12:40AM +, Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi Bob,
>
> On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 12:07:16AM -0400, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> > On Tue, 18 Jun 2019, Andy Smith wrote:
> > >What happens if you try to ping something? Like:
>
> […]
>
> > PING linode.com(2600:3c00::22 (2600:3c00::22)) 5
Hi Bob,
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 12:07:16AM -0400, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> On Tue, 18 Jun 2019, Andy Smith wrote:
> >What happens if you try to ping something? Like:
[…]
> PING linode.com(2600:3c00::22 (2600:3c00::22)) 56 data bytes
> 64 bytes from 2600:3c00::22 (2600:3c00::22): icmp_seq=1 ttl=51
Hi.
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 09:56:17PM +1200, Richard Hector wrote:
> On 18/06/19 3:38 AM, Reco wrote:
> > Hi.
> >
> > On Mon, Jun 17, 2019 at 10:38:27AM -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
> >> But that opens yet another container of worms. If I arbitrarily assign
> >> ipv6 local addresses,
On 18/06/19 3:38 AM, Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Mon, Jun 17, 2019 at 10:38:27AM -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
>> But that opens yet another container of worms. If I arbitrarily assign
>> ipv6 local addresses, and later, ipv6 shows up at my side of the router,
>> what if I have an address clash
On 17/06/19 9:59 PM, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> On Mon, Jun 17, 2019 at 10:05:11AM +0100, mick crane wrote:
>> Without knowing anything about it I'm wondering if I should request an
>> IPv6 range from my ISP to use locally.
>
> You don't need a global IPv6 address allocation in order to have local
> On Monday 17 June 2019, Gene Heskett was heard
> to say:
>
>> How is that resolved, by unroutable address blocks such
>> as 192.168.xx.xx is now?
>
> Yes, IPv6 does have such allocations. The first 64bits is network
> block, then the last 64bits are your local machine.
>
> fc00:: is the no
On 18/06/19 4:07 PM, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> On Tue, 18 Jun 2019, Andy Smith wrote:
>
>> What happens if you try to ping something? Like:
Sorry, sent my previous reply direct instead of to the list.
How about the "ip route show" that Andy suggested?
If you've been experimenting with openvpn, and
On Tue, Jun 18, 2019 at 12:07:16AM -0400, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> On Tue, 18 Jun 2019, Andy Smith wrote:
>
> >What happens if you try to ping something? Like:
>
> It is the ping failures that give me the most angst [...]
> I was also interested to note that linode returned pings in ipv6
> mode. S
Hi there
On 17/06/2019 12:11, Aidan Gauland wrote:
On 17/06/19 9:09 PM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Mon, Jun 17, 2019 at 10:05:11AM +0100, mick crane wrote:
hello,
I know nothing about IPv6.
Can somebody point to a good explanation ?
I'd recommend skimming the relevant Wikipedia [1] page.
C
Quoting franiortiz hotmail (2019-06-17 11:33:30)
> On Sat, Jun 15, 2019 at 12:11:17PM -0700, Fred wrote:
>> On 06/15/2019 08:40 AM, k. jantzen wrote:
>>>On 6/13/19 4:29 PM, k. jantzen wrote:
in general I do not have a problem reading a pdf file with either
xpdf or documentviewer.
65 matches
Mail list logo