On 2020-12-23 03:37, Andy Smith wrote:
<..>
e.g. if you install a drive and it shows up in your OS as /dev/foo
of size 1TB, then:
# pvcreate /dev/foo
# vgcreate myvg /dev/foo
Now you have a volume group called "myvg" with ~1TB (some space
reserved for metadata) available for allocation.
This
Hi Mick,
On Wed, Dec 23, 2020 at 12:55:58AM +, mick crane wrote:
> I have a buster PC and a bullseye PC which are both supposed to have
> gigabyte network cards connected via a little Gigabyte switch box.
"gigabyte" is not a network speed. You probably mean gigabit; that
is 10⁹ bits per secon
Hello,
On Tue, Dec 22, 2020 at 11:10:20PM +, mick crane wrote:
> On 2020-12-22 22:19, Michael wrote:
> >- pvcreate to add a partition to a pool of physical volumes
[…]
> I have only skimmed reading the fine manual and other things but I'm
> guessing that if the partition is full I'll either
On 23/12/20 9:40 am, Jeremy Ardley wrote:
rsync is never particularly fast as there is a lot of handshaking and
file examination at each end prior to a transfer. I wouldn't be
surprised at 50 Mbps.
scp should be a lot faster as there is no handshaking other than
establishing the session; a
On 23/12/20 8:55 am, mick crane wrote:
hello,
I have a buster PC and a bullseye PC which are both supposed to have
gigabyte network cards connected via a little Gigabyte switch box.
Transferring files between them, I forget which shows the transfer
speed per file, either scp or rsync the maxim
On 12/23/20 2:55 AM, mick crane wrote:
> hello,
> I have a buster PC and a bullseye PC which are both supposed to have
> gigabyte network cards connected via a little Gigabyte switch box.
> Transferring files between them, I forget which shows the transfer speed
> per file, either scp or rsync the
On 12/22/20 7:55 PM, mick crane wrote:
hello,
I have a buster PC and a bullseye PC which are both supposed to have gigabyte
network cards connected via a little Gigabyte switch box.
Transferring files between them, I forget which shows the transfer speed per
file, either scp or rsync the maximu
hello,
I have a buster PC and a bullseye PC which are both supposed to have
gigabyte network cards connected via a little Gigabyte switch box.
Transferring files between them, I forget which shows the transfer speed
per file, either scp or rsync the maximum is 50 Mbs per file.
Would you expect
On 2020-12-22 09:11, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
See the quoted paragraph, below, quoted from the
[[https://wiki.debian.org/LVM#Encrypted_LVM][LVM#Encrypted_LVM]] wiki.
It seems to me that the idea of creating and saving backup passwords is
something of a red herring (to borrow a "Briticism").
Th
On 2020-12-22 22:19, Michael wrote:
On Tuesday, December 22, 2020 10:58:14 PM CET, mick crane wrote:
You mean like RTFM or something ?
indeed, i had something like this in mind... ;)
agreed, the quality of man pages is not, what it used to be back in
the day, when i was young, but lvm is old,
On 23/12/20 7:58 am, mick crane wrote:
On 2020-12-22 21:04, Michael wrote:
On Tuesday, December 22, 2020 1:26:36 PM CET, elvis wrote:
The LVM howto is your friend
there are also plenty of man pages!
greetings...
You mean like RTFM or something ?
The man pages generally assume you know wh
On Tuesday, December 22, 2020 10:58:14 PM CET, mick crane wrote:
You mean like RTFM or something ?
indeed, i had something like this in mind... ;)
agreed, the quality of man pages is not, what it used to be back in the
day, when i was young, but lvm is old, and hence the man pages provide mor
On 2020-12-22 21:04, Michael wrote:
On Tuesday, December 22, 2020 1:26:36 PM CET, elvis wrote:
The LVM howto is your friend
there are also plenty of man pages!
greetings...
You mean like RTFM or something ?
The man pages generally assume you know why you are reading them.
I've noticed a lot
On Tuesday, December 22, 2020 1:26:36 PM CET, elvis wrote:
The LVM howto is your friend
there are also plenty of man pages!
greetings...
Roberto,
Thanks for the reply!
Good points, both of them. I might (or might not) add your use case (the
multiple user case) to the wiki as it sounds like a more plausible need.
On Tuesday, December 22, 2020 12:34:12 PM Roberto C. Sánchez wrote:
> On Tue, Dec 22, 2020 at 12:11:19PM -0500, rhkra
On Tue, Dec 22, 2020 at 12:11:19PM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> My point is this: I think creating and saving backup passwords is of minimal
> value.
Maybe to you as a single user. However, I have worked in places where
resources are protected by multiple passwords. For instance ther
See the quoted paragraph, below, quoted from the
[[https://wiki.debian.org/LVM#Encrypted_LVM][LVM#Encrypted_LVM]] wiki.
It seems to me that the idea of creating and saving backup passwords is
something of a red herring (to borrow a "Briticism").
The way I see it:
* if, in the future: "som
On Ma, 22 dec 20, 11:13:59, Dan Ritter wrote:
> Jan Girke wrote:
> > Hi
> >
> > I am searching for a good tutorial for setting up Gnome and KDE as my
> > desktops with a screen at the start to choose which one I want today /
> > this start.
>
> sudo apt install xdm
> and whichever of the followi
Jan Girke wrote:
> Hi
>
> I am searching for a good tutorial for setting up Gnome and KDE as my
> desktops with a screen at the start to choose which one I want today /
> this start.
sudo apt install xdm
and whichever of the following makes you happy:
task-gnome-desktop | task-xfce-desktop | ta
Hi
I am searching for a good tutorial for setting up Gnome and KDE as my
desktops with a screen at the start to choose which one I want today /
this start.
Can anybody give me the link to a good one?
Best, Jan
On Sun 20 Dec 2020 at 17:01:31 (+0100), Jesper Dybdal wrote:
> On 2020-12-19 21:05, Kushal Kumaran wrote:
> > > > Jesper Dybdal wrote:
> > > > > I run Buster with unattended updates configured to allow reboots.
> > > > >
> > > > > Sometimes after an update, the log contains:
> > > > > > Service re
George Shuklin wrote:
> On 20/12/2020 00:42, Dan Ritter wrote:
> > George Shuklin wrote:
> > > On 12/18/20 9:55 PM, Dan Ritter wrote:
> > > > George Shuklin wrote:
> > > > > I continue to choose hardware carefully, and the next issue (I found
> > > > > a lot
> > > > > on it) is support for tiling
El mar., 22 dic. 2020 14:07, Greg Wooledge escribió:
> On Mon, Dec 21, 2020 at 08:12:28PM -0500, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> > Last I read wayland had serious accessibility problems. How does fvwm
> > work with screen readers and similar accessibility items and is fvwm
> > going the way of xWindows?
On Mon, Dec 21, 2020 at 08:12:28PM -0500, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> Last I read wayland had serious accessibility problems. How does fvwm
> work with screen readers and similar accessibility items and is fvwm
> going the way of xWindows?
I have no experience with screen readers, and very little know
On 20/12/2020 00:42, Dan Ritter wrote:
George Shuklin wrote:
On 12/18/20 9:55 PM, Dan Ritter wrote:
George Shuklin wrote:
I continue to choose hardware carefully, and the next issue (I found a lot
on it) is support for tiling displays. They uses multiple streams inside
DisplayPort to achieve h
On 21/12/20 4:27 pm, mick crane wrote:
On 2020-12-20 20:38, Charles Curley wrote:
On Sun, 20 Dec 2020 19:05:45 +
mick crane wrote:
It's a more or less new bullseye installation.
The installer kindly set up a Volume Group and added Logical Volumes
of a couple of the partitions on the dis
On Tue, Dec 22, 2020 at 01:25:05AM +0100, Linux-Fan wrote:
> Andrew M.A. Cater writes:
>
> > On Mon, Dec 21, 2020 at 07:06:45AM -0800, Rick Thomas wrote:
> > >
> > > On Mon, Dec 21, 2020, at 3:48 AM, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
>
> [...]
>
> > > > If you have "real" 686 32 bit hardware that you can
Folks;
unsure whether this belongs here (apologies if not): Using Thunderbird
78 and GNOME on Debian bullseye, I wonder whether there is any way to
make Thunderbird comply with the font (size, style) settings of the rest
of the desktop? Spent a fair amount of time trying to tweak this, but
re
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