On Jo, 08 apr 21, 08:55:47, Robbi Nespu wrote:
>
> I use auto partitioning (if not mistaken) and boot mounted on root "/"
> instead of creating own "/boot" partition
>
> $ df -h /boot/
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/sda1 110G 62G 43G 60% /
>
> What actually
On Mi, 07 apr 21, 23:49:46, deloptes wrote:
> Rainer Dorsch wrote:
>
> > I have a bullseye system with an on-board Intel sound device and a
> > Logitech USB headset. Everything works perfect, if I boot without the USB
> > headset plugged in. Both devices are detected and I can switch between
> > t
On Mi, 07 apr 21, 20:38:46, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> Am Mittwoch, 7. April 2021, 19:47:47 CEST schrieb Andrei POPESCU:
> > On Mi, 07 apr 21, 18:39:21, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> > > Hello,
> > >
> > > I have a bullseye system with an on-board Intel sound device and a
> > > Logitech
> > > USB headset. Ev
Erwan David wrote:
> Le 06/04/2021 à 22:39, deloptes a écrit :
>>> Is it a bug in ifrename ?
>>
>> if you refer to something like this here
>> https://wiki.debian.org/InterfaceRenaming
>> IMO it means youare living in the past
>
> I am in the present and the present does not work. That's the pr
On 4/7/21 2:06 PM, Gary L. Roach wrote:
Hi all,
Some of my most useful software is only available through Ubuntu PPA's
. I can no longer access PPA's since Debian changed their security
policies. When trying to access a PPA I get the following:
The repository
'http://ppa.launchpad.net/el
> I use auto partitioning (if not mistaken) and boot mounted on root "/"
> instead of creating own "/boot" partition
>
> $ df -h /boot/
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/sda1 110G 62G 43G 60% /
>
> What actually the best way for boot directory?
The best way is th
On Thu, Apr 08, 2021 at 08:55:47AM +0800, Robbi Nespu wrote:
> $ df -h /boot/
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/sda1 110G 62G 43G 60% /
>
> What actually the best way for boot directory? put on same root directory
> like I have right now or it better to have it o
Gary L. Roach:
>
> Some of my most useful software is only available through Ubuntu PPA's . I
> can no longer access PPA's since Debian changed their security policies.
> When trying to access a PPA I get the following:
>
> The repository
> 'http://ppa.launchpad.net/elmer-csc-ubuntu/elmer-csc-pp
On 4/8/21 5:06 AM, Gary L. Roach wrote:
Hi all,
Some of my most useful software is only available through Ubuntu PPA's .
I can no longer access PPA's since Debian changed their security
policies. When trying to access a PPA I get the following:
The repository
'http://ppa.launchpad.net/elm
I use auto partitioning (if not mistaken) and boot mounted on root "/"
instead of creating own "/boot" partition
$ df -h /boot/
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/sda1 110G 62G 43G 60% /
What actually the best way for boot directory? put on same root
directory
Am Mittwoch, 7. April 2021, 20:38:46 CEST schrieb Rainer Dorsch:
> Am Mittwoch, 7. April 2021, 19:47:47 CEST schrieb Andrei POPESCU:
> > On Mi, 07 apr 21, 18:39:21, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> > > Hello,
> > >
> > > I have a bullseye system with an on-board Intel sound device and a
> > > Logitech
> > >
Am Mittwoch, 7. April 2021, 19:47:47 CEST schrieb Andrei POPESCU:
> On Mi, 07 apr 21, 18:39:21, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I have a bullseye system with an on-board Intel sound device and a
> > Logitech
> > USB headset. Everything works perfect, if I boot without the USB headset
> > p
On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 09:41:51PM +, Lee wrote:
> Interesting.. "echo foo" in .bashrc does break scp, but not "echo foo >2"
That redirects to a file named "2".
> .. but that doesn't work for bash, so hhrmm.. > /dev/stderr seems to
> work in all cases:
You wanted >&2 .
Gary L. Roach wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Some of my most useful software is only available through Ubuntu PPA's . I
> can no longer access PPA's since Debian changed their security policies.
> When trying to access a PPA I get the following:
>
> The repository
> 'http://ppa.launchpad.net/elmer-csc-ub
Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> I have a bullseye system with an on-board Intel sound device and a
> Logitech USB headset. Everything works perfect, if I boot without the USB
> headset plugged in. Both devices are detected and I can switch between
> them as expected. If I boot with the USB headset plugged
On 4/7/21, Marco Ippolito wrote:
>> Where I want output, I protect it with:
>>
>> [ -n "$PS1" ] && printf …
>
> Maybe consider:
>
> [[ -t 1 ]] && printf ...
Until your script that was started via crontab silently fails. I
*like* always having error messages enabled.
Lee
On 4/7/21, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 03:16:41PM +, Lee wrote:
>> On 4/7/21, Gene Heskett wrote:
<.. snip ..>
>> > Any idea why its not working?
>>
>> A typo in your script? Add an else clause that shows the error and
>> that will probably show you what's wrong -- eg
>>
> Where I want output, I protect it with:
>
> [ -n "$PS1" ] && printf …
Maybe consider:
[[ -t 1 ]] && printf ...
Hi all,
Some of my most useful software is only available through Ubuntu PPA's .
I can no longer access PPA's since Debian changed their security
policies. When trying to access a PPA I get the following:
The repository
'http://ppa.launchpad.net/elmer-csc-ubuntu/elmer-csc-ppa/ubuntu hirsute
> I decided to let MY initramfs images go on diet
> and added a little script which removes a few drivers that I certainly
> don't need (checked with lsmod) and which contained lots of firmwares
> and similar stuff.
Creative. I liked it. Indeed the ``most'' strategy produces large files.
> Which Firefox do you have installed?
ii firefox-esr78.8.0esr-1~deb10u1 amd64Mozilla
Firefox web browser - Extended Support Release (ESR)
ii firefox-esr-l10n-en-gb 78.8.0esr-1~deb10u1 all English
(United Kingdom) language package for Firefox ESR
On Wed, 7 Apr 2021 21:59:33 +0200
Marco Ippolito wrote:
> I reinstalled Buster (basic installation with GUI, no additional
> packages chosen) and typed "about:profiles" in Firefox's URL bar.
>
> It shows two profiles:
>
> * Profile: default-esr
> * Profile: default
>
> with different Root Dire
Hello,
I have a bullseye system with an on-board Intel sound device and a Logitech
USB headset. Everything works perfect, if I boot without the USB headset
plugged in. Both devices are detected and I can switch between them as
expected. If I boot with the USB headset plugged in, inxi still find
I reinstalled Buster (basic installation with GUI, no additional packages
chosen) and typed "about:profiles" in Firefox's URL bar.
It shows two profiles:
* Profile: default-esr
* Profile: default
with different Root Directories.
What is the purpose of this duality and which Profile should I use
Hallo,
* Marco Ippolito [Wed, Apr 07 2021, 09:20:46AM]:
> dpkg: error processing package initramfs-tools (--configure):
> installed initramfs-tools package post-installation script subprocess
> returned
> error exit status 1
> Errors were encountered while processing:
> initramfs-tools
>
> #
On Wed 07 Apr 2021 at 14:02:58 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 08:40:58PM +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> > While I'm a big fan of aptitude's patterns it's also not installed by
> > default. For basic uses 'apt' is fine as well and supports globs:
> >
> > apt list --ins
Am Mittwoch, 7. April 2021, 19:40:58 CEST schrieb Andrei POPESCU:
Hi Andrei,
yes, you casn do this also with using apt. However, I forgot how to do this,
it was a litttle bit more complicated.
The syntax was something like "apt-get --purge remove `somestring` " or
similar. Apt was then using re
On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 08:40:58PM +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> While I'm a big fan of aptitude's patterns it's also not installed by
> default. For basic uses 'apt' is fine as well and supports globs:
>
> apt list --installed linux-image-4*
>
> apt purge linux-image-4.9.10-?-amd64
Re
On Mi, 07 apr 21, 18:39:21, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have a bullseye system with an on-board Intel sound device and a Logitech
> USB headset. Everything works perfect, if I boot without the USB headset
> plugged in. Both devices are detected and I can switch between them as
> expecte
On Mi, 07 apr 21, 11:11:55, Marco Ippolito wrote:
> > Hi Marco,
>
> Hi Hans :)
>
> > aptitude purge ~n4.9.10-amd64-*
>
> Hadn't thought of matching a pattern, thanks.
While I'm a big fan of aptitude's patterns it's also not installed by
default. For basic uses 'apt' is fine as well and suppo
On 4/8/21 12:39 AM, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
system with an on-board Intel sound device and a Logitech
USB headset. Everything works perfect, if I boot without the USB headset
plugged in. Both devices are detected and I can switch between them a
Try checking "dmesg --human" output, there maybe someth
On Wed 07 Apr 2021 at 08:30:30 (+), Curt wrote:
> On 2021-04-07, David Wright wrote:
> >> >
> >> > But I don't know how vim would do on-the-fly filtering like
> >> > less can do with & (not being very familiar with vim).
> >>
> >> :g/pattern/.w! >> output.txt
> >>
> >> I pressed 'v' in les
On Wed 07 Apr 2021 at 11:33:02 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 03:16:41PM +, Lee wrote:
> > A typo in your script? Add an else clause that shows the error and
> > that will probably show you what's wrong -- eg
> >
> > dir="$HOME/AppImages"
> > if [ -d "$dir" ] ; then
>
On 2021-04-07, Keith Christian wrote:
> Looking on the www, some people recommend using apt-get -y upgrade or
> apt-get -y install to avoid the following message:
>
> "NNN packages can be upgraded. Run 'apt list
> --upgradable' to see them."
That's the message you receive afte
https://gnu.support/richard-stallman/Ludovic-Court%C3%A8s-Guix-is-accusing-Stallman-of-Thoughtcrime-on-his-own-domain-GNU-org.html
>> where `MODULES=dep` and `COMPRESS=lzma` have made a big difference for
>> me (more or less shrunk the initrd images by a factor 3-4).
> Thank you.
> Why did you choose lzma Vs xz or zstd, by the way? Measured diff?
`lzma` and `xz` should be pretty much identical, it was a toss-up (I
have a pref
On Wednesday 07 April 2021 08:28:49 IL Ka wrote:
> > The first of them will be added but not the other if I
> > . .profile
>
> Try to debug it. First of all, run this from the command line:
>
> [ -d "$HOME/AppImages" ] ; echo $?
>
> result should be "0". If not, then there must be some problem wi
On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 03:16:41PM +, Lee wrote:
> On 4/7/21, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > Greetings all;
> >
> > I just installed buster on a Dell 7010 and I have added two stanza's to
> > my .profile, to find a logout and back in does not establish a new
> > $PATH.
>
> Probably because you've go
On Wednesday 07 April 2021 08:28:49 IL Ka wrote:
> > The first of them will be added but not the other if I
> > . .profile
>
> Try to debug it. First of all, run this from the command line:
>
> [ -d "$HOME/AppImages" ] ; echo $?
>
> result should be "0". If not, then there must be some problem wi
On 4/7/21, Gene Heskett wrote:
> Greetings all;
>
> I just installed buster on a Dell 7010 and I have added two stanza's to
> my .profile, to find a logout and back in does not establish a new
> $PATH.
Probably because you've got a window manager that does the login stuph for you..
> The first o
On Wed 07 Apr 2021 at 08:19:40 (-0600), Keith Christian wrote:
> Looking on the www, some people recommend using apt-get -y upgrade or
> apt-get -y install to avoid the following message:
>
> "NNN packages can be upgraded. Run 'apt list
> --upgradable' to see them."
>
> Is "ap
On Wed 07 Apr 2021 at 08:16:43 (-0400), Gene Heskett wrote:
>
> I just installed buster on a Dell 7010 and I have added two stanza's to
> my .profile, to find a logout and back in does not establish a new
> $PATH.
>
> The first of them will be added but not the other if I
> . .profile
>
> The
works for me:
$ apt -y update && apt upgrade -y
You can also use yes(1):
yes | apt upgrade
On Wed, Apr 7, 2021 at 5:20 PM Keith Christian
wrote:
> Looking on the www, some people recommend using apt-get -y upgrade or
> apt-get -y install to avoid the following message:
>
>
Looking on the www, some people recommend using apt-get -y upgrade or
apt-get -y install to avoid the following message:
"NNN packages can be upgraded. Run 'apt list
--upgradable' to see them."
Is "apt" unable to perform an "upgrade," or am I missing a command
line option (e.g
> Hi Marco,
Hi Hans :)
> aptitude purge ~n4.9.10-amd64-*
Hadn't thought of matching a pattern, thanks.
> Recently that was fixed at unstable [1]
I thought I had noticed a warning about this clean-up, but it does not happen
during the upgrade so I run out of space.
> I found a interesting manpage for this issue [2]
Good catch. Functionality now in apt and purge-old-kernels got deprecated.
> where `MODULES=dep` and `COMPRESS=lzma` have made a big difference for
> me (more or less shrunk the initrd images by a factor 3-4).
Thank you.
Why did you choose lzma Vs xz or zstd, by the way? Measured diff?
> > Doubt: after this, by default old kernels will be cleaned up in Bullseye Vs
> >
Le 07/04/2021 à 14:58, Stefan Monnier a écrit :
What do you recommend I do?
Other than purging old kernels, I also recommend you check
/etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf
where `MODULES=dep` and `COMPRESS=lzma` have made a big difference for
me (more or less shrunk the initrd images by a
El mié., 7 abr. 2021 14:58, Stefan Monnier
escribió:
> > What do you recommend I do?
>
> Other than purging old kernels, I also recommend you check
>
> /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf
>
> where `MODULES=dep` and `COMPRESS=lzma` have made a big difference for
> me (more or less shrunk the
Am Mittwoch, 7. April 2021, 14:20:46 CEST schrieb Marco Ippolito:
Hi Marco,
just get rid of older kernels.
This is may way:
1st, check your running actual kernel:
uname -a
Then check all installed kernel versions:
ls /boot
You will see several kernels. I suppose, apt-get autoremove will no
> What do you recommend I do?
Other than purging old kernels, I also recommend you check
/etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf
where `MODULES=dep` and `COMPRESS=lzma` have made a big difference for
me (more or less shrunk the initrd images by a factor 3-4).
> Doubt: after this, by default old
>
>
> # df -h /boot
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/nvme0n1p1 236M 233M 0 100% /boot
>
> What do you recommend I do?
>
1. Autoremove old automatically installed stuff
$ apt purge --autoremove
2. Check packages:
$ dpkg-query --show -f='${Installed-Size}\t${Package
On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 09:20:46AM -0300, Marco Ippolito wrote:
> # df -h /boot
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/nvme0n1p1 236M 233M 0 100% /boot
>
> What do you recommend I do?
Purge one or more of your kernel images.
On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 08:16:43AM -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
> I just installed buster on a Dell 7010 and I have added two stanza's to
> my .profile, to find a logout and back in does not establish a new
> $PATH.
> Any idea why its not working?
How do you log in? Probably with a GUI, yes?
ht
>
>
> The first of them will be added but not the other if I
> . .profile
>
Try to debug it. First of all, run this from the command line:
[ -d "$HOME/AppImages" ] ; echo $?
result should be "0". If not, then there must be some problem with this
directory (check name, case, etc).
Then try
set
Was upgrading from buster to bullseye. Space ran out, UI crashed, restarted in
recovery mode and cleaned up space. Restarted and run:
# dpkg --configure -a
Setting up initramfs-tools (0.139) ...
update-initramfs: deferring update (trigger activated)
Processing triggers for initramfs-tools (0.139)
Greetings all;
I just installed buster on a Dell 7010 and I have added two stanza's to
my .profile, to find a logout and back in does not establish a new
$PATH.
The first of them will be added but not the other if I
. .profile
The additions to .profile are:
=
# set PATH so it includes user
riveravaldez wrote:
> On Tuesday, April 6, 2021, Brian wrote:
> > On Tue 06 Apr 2021 at 11:20:58 +0200, Yoann LE BARS wrote:
> >
> > I had occasion to install Zoom a few weeks ago;'snap install zoom-client'.
> > Everything went smoothly and I quite like having this proprietary package
> > strictl
Le 07/04/2021 à 10:54, Reco a écrit :
Hi.
On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 09:53:57AM +0200, Erwan David wrote:
How Am I a supposed to have this working ?
By disabling problematic renaming of course:
cat > /etc/systemd/network/00-vlan.link << EOF
[Match]
Type=vlan
[Link]
NamePolicy=kernel
MA
On 2021-04-07, David Wright wrote:
>> >
>> > But I don't know how vim would do on-the-fly filtering like
>> > less can do with & (not being very familiar with vim).
>>
>> :g/pattern/.w! >> output.txt
>>
>> I pressed 'v' in less, searched a pattern and wrote the filtered output
>> to a file usi
Hi.
On Wed, Apr 07, 2021 at 09:53:57AM +0200, Erwan David wrote:
> > > How Am I a supposed to have this working ?
> >
> > By disabling problematic renaming of course:
> >
> > cat > /etc/systemd/network/00-vlan.link << EOF
> > [Match]
> > Type=vlan
> >
> > [Link]
> > NamePolicy=kernel
>
Le 06/04/2021 à 22:39, deloptes a écrit :
Erwan David wrote:
Hello,
I have a machine with a working bond0 interface
Not clear what debian your machine is running
It's a debian10
In my /etc/network/interfaces I have a configuration for a vlan
subinterface
auto bond0.4011
address 80.7
Le 07/04/2021 à 08:23, Reco a écrit :
Hi.
On Tue, Apr 06, 2021 at 06:41:21PM +0200, Erwan David wrote:
At boot, interface bond0.4011 is created and immediately renamed rename12.
How Am I a supposed to have this working ?
By disabling problematic renaming of course:
cat > /etc/system
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