On Mon, Mar 06, 2023 at 03:26:15AM +, piorunz wrote:
On 05/03/2023 20:26, Russell L. Harris wrote:
Thunderbird under Debian 11 gave minor miscellaneous problems from
time to time.
Can't reproduce. If you have exact problem, please describe and/or
fill a bug.
Disclaimer: I use TB for about
On 05/03/2023 20:26, Russell L. Harris wrote:
Thunderbird under Debian 11 gave minor miscellaneous problems from
time to time.
Can't reproduce. If you have exact problem, please describe and/or fill
a bug.
Disclaimer: I use TB for about 10 years and don't have any
"miscellaneous problems" or
On 3/4/23, davidson wrote:
> On Sat, 4 Mar 2023 Keith Christian wrote:
>> Several versions back, we could download the source code
>> on various iso files for previous and current releases.
>
>Debian CDs/DVDs archive
>https://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage/archive/
I like to get mine from pac
On Sun, 5 Mar 2023 16:22:25 +0800
Ken Young wrote:
> Hello,
>
> The methods I know,
>
> 1. scp
> pros: the native tool in the OS
> cons: you will either input password or put key pairs into servers for
> authentication.
Not so much of a con. I now automatically add my public keys to a
machine
That's smart. Thanks
Sincerely,
Ken Young
On Mon, Mar 6, 2023 at 3:43 AM Linux-Fan wrote:
> Ken Young writes:
>
> > Hello,[1;5B
> >
> >
> > The methods I know,
> >
> > 1. scp
> > pros: the native tool in the OS
> > cons: you will either input password or put key pairs into servers for
> > auth
The provider has separated block device service, like what Ceph does.
So I have to buy another 100GB block device as the secondary disk.
Sincerely,
Ken Young
On Mon, Mar 6, 2023 at 6:26 AM Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Mon, Mar 06, 2023 at 03:11:43AM +0800, Ken Young wrote:
> > Filesystem
Hi,
On Mon, Mar 06, 2023 at 03:11:43AM +0800, Ken Young wrote:
> Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
> /dev/vda1 9.7G 1.5G 7.9G 16% /
> ...
>
> So I want to add a block device /dev/vdb and fdisk/format it and mount it
> as /home dir.
Have you checked your VPS provider's doc
On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 02:37:48PM -0600, David Wright wrote:
> There are many lists of dangerous aliases on the web, but I haven't
> found a list of such aliases that can't be transcribed into functions.
Here's one document:
https://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/aliases.html
On 3/5/23, David Wright wrote:
> On Sun 05 Mar 2023 at 02:42:46 (+), Albretch Mueller wrote:
>> On 3/4/23, David Wright wrote:
>> > Also, now that the firmware is in place, if you repeat those steps,
>> > you're /likely/ to find that ath10k_pci is busy, because the link
>> > will be configure
On Sat 04 Mar 2023 at 12:23:58 (-0500), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 04, 2023 at 11:14:39AM -0600, David Wright wrote:
> > > This use is discouraged
> >
> > There's a place for warning about the use of aliases in, say,
> > Greg's BashPitfalls, or books, but not here.
>
> Discouraging th
On Sun 05 Mar 2023 at 21:22:10 (+0200), Anssi Saari wrote:
> Curt writes:
>
> > * UNPREDICTABILITY
> > it turns out even after all this [**an enumeration of complications and
> > corner
> > cases**] there are still reported cases of interfaces changing their name
> > on a
> > reboot.
>
> I hav
On Sun 05 Mar 2023 at 02:42:46 (+), Albretch Mueller wrote:
> On 3/4/23, David Wright wrote:
> > Also, now that the firmware is in place, if you repeat those steps,
> > you're /likely/ to find that ath10k_pci is busy, because the link
> > will be configured automatically in the first few secon
Thunderbird under Debian 11 gave minor miscellaneous problems from
time to time. But when Thunderbird lost a couple of messages, I
switched to Evolution. Now I have no more problems and I prefer
the features Evolution; I wish I had discovered Evolution long ago.
--
He turneth rivers into a wild
On 05/03/2023 07:39, Mark Allums wrote:
It's a bug in Thunderbird. It is the result of using multiple accounts
and something about multi-threading, I think, (on mine, anyway). I have
not filed a bug, but surely they know about it, it's present on both
Linux and Windows, and through several ve
I thought “unpredictability” was the name of my daily drama show, but
apparently “I am not the only one”. Yes, I know javascript is the
primary vector they use to mess with whomever they choose, regardless
of if they wear a “tiny tin hat” or expensive shoes.
In my case, among many other things, t
On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 09:22:10PM +0200, Anssi Saari wrote:
> I have just this fun kind of unpredictability in my router's 4G
> module. Mostly, it comes up as wwan0 but sometimes it's wwx. So
> I put something in my 4G management script to rename such interface if
> there's no wwan0.
If you're ru
Ken Young writes:
Hello,[1;5B
The methods I know,
1. scp
pros: the native tool in the OS
cons: you will either input password or put key pairs into servers for
authentication.
Works for simple cases.
2. rsync
pros: it can transfer data by increasement
cons: you need to setup rsyncd ser
On 2023-03-05 at 14:11, Ken Young wrote:
> Hello
>
> My vps has limited volume for /. You can see it as follows.
>
> root@nxacloud-bloghost:~# lsb_release -cd
>
> Description: Debian GNU/Linux 11 (bullseye)
>
> Codename: bullseye
>
>
> root@nxacloud-bloghost:~# df -h
>
> Filesystem Siz
Curt writes:
> * UNPREDICTABILITY
> it turns out even after all this [**an enumeration of complications and corner
> cases**] there are still reported cases of interfaces changing their name on a
> reboot.
I have just this fun kind of unpredictability in my router's 4G
module. Mostly, it comes u
Hello
My vps has limited volume for /. You can see it as follows.
root@nxacloud-bloghost:~# lsb_release -cd
Description: Debian GNU/Linux 11 (bullseye)
Codename: bullseye
root@nxacloud-bloghost:~# df -h
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
udev472M 0 472M 0% /
Hi Ken,
For short, I use scp and rsync too. Work fine with my scripts. Ftp works
fine on old servers. I saw old servers work with this, but with monitoring
in the FTP port for recovery. Another is to mount an NFS directory at
/etc/fstab. Work fine, too. If you have a critical script at the
schedule
2023-03-04, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 4, 2023 at 12:12 PM David Wright wrote:
>>
>> On Sat 04 Mar 2023 at 01:02:54 (-0500), Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>> > On Fri, Mar 3, 2023 at 6:10 PM Greg Wooledge wrote:
>> > > On Fri, Mar 03, 2023 at 05:45:54PM -0500, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>> > > > The
On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 02:19:38PM +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> Tom Browder (12023-03-05):
> > Yes, but please use its new name, Raku. Note new releases come out monthly
> > so you shouldn't use the Debian packages since they are way behind. We have
> > a member on the release team who provides D
Thanks for the suggestion. I will give it a try on mailbox.org.
Sincerely,
Ken Young
On Sun, Mar 5, 2023 at 9:05 PM wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 07:23:49PM +0800, Ken Young wrote:
> > What provider do you recommend then?
>
> Around here (West Europe), for example, mailbox.org [1]. But the
Tom Browder (12023-03-05):
> Yes, but please use its new name, Raku. Note new releases come out monthly
> so you shouldn't use the Debian packages since they are way behind. We have
> a member on the release team who provides Debian packages as "rakudo-pkg"
> so apt/aptitude update/upgrade work as
On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 07:30:18PM +0800, Ken Young wrote:
> Is perl6 production ready?
Of course. But be aware that it is quite a different language.
> I have not used perl for a long time.
If you prefer the "old" Perl (I do, for... reasons), it's still
being maintained actively, too.
Cheers
-
On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 07:23:49PM +0800, Ken Young wrote:
> What provider do you recommend then?
Around here (West Europe), for example, mailbox.org [1]. But they
are far from the only one (I'm not a customer, nor associated with
them, but I do know a few happy customers).
Whenever they don't co
On Sun, Mar 5, 2023 at 4:00 AM Kamil Jońca wrote:
> Ken Young writes:
>
> > Hello,
> >
> > The methods I know,
>
> Short answer: it depends.
>
> I use:
> scp
> rdbms (central server with data + clients)
> git
> samba
>
> FuseSSH with the FISH protocol in Dolphin.
> I cannot say I "prefer" any
On Sun, Mar 5, 2023 at 05:30 Ken Young wrote:
> Is perl6 production ready?
>
Yes, but please use its new name, Raku. Note new releases come out monthly
so you shouldn't use the Debian packages since they are way behind. We have
a member on the release team who provides Debian packages as "rakudo
Is perl6 production ready?
I have not used perl for a long time.
Sincerely,
Ken Young
On Sun, Mar 5, 2023 at 7:28 PM Tom Browder wrote:
> My take:
>
> I use aliases heavily in my shell (bash), but I rarely use bash scripting
> at all.
>
> For any serious scripting, since about 2016 I'ved used
My take:
I use aliases heavily in my shell (bash), but I rarely use bash scripting
at all.
For any serious scripting, since about 2016 I'ved used Raku (formerly Perl
6). Before that I used Perl. Both are much easier to use.
-Tom
What provider do you recommend then?
Sincerely,
Ken Young
On Sun, Mar 5, 2023 at 6:54 PM wrote:
> On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 11:31:42AM +0100, Michel Verdier wrote:
> > Le 5 mars 2023 tomas a écrit :
> >
> > > The others I'd only use when forced to. Well, rclone, I think,
> > > I'd even refuse wh
Hello,
On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 09:08:57AM +0800, jeremy ardley wrote:
> The problem is when I try and configure private keys for ldap TLS the
> permissions are checked and if it's not owned by openldap and permissions
> 400 or 600 the configuration fails.
>
> Is there a known solution to this pro
On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 11:31:42AM +0100, Michel Verdier wrote:
> Le 5 mars 2023 tomas a écrit :
>
> > The others I'd only use when forced to. Well, rclone, I think,
> > I'd even refuse when forced to. Eek.
>
> Do you have an alternate solution for cloud storage like google one ?
I don't "do" cl
Le 5 mars 2023 tomas a écrit :
> The others I'd only use when forced to. Well, rclone, I think,
> I'd even refuse when forced to. Eek.
Do you have an alternate solution for cloud storage like google one ?
Le 5 mars 2023 Ken Young a écrit :
> 2. rsync
> pros: it can transfer data by increasement
> cons: you need to setup rsyncd server and make the correct authorization.
Definitely rsync over ssh : easy and secure. You can further filter
commands and automate with proper ssh keys.
> 4. rclone
> pro
On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 04:22:25PM +0800, Ken Young wrote:
> Hello,
>
> The methods I know,
>
> 1. scp
> pros: the native tool in the OS
> cons: you will either input password or put key pairs into servers for
> authentication.
Sometimes. From the command line, and if I only have to transfer a
h
On Sun, Mar 05, 2023 at 09:05:01AM +0100, john doe wrote:
> On 3/5/23 04:59, William Torrez Corea wrote:
> > I am working with remotes, when i want push to the remote with this command
>
> What CMD?
>
> > appear the following error:
> >
> > *git push main master*
>
> This error looks to indicat
Ken Young writes:
> Hello,
>
> The methods I know,
Short answer: it depends.
I use:
scp
rdbms (central server with data + clients)
git
samba
I cannot say I "prefer" any of them.
KJ
--
http://stopstopnop.pl/stop_stopnop.pl_o_nas.html
On Sat, Mar 04, 2023 at 11:13:04PM -0500, Larry Martell wrote:
> On Sat, Mar 4, 2023 at 11:00 PM William Torrez Corea wrote:
>
> > I am working with remotes, when i want push to the remote with this
> > command appear the following error:
> >
> > *git push main master*
> >
> > fatal: 'main' does
On 5/3/23 16:22, Ken Young wrote:
Hello,
The methods I know,
1. scp
pros: the native tool in the OS
cons: you will either input password or put key pairs into servers for
authentication.
2. rsync
pros: it can transfer data by increasement
cons: you need to setup rsyncd server and make the
Hello,
The methods I know,
1. scp
pros: the native tool in the OS
cons: you will either input password or put key pairs into servers for
authentication.
2. rsync
pros: it can transfer data by increasement
cons: you need to setup rsyncd server and make the correct authorization.
3. ftp/ftps
pros
On 3/5/23 04:59, William Torrez Corea wrote:
I am working with remotes, when i want push to the remote with this command
What CMD?
appear the following error:
*git push main master*
This error looks to indicate that you are pushing to main and master
branches.
fatal: 'main' does not app
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