On Wed, Mar 29, 2023 at 02:44:18PM +0900, Byung-Hee HWANG wrote:
> I did mean that 10 years of security updates.
> Most Ubuntu users know this news, i think.
Perhaps they would, though I have my doubts about *most*. Regardless, this
isn't an Ubuntu list so no Ubuntu knowledge should be assumed.
C
On Wed, Mar 29, 2023 at 03:02:12PM +0900, Byung-Hee HWANG wrote:
[...]
> Thank you for kind test, tomas!
My pleasure.
> Also i like GNU bash very much, indeed.
Still, the question remains: what will be the bash version in year 2033?
Cheers
--
tomás
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writes:
> On Wed, Mar 29, 2023 at 10:05:28AM +0900, Byung-Hee HWANG wrote:
>> cor...@free.fr writes:
>>
>> > Dear list,
>> >
>> > Though I have been using debian 11 for long days, I want to give a try
>> > on ubuntu 22.04.
>> > Do you know what's the main difference for these two systems on
>> >
Tom Furie writes:
> On Wed, Mar 29, 2023 at 10:05:28AM +0900, Byung-Hee HWANG wrote:
>
>> I have experience both Ubuntu and Debian. Google cloud vm is running
>> Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (+ESM). Then my desktop is Debian 11 under Chromebook.
>>
>> Ubuntu's advantage is 10 years.
>
> I can't interpret
On Tue, Mar 28 2023 at 03:07:10 PM, Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi Kushal,
>
> On Sun, Mar 26, 2023 at 08:13:33PM -0700, Kushal Kumaran wrote:
>> If you installed a -dkms package to get the kernel module (there are
>> several such packages in the debian repositories),
>
> Yep, that's what I did. The git r
On Wed, Mar 29, 2023 at 10:05:28AM +0900, Byung-Hee HWANG wrote:
> I have experience both Ubuntu and Debian. Google cloud vm is running
> Ubuntu 18.04 LTS (+ESM). Then my desktop is Debian 11 under Chromebook.
>
> Ubuntu's advantage is 10 years.
I can't interpret what this 10 year advantage ref
On Wed, Mar 29, 2023 at 10:05:28AM +0900, Byung-Hee HWANG wrote:
> cor...@free.fr writes:
>
> > Dear list,
> >
> > Though I have been using debian 11 for long days, I want to give a try
> > on ubuntu 22.04.
> > Do you know what's the main difference for these two systems on
> > dev/ops environment
On 29/03/2023 05:01, John Boxall wrote:
I am trying to launch Thunderbird as my calendar application when
opening a webcal link.
Your description is too general, it lacks details. E.g. you did not
provide exact commands and their output that you use to check that
defaults are set properly.
2023-03-29 5:49 GMT+05:00, cor...@free.fr :
> Though I have been using debian 11 for long days, I want to give a try
> on ubuntu 22.04.
> Do you know what's the main difference for these two systems on dev/ops
> environment?
Ubuntu more quickly upgrades to fresh versions and have longer lts
suppo
cor...@free.fr writes:
> Dear list,
>
> Though I have been using debian 11 for long days, I want to give a try
> on ubuntu 22.04.
> Do you know what's the main difference for these two systems on
> dev/ops environment?
I have experience both Ubuntu and Debian. Google cloud vm is running
Ubuntu 18
Dear list,
Though I have been using debian 11 for long days, I want to give a try
on ubuntu 22.04.
Do you know what's the main difference for these two systems on dev/ops
environment?
Thanks
Corey Hickman
OK this is what the gradle folks told me/us:
https://discuss.gradle.org/t/gradle-wants-as-java-version-openjdk-11-even-if-a-newer-version-is-installed/45254/6
Gradle itself would just use the Java from your JAVA_HOME or as
fallback from PATH (given you use a version that is compatible with
yo
I am trying to launch Thunderbird as my calendar application when
opening a webcal link. Though I have updated all appropriate
gnome-mimeapps.list and mimeapps.list files and used xdg-mime to query
and set the default calendar application, my user session wants to open
Evolution. The GNOME defa
Richmond wrote:
> debian-u...@howorth.org.uk writes:
>
>
> >> I tried this in rxvt(-unicode), xterm, and lxterm (which is
> >> apparently part of the xterm package -- never heard of it
> >> before!).
> >
> > It's lxterminal, not lxterm, and it's part of LXDE so I'm surprised
> > if it's bundle
Let me try to disabuse myself somewhat with a bit of humor. Some of
you have been telling me for a long time about how "visually
upsetting" and "procedurally obnoxious" I am and as they say:
"misunderstanding is as mutual as love should be". I can't really make
sense of what you are telling me, no
Hello
I'm trying to install Bookworm on a G513QY laptop with MT7921 wifi adapter.
As soon as the installer (Net or DVD) tries to detect the HW, the installer
stops blank.
The last thing I see in dmesg is something like
Detected ethernet HW, renamed to eth0 (succeed)
then... :
Failed to load mt78
For those interested in KDE's own virtual keyboard status, Nate Graham
gave an explanation here:
https://discuss.kde.org/t/how-to-enable-virtual-keyboard-included-in-kde/264/2
Regards,
Yvan
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debian-u...@howorth.org.uk writes:
>> I tried this in rxvt(-unicode), xterm, and lxterm (which is apparently
>> part of the xterm package -- never heard of it before!).
>
> It's lxterminal, not lxterm, and it's part of LXDE so I'm surprised if
> it's bundled with xterm.
>
lxterm and lxterminal a
On Tue, Mar 28, 2023 at 07:54:07PM +0200, tomas wrote:
> [...] It has an extensive man page. Here [1] [2] you might
> draw some inspiration on what you can do.
Gah. Forgot the links:
[1] https://www.imagemagick.org/Usage/color_mods/#level-colors
[2] https://www.imagemagick.org/Usage/color_basics
On Tue, Mar 28, 2023 at 12:48:48PM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
[...]
> gimp could probably do it, but I get lost in endless menu's.
You can batch gimp and then use one of its embedded languages
(script-fu, python, there might be more). But I never tried.
>
> imagemagick won't run from the cli, f
On Tue, Mar 28, 2023 at 05:19:09PM +0100, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > Interstingly, though, in rxvt-unicode, if I only press Ctrl-Shift and
> > skip the U, a small region of the terminal window (lower left corner,
> > which is annoyingly right where the cursor is)
On 3/28/23 06:53, davidson wrote:
On Mon, 27 Mar 2023 gene heskett wrote:
On 3/27/23 09:18, Nicolas George wrote:
Dan Ritter (12023-03-27):
changing 33 to 30 will get you black. ANSI color escapes are on
the web in many places.
Also, decent terminal emulators let users tweak the colors, and
Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 27, 2023 at 08:45:18PM +0100, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk
> wrote:
> > Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > > Just to be clear, are you using some kind of Desktop Environment
> > > specific means of entering these Unicode characters? I don't know
> > > what CTRL-SHIFT-Uun
On 3/28/23 06:53, davidson wrote:
On Mon, 27 Mar 2023 gene heskett wrote:
On 3/27/23 09:18, Nicolas George wrote:
Dan Ritter (12023-03-27):
changing 33 to 30 will get you black. ANSI color escapes are on
the web in many places.
Also, decent terminal emulators let users tweak the colors, and
On Mon, Mar 27, 2023 at 12:48:13PM +0100, Richmond wrote:
> So how is the preference determined? It seems to be determined by the
> DNS, but why or how do I tell for example with host -v?
I'm not adding anything new here, only pulling together what has
already been said in several different replie
On 3/28/23, Nicolas George wrote:
> Cindy Sue Causey (12023-03-28):
>> Has "diff" come up in this thread yet?
> The thread is in the archives.
Yes, pleeze! Thank you very much!
lbrtchx
Even though I think it is not a problem with gradle per se, I was
trying to make sense of things by also raising those issues with them:
https://discuss.gradle.org/t/gradle-wants-as-java-version-openjdk-11-even-if-a-newer-version-is-installed/45254
those gradle folks should avail jar files wi
Hi Kushal,
On Sun, Mar 26, 2023 at 08:13:33PM -0700, Kushal Kumaran wrote:
> If you installed a -dkms package to get the kernel module (there are
> several such packages in the debian repositories),
Yep, that's what I did. The git repository I linked to builds an
rt89-dkms .deb package.
> uninst
On 3/28/23 01:02, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Mon, Mar 27, 2023 at 02:02:43PM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
On 3/27/23 11:31, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Mon, Mar 27, 2023 at 10:00:48AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
[...]
Would it be practical to put a filter in the path cups put things headed to
a
Cindy Sue Causey (12023-03-28):
> Has "diff" come up in this thread yet?
The thread is in the archives.
--
Nicolas George
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On 3/28/23, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> On 3/28/23, Nicolas George wrote:
>> I suggest you show the contents of this file instead ...
>
> Did you mean you would rather have me post both 348 line files
> instead of showing that they are the same? (I had eyeballed them, BTW)
Has "diff" come up in
Hi all
I set postfix sending mails to dovecot for mailbox storage:
mailbox_transport = lmtp:unix:private/dovecot-lmtp
dovecot listen with lmtp:
service lmtp {
unix_listener /var/spool/postfix/private/dovecot-lmtp {
mode = 0666
user = postfix
group = postfix
}
}
passdb {
driver
Albretch Mueller (12023-03-28):
> Did you mean you would rather have me post both 348 line files
> instead of showing that they are the same?
That would have been less useless. But…
> (I had eyeballed them, BTW)
… you already knew how to make it even less useless.
> as I showed by running "wh
On 3/28/23, Nicolas George wrote:
> I suggest you show the contents of this file instead ...
Did you mean you would rather have me post both 348 line files
instead of showing that they are the same? (I had eyeballed them, BTW)
as I showed by running "which ..." and "... -version" on the comman
Albretch Mueller (12023-03-28):
> $ sudo apt-get install gradle --dry-run > jdk-19.txt
I suggest you show the contents of this file instead of showing us five
times it is identical to the previous one. But the explanation is quite
obvious:
> $ JAVA_HOME="/media/user/078TG3336/graalvm-ce-java1
I was having issues with the installation of gradle (the groovy DSL
based compilation tool) and I think it relates to gradle assuming you
have version 11 of the jdk installed:
$ sudo apt-get install gradle --dry-run > jdk-11.txt
$ JAVA_HOME="/media/user/078TG3336/graalvm-ce-java19-22.3.0"
PAT
On 2023-03-27 13:48, Richmond wrote:
I have configured an ipv6 tunnel. If I visit this site:
http://ip6.me/
The "normal" test shows my ipv4 address, and the:
http://ip6only.me/
shows the ipv6 address.
However if I switch my DNS from opendns to the one provided by my ISP
and then run the "nor
On Mon, 27 Mar 2023 gene heskett wrote:
On 3/27/23 09:18, Nicolas George wrote:
Dan Ritter (12023-03-27):
changing 33 to 30 will get you black. ANSI color escapes are on
the web in many places.
Also, decent terminal emulators let users tweak the colors, and making
sure all main colors are rea
On 2023-03-28 10:56, davidson wrote:
On Mon, 27 Mar 2023 Jesper Dybdal wrote:
On 2023-03-27 10:59, davidson wrote:
It baffles me that the number of packages suggested for autoremoval is
different, between guile-2.2-libs and w3m.
Me too.
The two packages depend on different collections of sup
On 2023-03-28 11:16, Sven Hartge wrote:
Jesper Dybdal wrote:
I have a cron job that cleans up all old mail from the mailbox that I
use for my mobile phone by running "doveadm expunge" every night.
[snip]
Solution is to move the contents of /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-ssl.conf to
another file in /e
On Mon, 27 Mar 2023 16:45:11 -0400
"hobie of RMN" wrote:
Hello hobie,
>Thanks, Dan and Brad. :) I rebooted the machine (not just the desktop)
YW.
>and everything returned to normal. Go figure. :)
Sometimes, sh* err, "stuff 'appens" :-)
--
Regards _ "Valid sig separator is {dash}
On Tue, Mar 28, 2023 at 12:19:05PM +0300, Anssi Saari wrote:
> Ram Ramesh writes:
>
> > How do I tie the install of linux-image to linux-header so that I cannot
> > install image without the headers.
>
> In my experience it's been enough to install linux-image-amd64 and
> linux-headers-amd64. Wh
Jesper Dybdal writes:
> On 2023-03-26 23:12, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
>> On Sun, Mar 26, 2023 at 5:16 AM Jesper Dybdal
>> wrote:
>>> Yesterday, I upgraded Buster => Bullseye.
>> For completeness, here is the Debian procedure for a release upgrade:
>> https://wiki.debian.org/DebianUpgrade .
> Thank
Ram Ramesh writes:
> I have nvdia card that requires binary driver to work in my system. Xorg is
> unable display anything with free driver. Since nvidia-driver has to be
> built for each kernel install, I need to install headers also. This seem to
> work automatically for any standard kernel r
Jesper Dybdal wrote:
> Yesterday, I upgraded Buster => Bullseye.
> I have a cron job that cleans up all old mail from the mailbox that I
> use for my mobile phone by running "doveadm expunge" every night.
> That worked fine in Buster, but now it fails:
>> jdmobile@nuser:~$ doveadm expunge mail
Charles Curley:
> Siard:
>
> > To type ♠ , for example:
> >
> > - hold Ctrl+Shift
> > - type U2660
> > - release Ctrl+Shift
>
> Nice to know about, but it requires knowing the UTF code for the
> characters you want. That's a bit like trying to navigate the Internet
> with IP addresses instead of
On Mon, 27 Mar 2023 Jesper Dybdal wrote:
On 2023-03-27 10:59, davidson wrote:
It baffles me that the number of packages suggested for autoremoval is
different, between guile-2.2-libs and w3m.
Me too.
The two packages depend on different collections of supporting
packages.
And so, depending o
Xiyue Deng writes:
> So after some more tries it looks like this issue is not directly memory
> usage related. I've tried the following:
>
> * Using older kernel version when I was on Bullseye.
> * Have a cronjob to drop memory caches every minutes.
> * Using Gnome on Wayland by default or Xor
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