Dear Andersson,
Thanks for your reply.
It is because our Vendor highly recommends us to purchase a new server to
install Debian 12. Therefore, I seek your expert opinion.
Best Regards,
Keith Cheng | Officer (IT)/HQIP
Tel: 3907 6721 | Fax: 3165 1106
From: Anders Andersson
Sent: Wednesday, Jan
Nicolas George composed on 2024-01-24 20:50 (UTC+0100):
> Felix Miata composed:
>> Technically, quite true. However, OS and user data are very different. User
>> data
>> recreation and/or restoration can be as painful as impossible, justifying
>> RAID. OS
>> can be reinstalled rather easily in
On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 10:43:51PM +0100, Miroslav Skoric wrote:
> I do not have root account.
Sure you do. You might not have a root *password* set.
> (I use sudo from my user account.) I think I
> already tried rescue mode in the past but was not prompted for root
> password.
You can set a ro
Hello,
On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 09:20:47AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
> Notice that separate /usr is not supported by latest systemd that should be
> a part of the next Debian release.
I don't think this is the case. What I think is not supported is a
separate /usr that is not mounted by initramfs.
On 1/24/24 3:20 AM, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 24/01/2024 06:29, Miroslav Skoric wrote:
# df -h
/dev/mapper/localhost-root 6.2G 4.7G 1.2G 81% /
Taking into account size of kernel packages, I would allocate a few G
more for the root partition.
dpkg -s linux-image-6.1.0-17-amd64 | grep -i
On 1/24/24 12:42 AM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
You'll have to unmount it, which generally means you will have to reboot
in single-user mode, or from rescue media, whichever is easier.
If you aren't opposed to setting a root password (some people have *weird*
self-imposed restrictions, seriously), si
Hi,
Nicolas George wrote:
> Interesting. Indeed, “table-length: 4” causes sfdisk to only write 3
> sectors at the beginning and 2 at the end. I checked it really does not
> write elsewhere.
> That makes it possible to use full-disk RAID on a UEFI boot drive. Very
> good news.
\o/
(Nearly as good
On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 11:52:04AM -0800, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
> I updated my main machine to Bookworm (12.2, kernel 6.1.0.13-amd64)
> some time ago and it's running well. My laptop, and the media box in
> the living room, are still running Bullseye. I was about to update
> them when I read the f
Hello,
for a while I am using
gsettings set org.gnome.desktop.peripherals.touchpad send-events
'disabled-on-external-mouse'
which really worked fine.
But since last week this does not work anymore; in the way that the
trackpad is always disabled, even when the mouse is not connected.
I have to
Hi,
On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 11:17:34AM +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> Since mdadm can only put its superblock at the end of the device (1.0),
> at the beginning of the device (1.1) and 4 Ko from the beginning (1.2),
> but they still have not invented 1.3 to have the metadata 17 Ko from the
> begin
On 24/01/2024 10:17, Nicolas George wrote:
Hi.
We have drives in mdadm RAID1.
Since they are potential boot drives, we have to put a GPT on them.
Since mdadm can only put its superblock at the end of the device (1.0),
at the beginning of the device (1.1) and 4 Ko from the beginning (1.2),
but
On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 11:52:04AM -0800, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
> I updated my main machine to Bookworm (12.2, kernel 6.1.0.13-amd64)
> some time ago and it's running well.
> I read the fuss about EXT4 file system corruption. At first
> I got the impression that this happened in 12.4, but further
I updated my main machine to Bookworm (12.2, kernel 6.1.0.13-amd64)
some time ago and it's running well. My laptop, and the media box in
the living room, are still running Bullseye. I was about to update
them when I read the fuss about EXT4 file system corruption. At first
I got the impression
Thomas Schmitt (12024-01-24):
> i cannot make qualified proposals for the GRUB question, but stumble over
> your technical statements.
It was by far the most interesting reply. Better somebody who really
understood the question, realized their limitations and knowingly
replies with an interesting
Franco Martelli (12024-01-24):
> If I run "grub-install" with multiple device I got
>
> # LCALL=C grub-install /dev/sd[a-d]
> grub-install: error: More than one install device?.
>
> maybe it is a deprecated action for grub to install to multiple device, so
> this should it be investigated?
Do yo
Felix Miata (12024-01-24):
> Technically, quite true. However, OS and user data are very different. User
> data
> recreation and/or restoration can be as painful as impossible, justifying
> RAID. OS
> can be reinstalled rather easily in a nominal amount of time. A 120G SSD can
> hold
> multiple
On Wed 24 Jan 2024 at 23:46:31 (+0700), Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 24/01/2024 00:16, David Wright wrote:
> > On Wed 24 Jan 2024 at 00:00:57 (+0700), Max Nikulin wrote:
> > > Server-side code mixing 2 data streams into single channel may be a
> > > bit more simple than association of 2 connections with
On Tue 23 Jan 2024 at 18:09:00 (-0600), Mike McClain wrote:
> David Wright wrote:
> > You could try running:
> >
> > $ xmodmap -e 'keycode 124=' # to override XF86PowerOff
> >
> > $ xmodmap -e 'keycode 150=' # to override XF86Sleep
> >
> > $ xmodmap -e 'keycode 151=' # to override XF86WakeUp
On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 12:16:21PM -0700, D. R. Evans wrote:
> 4. But now how do I actually run the program? I tried just running:
> $ acrordrdc
Have you looked at the man page for snap? It's very long, so I took
a guess and looked for "run".
run
Run the given snap command
The run command ex
1. I've never used a snap package before.
2. I want to run the acrordrdc program, which is available as a snap package.
3. Following instructions found following a search for help with snap, I ran:
sudo apt install snapd
sudo snap install core
sudo snap install acrordrdc
There were no obvi
Good afternoon
Thank You.
I ll print it out and read it.
2 questions:
Is this the same problem with su
su -
su -p?
Is it not a problem of rescue mode,
before panic it did work.
Problem:
root terminal is not accepting copy paste.
Regards
Sophie
Von: Greg Woole
On 23/01/2024 08:52, phoebus phoebus wrote:
"Xterm 216" is unclear for me.
> PuTTY documentation in 4.4.3 Changing the action of the function keys
and keypad explain it by "In Xterm 216 mode, the unshifted function keys
behave the same as Xterm R6 mode. But pressing a function key together
with
On 24/01/2024 00:16, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 24 Jan 2024 at 00:00:57 (+0700), Max Nikulin wrote:
Server-side code mixing 2 data streams into single channel may be a
bit more simple than association of 2 connections with the same
client, but the price is this long thread.
OTOH we've all exp
On 24/01/24 at 11:17, Nicolas George wrote:
Which leads me to wonder if there is an automated way to install GRUB on
all the EFI partitions.
If I run "grub-install" with multiple device I got
# LCALL=C grub-install /dev/sd[a-d]
grub-install: error: More than one install device?.
maybe it is a
Nicolas George composed on 2024-01-24 15:39 (UTC+0100):
> Charles Curley (12024-01-24):
>> Although I found it simpler (and faster) to have all my system stuff on
>> an SSD, and the RAID on four HDDs. Grub goes on the SSD and that's that.
> If the SSD dies, your system does not boot. Somewhat wa
On Tue, Jan 23, 2024 at 10:27 AM CHENG YING KIT KEITH
wrote:
> Dear Colleagues,
>
>
>
> Can I install Debian 11 or 12 with “Intel(R) Xeon(R) CPU E5-2699 v3 @
> 2.30GHz” CPU?
>
> Do they both support the following application
>
> Nginx 1.22.1
>
> PHP 8.2.7
>
> Mariadb 10.11.4
>
>
> On the other ha
Charles Curley (12024-01-24):
> Perhaps a script based on:
Thanks, I know how to make scripts. My question ported specifically on
making it automatic.
> Although I found it simpler (and faster) to have all my system stuff on
> an SSD, and the RAID on four HDDs. Grub goes on the SSD and that's tha
On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 11:17:34 +0100
Nicolas George wrote:
> Which leads me to wonder if there is an automated way to install GRUB
> on all the EFI partitions.
I'm not aware of any existing solutions.
Perhaps a script based on:
for i in a b c d e ; do echo /dev/sd$i ; grub-install /dev/sd$i ; do
On Wed, 24 Jan 2024 07:33:59 +
Tixy wrote:
> On Tue, 2024-01-23 at 13:34 -0700, Charles Curley wrote:
> [...]
>
> As you've already found out, that's not the latest one, and if I'm not
> mistaken is the one that introduce a wifi bug [1], so that could
> explain it getting stuck in the wif
Hi all,
so, the problem is 90 percent solved. It was indeed the problem with the
graphic mode, just as Stefan's crytal ball told. Orinially the kernel driver
should automatically detect, which mode is possible and then switch to it. But
it doesn't. So the screen went blank.
The fix was easy:
On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 10:50:25AM +, Simeone Dominique wrote:
> Good morning,
>
> I had Debian 10 with two other linŭes that I could access at startup.
>
> I installed Debian 11 and the new grub only offers me Debian.
>
> How can I return to the presentation of my three operating systems fr
Hi,
On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 12:29:18AM +0100, Miroslav Skoric wrote:
> Dunno ... in any case, for some reason the rescue mode I went to by booting
> from an old installation CD (dated back to Debian 6.0.1A Squeeze!) did not
> see partitions in form of e.g. /dev/mapper/localhost-home, but rather
>
On Wed, Jan 24, 2024 at 06:45:12AM +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 23, 2024 at 06:42:43PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > You'll have to unmount it, which generally means you will have to reboot
> > in single-user mode, or from rescue media, whichever is easier.
>
> If you log in as r
Hi,
i cannot make qualified proposals for the GRUB question, but stumble over
your technical statements.
Nicolas George wrote:
> Since mdadm can only put its superblock at the end of the device (1.0),
> at the beginning of the device (1.1) and 4 Ko from the beginning (1.2),
> but they still have
Good morning,
I had Debian 10 with two other linŭes that I could access at startup.
I installed Debian 11 and the new grub only offers me Debian.
How can I return to the presentation of my three operating systems from the
command line?
Debianement your.
Mr.Dominique Simeone
Mr.Dominique Sime
Hi.
We have drives in mdadm RAID1.
Since they are potential boot drives, we have to put a GPT on them.
Since mdadm can only put its superblock at the end of the device (1.0),
at the beginning of the device (1.1) and 4 Ko from the beginning (1.2),
but they still have not invented 1.3 to have the
On Tue, Jan 23, 2024 at 06:05:29AM -0500, gene heskett wrote:
> On 1/23/24 00:30, Karl Vogel wrote:
> >>> On 1/22/24 11:31, gene heskett wrote:
> >
> > G> How does an 8T backup server sound for another $200 in hdwe? Very
> > G> enticing and I do have the sheckel's.
> >
> > https://www.amazon.com/d
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