On Wed 28 Feb 2024 at 22:32:57 (+0700), Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 28/02/2024 10:35, David Wright wrote:
> > In which case, I'd write the remaining cron line as:
> >
> >@reboot sleep 99 && echo 13b1 0bdc > /sys/bus/usb/drivers/brcmfmac/new_id
>
> I am in doubts if it is a task for cron. Wouldn't
There is a huge transition underway on unstable to migrate to 64-bit
time_t. After upgrading to the new libglib2.0-0t64, nothing could find
gsettings desktop schemas, breaking applications like rednotebook and
reportbug (lol), and after a reboot, stopping services like at-spi from
starting, cau
On 29/02/2024 00:00, Kamil Jońca wrote:
How precisely linger works? (what it starts? What not etc)
I read about lingering some time ago, and I have had impression
(wrong?) that it may conflict with my normal session.
Multiple sessions may be started for a user: DM, ssh, VT logins. I am
unsur
Andy Smith writes:
> Hi,
>
> On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 04:47:59PM +0100, Kamil Jońca wrote:
>> Andy Smith writes:
>> > Once you enable lingering for a user, that user's timers will
>> > trigger all the time.
>>
>> IIRC lingered user cannot be "normal" with session and so on. Am I
>> wrong?
>
> H
Hi,
On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 04:47:59PM +0100, Kamil Jońca wrote:
> Andy Smith writes:
> > Once you enable lingering for a user, that user's timers will
> > trigger all the time.
>
> IIRC lingered user cannot be "normal" with session and so on. Am I
> wrong?
How do you mean? On several machines
Andy Smith writes:
> Hi,
>
> On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 05:49:58AM +0100, Kamil Jońca wrote:
>> With cron, regular user can set up his/her jobs wihtout using admin
>> credentials, and these jobs will be triggered regardless of being logged
>> in. Is it possible with systemd timers?
>
> Once you enab
Max Nikulin (12024-02-28):
> I am in doubts if it is a task for cron. Wouldn't udev rules be better?
Or even the good old simple way that still works:
install modulename command...
This command instructs modprobe to run your command instead of
inserting the module in
On 28/02/2024 10:35, David Wright wrote:
In which case, I'd write the remaining cron line as:
@reboot sleep 99 && echo 13b1 0bdc > /sys/bus/usb/drivers/brcmfmac/new_id
I am in doubts if it is a task for cron. Wouldn't udev rules be better?
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/442833/how-to-
Hi,
On Wed, Feb 28, 2024 at 05:49:58AM +0100, Kamil Jońca wrote:
> With cron, regular user can set up his/her jobs wihtout using admin
> credentials, and these jobs will be triggered regardless of being logged
> in. Is it possible with systemd timers?
Once you enable lingering for a user, that us
Hello,
On Tue, Feb 27, 2024 at 02:58:13PM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> I don't foresee real cron going away any time soon.
If you today install bookworm base system and select no packages,
the only reason why you get cron is because logrotate depends upon
it. If you do not need logrotate then yo
On Tue Feb 27, 2024 at 7:12 AM GMT, Frank Weißer wrote:
> So we are at my original question: Which package to file a bug report ?
Package "debian-installer", I think; and/or submit an installation report,
which can be done with reportbug against the "installation-report" pseudo
package. See
Gremlin wrote:
The new OS called Raspberry Pi OS is a new animal. The foundation
used raspian and the the Raspberry Pi OS is the foundations, developed
by the foundation.
Yet it is still based on Debian, according to their changelog
https://downloads.raspberrypi.com/raspios_arm64/release_notes
Gremlin wrote:
> On 2/27/24 16:08, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> > Gremlin wrote:
> >
> >> The provider is raspberry foundation and Raspian has been
> >> dis-continued.
> Nope that is just wrong.
>
> https://www.raspbian.org/
[snip]
> Note: Raspbian is not affiliated with the Raspber
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