On Sat, Jun 22, 2024 at 10:22:53AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
[...]
> I think, you are biased treating "system" as tightly built-in while most of
> others assume "system-wide".
Taking your bias out ("you are biased" -- "most of others") I'd
tend to agree :-)
You do have a point. Coming from the
On 19/06/2024 16:27, Julien Petit wrote:
Does it have some logic to avoid descending into bind mounts? Maybe I am
wrong with my expectation that it does not use anything besides st_dev
from stat result. It may be promising case to demonstrate the issue in a
way independent of systemd and sandboxi
On 21/06/2024 11:45, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 09:32:10AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 20/06/2024 11:52, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
"the system's
time zone" (of which some, me included, say "there's no such thing",
and others disagree 🙂
What term is appropriate in your opin
On 21/06/2024 11:39, David Christensen wrote:
On 6/20/24 19:10, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 20/06/2024 12:06, David Christensen wrote:
You can use the fdisk(8) command to list the partitions on a drive.
lsblk --fs
perhaps with "-o +SIZE" may be more convenient to get overview of drives.
The debi
> When the shell is using standard input and it invokes a command that
> also uses standard input, the shell shall ensure that the standard
> input file pointer points directly after the command it has read when
> the command begins execution.
>
> But I consider this clause is misguided, it
Am 21.06.2024 um 13:57:11 Uhr schrieb CHRIS M:
> And I like how for POP3 accounts, each email is stored as an
> individual file, vs being shoved into a binary .mbx file that could
> get corrupted at any time!
This is possible for IMAP too, e.g. with the Maildir format.
--
Gruß
Marco
Send unso
On Wednesday 19 June 2024 04:00:44 pm Cindy Sue Causey wrote:
> My brain keeps wanting to note that e.g. Gmail used to make us jump
> through painful hoops to use desktop programs like Evolution. That
> didn't happen for me this time, but maybe other email providers still
> have the detail that
On Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 09:43:52 -0700, Mike Castle wrote:
> On Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 4:57 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > That's why I find it frustrating when someone claims that this bug is
> > so severe that Debian has to *change their policy* without even describing
> > how this bug is affecting t
On Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 4:57 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> That's why I find it frustrating when someone claims that this bug is
> so severe that Debian has to *change their policy* without even describing
> how this bug is affecting them in real life.
I did not feel like the OP was saying the bug wa
Hello
On 2024-06-17 16:14, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
On 2024-06-17 08:26:39 -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
On stable:
$ openssl list -disabled
Disabled algorithms:
IDEA
MD2
MDC2
RC5
SCTP
SSL3
ZLIB
So, SSL3 support was removed at least that long ago. I think it
was actually dropped around 2016.
That's
On Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 13:44:35 +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> Greg Wooledge (12024-06-21):
> > The original message began with the assertion that the OP had run
> > across a bug in dash, and gave two URLs, with no description of the bug
> > or the impact it was having on their life.
> >
> > I re
Greg Wooledge (12024-06-21):
> The original message began with the assertion that the OP had run
> across a bug in dash, and gave two URLs, with no description of the bug
> or the impact it was having on their life.
>
> I read one of the URLs, and the bug is rather obscure. It involves a
> second
The original message began with the assertion that the OP had run
across a bug in dash, and gave two URLs, with no description of the bug
or the impact it was having on their life.
I read one of the URLs, and the bug is rather obscure. It involves a
second script embedded inside a here document i
On Thu, Jun 20, 2024 at 23:17:42 -0500, David Wright wrote:
> And what am I to call the time that a system
> issues using that system default time zone?
If you mean the current time translated into that time zone, "local time"
is the traditional name for it.
If you mean an arbitrary past time, th
Julien Petit wrote:
> How Linux is supposed to be used? That's why i'm here. There wasn't
> until kernel 4.19 an official limit to the number of mounts in the
> documentation. Even though we use mounts a lot, we're still far from
> the official limit. Did we get lucky for 15 years and we should ch
On 21 Jun 2024 00:28 +0200, from ilya.kazakev...@jetbrains.com (Ilya
Kazakevich):
> [...] honestly, I can't imagine how bash
> could be a bottleneck for anything in 2024 (if you have such
> scenarios, please share).
Debian doesn't target only desktops and servers, where your assertion
is quite po
That's the beauty of Debian. If the dev doesn't backport a fix, the
maintainer might. It's not uncommon.
On Thu, Jun 20, 2024, 22:38 Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> One additional data point to consider... there are folks who have
> exploits written for vulnerabilities that the community does not know
>
i have installed it for bookworm
but firefox can't display Chinese characters on pages at debian.org
https://www.debian.org/index.zh-cn.html
https://www.debian.org/index.zh-hk.html
https://www.debian.org/index.zh-tw.html
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