On Fri, Apr 4, 2025 at 8:37 PM Eben King wrote:
>
> On 4/4/25 16:41, George at Clug wrote:
> >
> > [...]
> > If you need to reboot to complete the installation
> > # systemctl reboot
>
> shutdown doesn't. I mean it acts like it does, goes through the
> motions, and ends up with a computer that's
On 4/3/25 07:49, Dan Purgert wrote:
On Apr 02, 2025, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 02 Apr 2025 at 09:12:24 (-0400), gene heskett wrote:
[...]
Experimenting I find the duplication does not seem to generate an
error, other than I now had to ping itself by address, since the name
is now found at 127.
I have two memory RAM SO-DIMM in my two slot
The two memory have the following characteristics:
- 12800MHz
- 4GB
- DDR3L
But the BIOS only reflects 1600MHz, why? What happened to the rest?
I have enabled swap memory, but if i disable the swap memory the machine is
slow.
With kindest r
Still missing a topic or discussion of "SOLVED" in the subject.
On Fri, Apr 4, 2025 at 8:47 PM Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
>
> Debian-user is a mailing list provided for support for Debian users,
> and to facilitate discussion on relevant topics.
>
> Codes of Conduct
>
>
> * The lis
On 05/04/2025 07:33, coffeeforblood.pardon117 wrote:
I think there is still the question of why this setting must be ON for
this to work properly. I followed the steps suggested by Max Nikulin and
I think there is something interesting in the output of 'journalctl -f'.
I do not think, GNOME ap
Great, I have that same question. Eventually came up with a workaround
that works for my case.
A while back I was trying to do exactly that, never did get it working.
My situation was:
my Truenas NAS insisted to export share path like so: /mnt/my/share
my client was hard coded to mount /home
On 05/04/2025 04:00, Eben King wrote:
Also it suspends the OS after a few minutes, so I
gotta find out where that's controlled.
Either your desktop environment or systemd had a hope to reduce your
electricity bills. Check power management setting for both. For the
latter see /etc/systemd/slee
On 05/04/2025 03:35, Andy Smith wrote:
Do you understand that Max and I are saying that the way the web UI for
gmail and other large mailbox providers works is that as soon as you
change a subject line it breaks the thread and places those mails in
their own separate group?
Disclaimer: I have n
Hi,
Thanks.
The Copyright is now in effect. I am releasing the game ( JASAG ) under the
gpl3 license (if anyone is interested).
I put the game ( JASAG ) on itch.io today (with a short description and some
screenshots), Included are all required modules, files, source as well as the
install s
debian-user:
I would like to use the Perl module Digest::SHA256 on Debian:
2025-04-02 15:57:50 root@laalaa ~
# cat /etc/debian_version ; uname -a
11.11
Linux laalaa 5.10.0-34-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 5.10.234-1 (2025-02-24)
x86_64 GNU/Linux
2025-04-02 15:58:20 root@laalaa ~
# perl -v
This is perl
On Fri, 4 Apr 2025 18:13:40 -0400
Eben King wrote:
> > Not necessarily. I routinely ssh into all my computers, to their
> > root and user accounts,
>
> So you ssh-login as root, or do you login as a user then su to root?
I log in as root. "ssh r...@dragon.example.com".
--
Does anybody read
On Thu, Apr 4, 2025 at 11:56 PM wrote:
> Can you try it with Make available to other users ON
Toggling "Make available to other users" to ON solves the problem! First I
tested this with the built-in Ethernet adapter. After this was successful I
configured this to ON for the other adapters and
On Thu, Apr 3, 2025 at 9:32 PM wrote:
>
> Background Information
> ===
>
> Debian 12 Bookworm has been freshly installed on a laptop. The laptop is
> functioning as a simple home server and has three Ethernet devices, two USB
> Ethernet adapters and a built-in Ethernet adapte
On Fri, Apr 4, 2025 at 5:02 PM Larry Martell wrote:
>
>
> On Fri, Apr 4, 2025 at 12:05 PM Fred wrote:
>>
>> HI,
>>
>> One reason to use the "solved" tag is to let everyone know that the OP
>> has solved the problem and moved on so that others don't continue to
>> waste their time and effort tryin
Debian-user is a mailing list provided for support for Debian users,
and to facilitate discussion on relevant topics.
Codes of Conduct
* The list is a Debian communication forum. As such, it is subject to both
the Debian mailing list Code of Conduct and the main Debian Code of
On 4/4/25 18:08, Charles Curley wrote:
On Fri, 4 Apr 2025 17:00:09 -0400
Eben King wrote:
to run synaptic you would need to do this on the computer itself,
not remotely unless you are using a remote X or Wayland client like
VNC.
So ssh is right out? That sucketh much. It's not all X cli
On Fri, 4 Apr 2025 17:00:09 -0400
Eben King wrote:
> > to run synaptic you would need to do this on the computer itself,
> > not remotely unless you are using a remote X or Wayland client like
> > VNC.
>
> So ssh is right out? That sucketh much. It's not all X clients that
> don't work, so w
On Fri, Apr 04, 2025 at 10:22:47AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 02/04/2025 05:17, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> > I see the changing of title or subject to add things like "SOLVED" is
> > not included in the FAQ.
>
> I am neutral to this recommendations. Just some considerations...
>
> I rarely use G
On Fri, Apr 4, 2025 at 3:05 PM Fred wrote:
>
> One reason to use the "solved" tag is to let everyone know that the OP
> has solved the problem and moved on so that others don't continue to
> waste their time and effort trying to find a solution when the OP has
> moved on and won't need to respond
On 4/4/25 16:41, George at Clug wrote:
Hi,
I believe you are using a terminal from another computer, and not using a remote X or
Wayland client like VNC? (e.g. "I usually access it via ssh")
That is correct, ssh in bash in xfce4-terminal in XFCE in X11 under
kernel 6.1.0-32-amd64.
If so
On Wed, Mar 26, 2025 at 02:55:11PM -, Greg wrote:
> On 2025-03-26, Richard Owlett wrote:
>
> >> If he hasn't noticed yet, I doubt it.
> >
> > I agree.
> > If I understand what people want to accomplish by using command-line
> > options, I would likely have gone to System->Log Out ... and the
On 3/31/25 05:10, Andy Smith wrote:
Hi,
On Mon, Mar 31, 2025 at 03:36:20AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
On 3/31/25 02:09, Henrik Ahlgren wrote:
I believe /run/utmp is gone in trixie, after systemd was upgraded to
256.5-2. The command `w` still works fine.
no, its dns lookup fails there also.
T
On 2025-03-19, jeremy ardley wrote:
>
> On 19/3/25 11:04, tim wade wrote:
>>
>> How can I check the graphics card model of my computer and how can I
>> test the floating-point computing capability of the graphics card?
>
>
> sudo lspci -v | grep -A 1 -i "VGA compatible controller"
I don't think
Hi,
I believe you are using a terminal from another computer, and not using a
remote X or Wayland client like VNC? (e.g. "I usually access it via ssh")
If so, please use apt to install software.
for example, become root
$ sudo -i or just su (which is what I use) $ su
After logging in as root
Hi,
On Fri, Apr 04, 2025 at 11:59:23AM -0700, Fred wrote:
> One reason to use the "solved" tag is to let everyone know that the OP has
> solved the problem
Do you understand that Max and I are saying that the way the web UI for
gmail and other large mailbox providers works is that as soon as you
On 2025-03-30, John Hasler wrote:
> Hans writes:
>> This looks strange for me, as I would think, the AP on the computer
>> would also need some processing time for recognition, correction and
>> routing to the host.
>
> Every packet is routed by the kernel. There is no seperate "AP".
>
> How much
On Fri, Apr 4, 2025 at 12:05 PM Fred wrote:
> HI,
>
> One reason to use the "solved" tag is to let everyone know that the OP
> has solved the problem and moved on so that others don't continue to
> waste their time and effort trying to find a solution when the OP has
> moved on and won't need to
On Wed, Apr 2, 2025 at 1:37 AM Van Snyder wrote:
> I discovered that although I haven't even installed iptables, my server
> was running firewalld. I wasn't even aware it existed. I stopped it, and
> now I can access my web vandyke.mynetgear.com through my router on port
> 80 or 443.
>
> I disabl
On 31/3/25 03:23, Marc Shapiro wrote:
I was looking into Brave the other day, but what stopped me was the lack
of anything to replace Video Download Helper. Am I missing something?
Is there a way to download YouTube videos in Brave, or do I stick with
Firefox?
Marc
To download youtube vide
пн, 31 мар. 2025 г. в 16:27, :
>
> For comparison, some research and portability tests I'd like
> to install old releases of Debian, i.e. versions 8, 9, 10.
> Are there archives and old repositories to install from?
https://archive.debian.org and
https://cdimage.debian.org/mirror/cdimage/archive/
On Tue Mar 18, 2025 at 10:04 AM GMT, Roger Price wrote:
I removed my /etc/updatedb.conf, uninstalled package locate, installed
package plocate, and ran updatedb as root. The command locate is now
defined as /usr/bin/locate -> /etc/alternatives/locate* ->
/usr/bin/plocate*
I didn´t need to mo
HI,
One reason to use the "solved" tag is to let everyone know that the OP
has solved the problem and moved on so that others don't continue to
waste their time and effort trying to find a solution when the OP has
moved on and won't need to respond any more.
Best regards,
Fred
On 4/4/25 08
On 29/03/2025 04:14, George at Clug wrote:
I do not fully understand "email threading", even after reading up on
it. I don't use email threading, and I do not think my email client
does either.
The message, I am replying to, have these headers, however References
contains single Message-ID (f
Am Sonntag, 30. März 2025, 21:41:30 CEST schrieb debian-u...@howorth.org.uk:
> Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
>
> [snip]
>
> > If you make the storage server the access point
>
> What storage server?
> I thought this was about live video display from a drone?
Oh sorry, maybe I did the wrong expr
Mike Castle writes:
> The whole utmp stuff is flaky, a best effort system that might give
> some resemblance to reality.
I believe /run/utmp is gone in trixie, after systemd was upgraded to
256.5-2. The command `w` still works fine.
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1080330
Thank you for your help!
systemctl help local-fs.target
> systemctl cat local-fs.target
>
> I hope, it gives an answer to my question. For more details see
> loginctl(1). Actually I was shooting in dark.
>
I didn't understand much from this, frankly speaking. But...
In your logs I se
For comparison, some research and portability tests I'd like
to install old releases of Debian, i.e. versions 8, 9, 10.
Are there archives and old repositories to install from?
Steve
On Sunday 23 March 2025 09:02:26 am Charles Curley wrote:
> On Sun, 23 Mar 2025 08:37:58 +0100
> lina wrote:
>
> > Dear all,
> >
> > Which laptop option is friendly with Debian,
> > The purpose is related to work, not game.
> >
> > Mainly for computation, R and some bioinformatic analysis,
> >
On Sun, Mar 30, 2025 at 9:29 AM Hans wrote:
> Am Samstag, 29. März 2025, 19:21:39 CEST schrieb Stefan Monnier:
> > >> You need to make one PC an access point. I think most guides are
> > >
> > > yes, I already am aware of this, but this I wanted to avoid. It will
> > > be then again a new hop, w
On Tue, 25 Mar 2025 09:49:37 +0100
wrote:
Hello to...@tuxteam.de,
>since there is no "standard" way to express a "multiple" or
>"discontinuous" selection in the underlying windows system (it's
Use of for discontinuous selection seems pretty much ubiquitous.
is usually associated with continuo
On 21/03/2025 20:38, J wrote:
But i must mention that *this passage from Debian Wiki seems incorrect*
Bind mount various virtual filesystems:
# for i in /dev /dev/pts /proc /sys /sys/firmware/efi/efivars /run;
do mount -B $i /mnt/$i; done
https://wiki.debian.org/GrubEFIReinstall#
On 20/03/2025 03:22, J wrote:
But before this oopsie deletion I have saved as a back-up at least
something from /boot folder, or maybe even everything.
Copy files from backup to /boot and to the EFI system partition
EFI/debian/BOOTX64.CSV
EFI/debian/fbx64.efi
EFI/debian/grub.cfg
EFI/debian/g
On 4/4/25 11:47, John Hasler wrote:
Gene writes:
Which is to fix the reason for a 30 second all system freeze of the
system when trying to access a file I own, or want to create, in my
/home/me directory.
This happens only in that directory and only when you own the file?
I think its a bit mo
On 02/04/2025 21:31, J wrote:
I expect that this mount is a part of local-fs.target, so qbittorrent
and other processes started from user session should be stopped
already.
Unfortunately i don't know what the local-fs.target is. Quick search
shows that it is probably a part of syst
Hi,
On Fri, Apr 04, 2025 at 09:48:32AM -0400, Dan Purgert wrote:
> Congrats? What point are you trying to make?
Pocket also contacted me. As neither of those emails reached the list I
assume they have been banned and are trying to goad people in to
group-reply back onto the list for them.
Thank
Hi. I have this machine "alexandria" onto which I installed Debian
yesterday:
eben@alexandria:~$ cat /etc/debian_version
12.10
It has a video card and a keyboard, but to log in there I have to get
down on the floor, so I usually access it via ssh. Right now I'm trying
to use synaptic to instal
Hi,
On Fri, Apr 04, 2025 at 05:21:45AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> On 4/3/25 13:39, Andy Smith wrote:
> > Historically we do not get very far here when talking about IPv6 with
> > Gene.
> True Andy, but there's no ipv6 within 100 miles of me.
The Linux kernel comes with IPv6 on every interface (
Hi,
On Fri, Apr 04, 2025 at 10:22:47AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
> I am neutral to this recommendations. Just some considerations...
>
> I rarely use Gmail web UI, but this time I was curious enough to check its
> behavior.
As I keep pointing out, and you have covered again here, any change of
s
On Fri, Apr 04, 2025 at 10:46:35 -0500, John Hasler wrote:
> Gene writes:
> > Which is to fix the reason for a 30 second all system freeze of the
> > system when trying to access a file I own, or want to create, in my
> > /home/me directory.
>
> This happens only in that directory and only when yo
Gene writes:
> Which is to fix the reason for a 30 second all system freeze of the
> system when trying to access a file I own, or want to create, in my
> /home/me directory.
This happens only in that directory and only when you own the file?
--
John Hasler
j...@sugarbit.com
Elmwood, WI USA
On 4/4/25 06:10, Dan Purgert wrote:
On Apr 03, 2025, Greg wrote:
On 2025-04-03, Dan Purgert wrote:
That's what you want: as the address is in the 127.0.0.0 network,
pinging it will ping itself, and it gets a reply. It doesn't
require your LAN to be set up, and AIUI it's like localhost
(127.0.
On 4/4/25 05:57, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Fri, Apr 04, 2025 at 05:17:24AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
On 4/3/25 09:29, Greg wrote:
On 2025-04-03, Dan Purgert wrote:
That's what you want: as the address is in the 127.0.0.0 network,
pinging it will ping itself, and it gets a reply. It doesn't
On Thu, Apr 3, 2025 at 11:23 PM Max Nikulin wrote:
> [...]
> Let's avoid discussions if gmail should be used. De-facto it is widely
> used, it has features and limitations. My point is that gmail users
> should be aware that some suggestions perfectly valid for other MUA
> should be avoided in the
On Fri, Apr 04, 2025 at 05:19:08PM +0800, jeremy ardley wrote:
Off Topic I just did a 1 year diploma in advanced networking. I
couldn't even comprehend why the still had crossover cables in the
lab. Perhaps to accommodate pre-2000 CISCO switches?
cisco was one of the companies that was late to
On 04/04/2025 05:56, coffeeforblood.pardon117 wrote:
Here is the output of 'ip addr' for USB Ethernet Adapter #1 under
different circumstances:
You have not written it explicitly, but almost certainly you use
NetworkManager. That is why its configuration should be inspected
nmcli
n
On Apr 04, 2025, poc...@homemail.com wrote:
>
>
> > Sent: Friday, April 04, 2025 at 6:10 AM
> > From: "Dan Purgert"
> > To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
> > Subject: Re: DHCP and static addresses, nothing to do with Re:
> > Who:Bookwormv.Trixie
> >
> > On Apr 03, 2025, Greg wrote:
> > > On 2025
On 2025-04-04, Max Nikulin wrote:
>
> Let's avoid discussions if gmail should be used. De-facto it is widely
> used, it has features and limitations. My point is that gmail users
> should be aware that some suggestions perfectly valid for other MUA
> should be avoided in the mail.google.com web
On Apr 04, 2025, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> Greg Wooledge wrote:
>
> > I'm just going to assume that it worked similarly to traditional X
> > sessions (e.g. the ones on HP-UX), where it looked up the system's
> > hostname, and used whatever IP address that returned for connections
> > be
Greg Wooledge wrote:
> I'm just going to assume that it worked similarly to traditional X
> sessions (e.g. the ones on HP-UX), where it looked up the system's
> hostname, and used whatever IP address that returned for connections
> between the X client and server.
I'm confused. Traditional X ses
On Apr 03, 2025, Greg wrote:
> On 2025-04-03, Dan Purgert wrote:
>
> >> That's what you want: as the address is in the 127.0.0.0 network,
> >> pinging it will ping itself, and it gets a reply. It doesn't
> >> require your LAN to be set up, and AIUI it's like localhost
> >> (127.0.0.1) in that it
On Fri, Apr 04, 2025 at 05:17:24AM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> On 4/3/25 09:29, Greg wrote:
> > On 2025-04-03, Dan Purgert wrote:
> >
> > > > That's what you want: as the address is in the 127.0.0.0 network,
> > > > pinging it will ping itself, and it gets a reply. It doesn't
> > > > require you
> If an application is terminated by SIGKILL
>
There is *SIGTERM*
* deb systemd-shutdown[1]: Sending SIGTERM to remaining processes...*
And it happens after
*Stopped target local-fs.target - Local File Systems.*
On 4/3/25 13:39, Andy Smith wrote:
Hi,
On Thu, Apr 03, 2025 at 01:28:43PM -, Greg wrote:
On 2025-04-03, Dan Purgert wrote:
Indeed, the entirety of 127.0.0.0/8 is the virtual loopback adapter
(i.e. "localhost").
I thought IPV6 opened up the flood gates of assigning "real" ip
addresses
In
On 4/4/25 17:06, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
I would not be surprised to learn that some inexpensive ethernet
controllers lacked some features, like Auto MDI-X, since it is an
optional feature of the 1000BASE-T standard.
For 1000BASE-T I would be very surprised if that was the case as it uses
all
On 4/3/25 09:29, Greg wrote:
On 2025-04-03, Dan Purgert wrote:
That's what you want: as the address is in the 127.0.0.0 network,
pinging it will ping itself, and it gets a reply. It doesn't
require your LAN to be set up, and AIUI it's like localhost
(127.0.0.1) in that it doesn't touch the net
On Fri, Apr 4, 2025 at 12:52 AM jeremy ardley wrote:
>
> On 4/4/25 09:38, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> > It sounds like the client is connected directly to the server via
> > ethernet, presumably without a cross-over ethernet cable. So both
> > ethernet ports would need to auto-sense the configuration.
OK. Thanks!
when it is writing data then you can
> easily get corrupted files.
>
These apps don't write data. They only read, does it matter?
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