On Sun, 4 Nov 2018 02:07:16 +0300 Abdullah Ramazanoğlu said:
> I find Audacious quite better than timidity for playing midi pieces.
And a small audacious/midi how to (just in case someone needs it):
http://redmine.audacious-media-player.org/boards/1/topics/1143?r=1610
"The MIDI plugin
indows.
So you have squid installed.
Looks like a firewall or something, blocking direct FTP and HTTP traffic
(possibly in order to force users go through squid proxy).
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu - İstanbul, Türkiye
On Mon, 1 Oct 2018 23:18:13 -0700 David Christensen said:
> On 10/1/18 8:40 PM, Abdullah Ramazanoğlu wrote:
> > I'm not sure how an on-disk cache problem could definitively be caught
> > without power cycling. What if on-disk controller is ignoring all cache
> > relat
(where no OOM-killer would really help), but it turns out to be a
kernel bug instead.
Please see Reco's latest followups, and both Reco's and my suggestions about it.
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
On Thu, 7 Jun 2018 11:48:54 +0300 Reco said:
> On Thu, Jun 07, 2018 at 11:05:27AM +0300, Abdullah Ramazanoğlu wrote:
> > On Thu, 7 Jun 2018 10:52:01 +0300 Reco said:
> >
> > [--8<--]
> >
> > > Limit the size of dirty blocks cache. Kernel defaults are in
stions?
>
> Limit the size of dirty blocks cache. Kernel defaults are insanely large.
> What I'm using here is:
>
> $ cat /etc/sysctl.d/12309.conf
> vm.dirty_ratio=5
> vm.dirty_background_ratio=5
I have added the line below to /etc/crontab for different reasons (better FS
resilience), but it might help to circumvent this bug too.
* * * * * root /bin/sync
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
On Fri, 1 Jun 2018 11:27:46 +1200 Mike said:
> Does anyone have any thoughts?
I would have checked /var/log/{messages,syslog,Xorg.0.log}
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
On Tue, 29 May 2018 13:18:16 -0500 David Wright said:
> On Tue 29 May 2018 at 18:38:40 (+0300), Abdullah Ramazanoğlu wrote:
> > On Tue, 29 May 2018 09:14:12 -0400 Greg Wooledge said:
> > > On Sat, May 26, 2018 at 09:31:14PM +0300, Abdullah Ramazanoğlu wrote:
> --✁---
On Tue, 29 May 2018 09:14:12 -0400 Greg Wooledge said:
> On Sat, May 26, 2018 at 09:31:14PM +0300, Abdullah Ramazanoğlu wrote:
> > apt or apt-get upgrade does upgrade in passive mode: It never install new
> > packages, never removes existing ones. Just upgrades existing
or a partition larger than several gigs. I drop it to 1% (tune2fs
-m 1) for all partitions after installation.
As for OP, if disk-full condition was the case, then he could switch to root on
terminal session and delete some files.
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
packages if need be.
I never use apt, so I am relying on the man page. It seems that there is no
equivalent of "apt-get dist-upgrade" in apt.
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
There was enough CPU/RAM/disk room left,
that I could have also burdened it as well with print services or something.
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
ng through some sort of "loop-back"
mechanism to see your external address. External sites are one way of achieving
this.
John Conover's (dig) and likcoras' (script) solutions look promising in that
regard.
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
On Sun, 20 May 2018 12:10:01 -0700 Patrick Bartek said:
> On Sat, 19 May 2018 03:52:27 +0300 Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
> wrote:
>
> > On Fri, 18 May 2018 17:13:07 -0700 Patrick Bartek said:
> >
> > > I could use hwclock --set --date= with the --localtime
> > &g
fore shrinking / after enlarging an LV,
don't you?
[*] backup, umount/swapoff, resize2fs/mkswap, mount/swapon, (unlikely but
possibly: restore)
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
On Sat, 19 May 2018 21:27:42 +0300 Abdullah Ramazanoğlu said:
> On Sat, 19 May 2018 10:37:08 -0400 Matthew Dyer said:
>> root@matt-the-cat:/home/matthew# apt-get update && apt-get dist-upgrade
>> Hit:1 http://security.debian.org/debian-security testing/updates
estore /home to its new
partition.
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
quot; as it was a mixture of statistical computation and artificial
intelligence. [1] Hourly, daily, weekly, ... however one wants to use it.
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
in the current directory, so your
default config setting for NSPR in your home takes precedence, which succeeds.
I would have tested this by running firefox from a completely different
(not /opt, not /home/user) directory. If it runs, then maybe this hypothesis
has a chance.
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
not be upgraded and why.
BTW you don't need to really attempt an upgrade to see what happens. The
"-s" (simulate, or dry-run) option of apt can be helpful here. And it doesn't
need root privileges as it is not intrusive.
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
> first and convert.
This is probably because Debian is commited to systemd and going that way
further and further. The fact that today it is possible to convert to sysvinit
is because systemd migration is still in transient. Upcoming release or the
next one possibly won't even allow switching
chain which results in pulling in systemd, and
~$ apt-cache rdepends libsystemd0 systemd
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
ably a connector issue in the casing,
though I haven't opened it up as yet. I solve the issue by a couple of taps at
the back of the monitor, for another 3 months without issues. :D
Regards
--
Abdullah Ramazanoğlu
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