headers-5.10.0-11-amd64. So long as you
install the metapackage linux-headers-amd64, replacements like this
should be upgraded automatically.
> libirs-export161_1:9.11.19+dfsg-2.1
This is the only version available in Debian. It is built separately
from bind9 and is only used by the ISC DHC
e MODULES setting in /etc/initramfs-tools/initrams.conf
to MODULES=dep
- Run "update-initramfs -u"
If you do this, the disk probably won't be bootable if you move it to
another computer.
* Compress the initramfs harder:
- Change the COMPRESS setting in initramfs.conf to CO
using the alpha release of the
installer for Debian 10 "buster".
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
When in doubt, use brute force. - Ken Thompson
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ich
is designed for exactly this purpose?
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
Horngren's Observation:
Among economists, the real world is often a special case.
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like Linux 4.6
(available as linux-image-4.6.0-0.bpo.1-amd64 in jessie-backports).
Then use 'reportbug' to submit a bug report against that package if the
bug is still present, or the jessie package if it's fixed there, giving
a summary of the problems you've described.
Ben.
--
is mptsas here not mpt2sas as you posted - no idea what is
> the difference.
[...]
So far as I can see, mptsas is for SAS 1.0 (3 Gbps) controllers and
mpt2sas is for SAS 2.0 (6 Gbps) controllers. They are two entirely
separate drivers, probably with different sets of bugs.
Ben.
--
Ben
ior.
This is an unfortunate effect of doing multiple things in parallel,
which is really the only way to make them go fast.
I think most of the problems you're still having must be caused by a
bug in the RAID driver, mpt2sas (or its firmware, if that's not
embedded in the B
oot users.
>
> How, just by executing dpkg-reconfigure, did I tell it this is what
> I wanted? If that's the default, why wasn't it that way to begin with?
It probably was, but see bug #770492.
> More generally, is it somehow possible to still run debian without
>
md64 #1 SMP Debian 3.16.7-ckt7-1 (2015-03-01) x86_64
> GNU/Linux
[...]
This is the original kernel image for jessie (from 8.0). Not all the kernel
modules from current jessie (8.3) will work with it.
You must update your netboot images after each point release.
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
Once
still
affecting the version in jessie:
https://security-tracker.debian.org/tracker/source-package/squid3
Do you know otherwise?
Ben.
> So I'd like to request to mark Version 3.5 as stable.(But Version 3.5 in
> stable state)
>
> thank you
--
Ben Hutchings
The program is absolutely right; th
and have _not_ closed the lid but run the
> > code you send and cat'ing the state, it seems to think the lid is
> > closed. When I close the lid the state remains as a closed lid. When I
> > open the lid, it finally triggers as being open.
> >
> > So now the que
just *did* backport r8169 from 3.0 into squeeze."
> >>> http://lists.debian.org/debian-wnpp/2011/11/msg00347.html
> >>
> >> You probably meant:
> >> http://lists.debian.org/debian-wnpp/2011/11/msg00346.html (From: Ben
> >> Hutchings).
> >
> >
t/initrd-2.6.32-5-686
> exists and is not of zero size.
>
> in the case of the system(s) under bugs 636123 and 638896, the initrd
> file wasn't created - at all.
So it's not the exact same problem, is it?
> this definitely warrants further investigation.
Can you try to r
still log in to a system that has gone OOM. If there is no
network available, it doesn't do this because you cannot log in remotely
anyway.
The bug seems to be that sshd does not reset the OOM adjustment before
running the login shell (or other program). Therefore, please report a
bug agai
ny other device identification that the kernel log (for example, r8169
logs the 'XID' of the device).
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
Once a job is fouled up, anything done to improve it makes it worse.
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extlinux'.
For future reference, the primary list for kernel-related questions is
normally debian-ker...@lists.debian.org.
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
Once a job is fouled up, anything done to improve it makes it worse.
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kage is built using dpkg-buildpackage, which calls debian/rules,
which applies those patches. But this takes a very long time because it
builds several configurations and each of those enables most of the
drivers and optional features. If you want just a single configuration,
use linux-sourc
On Wed, 2009-01-14 at 17:56 -0500, Boxuan Gu wrote:
> Hello,
>
> When I opened "/usr/src/linux_2_6_26/drivers/net/Kconfig", I found the
> following:
>
> config TIGON3
>tristate "Broadcom Tigon3 support"
>depends on BROKEN
>depends on PCI
>
> I don't know what does "BROKEN
supported by the rt2570 driver. So we need some users of this
driver to test new versions of the package before we upload them. If
you are willing to do this, please respond to this bug.
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
Tomorrow will be cancelled due to lack of interest.
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u
offer to test new packages?
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
The generation of random numbers is too important to be left to chance.
- Robert Coveyou
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a card, or to test pre-release
packages against it, we cannot support this driver in any meaningful
way.
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
Lowery's Law:
If it jams, force it. If it breaks, it needed replacing anyway.
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personal GPG key).
Ben.
--
Ben Hutchings
The obvious mathematical breakthrough [to break modern encryption] would be
development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers. - Bill Gates
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Jacco Hoeve wrote:
Andreas Janssen wrote:
Jacco Hoeve (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
One more quick question:
I am used to typing "telnet 0 port" .. but after I upgraded woody to
sarge "telnet 0" gives:
server01:/etc# telnet 0 25
telnet: could not resolve 0/25: Name or service not known
It does the s
martin f krafft wrote:
I have just encountered a weird message by /bin/su:
master:/tmp# su -c id collector
su: Permission denied
(Ignored)
uid=200(collector) gid=200(collector) groups=200(collector)
root su's to the collector user (pam_rootok allows this), and the
command is executed. But
I wrote:
If you have a drive larger than 137 GB (128 GiB) then you must use a 2.6
kernel to avoid disk addresses wrapping around beyond that point.
Sorry, I got this wrong. 2.4 should be fine as well, so I don't know
what the problem might have been.
Ben.
--
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Alexandru Cabuz wrote:
Hello,
My question concerns the correct course of action when installing
Sarge on a computer whose only way to connect to the internet is
through an nVidia nForce 3 ethernet interface which needs the driver
provided by nVidia at
http://www.nvidia.com/object/linux_nforce_amd64
Adam Funk wrote:
As I mentioned in a previous post, I'm using the current unstable
version of mplayer-k6 from ftp.nerim.net and all the relevant packages.
My /etc/mplayer/codecs.conf contains the following lines:
audiocodec racook
info "RealAudio COOK"
status working
format 0x6B6F6F63 ; "coo
Levi Waldron wrote:
I just tried to install sarge, using the pre-rc2 debian-installer, on
an eMachines T1742 Celeron 1.7 GHz desktop system (82845G/GL
[Brookdale-G] mainboard chipset). After installing the base system,
the floppy drive, network card, and sound card do not work. Although
they are
Upayavira wrote:
Otto Wyss wrote:
Sorry I can't remember how I can redirect the stdout and stderr together
into a file. I can
grep > logfile
grep 2> logfile
but how can I redirect both together?
cat foo 2>&1 > logfile
or, to append to the file:
cat foo 2>&1 >> logfile
Should do it.
Redirections
Michael Graham wrote:
Ben Hutchings wrote:
Christopher Swingley wrote:
Change the ownership and permissions on their .bash_profile and .bashrc
to root:root 644:
-rw-r--r--1 root root 420 Sep 21 13:05
.bash_profile -rw-r--r--1 root root 746 Sep 21
13:05
Christopher Swingley wrote:
This is what I've done when I wanted to reduce the set of commands a
user could run. I'm sure a reasonably competant Unix user could easily
circumvent these restrictions, but it's a good first start, and making
such attempts would result in account suspension.
Chan
david.lozano wrote:
Hi all,
I've got a new PC and I've just installed that:
On a 160 Gbytes HD, three partitions:
hda1 with Windows 2000 (119 Gbytes), NTFS
hda2 with a Linux swap partition (1 Gbyte)
hda3 with an ext2 file system (40 Gbytes)
My linux installation is a Debian Woody (just downloaded t
Joshua J. Brickel wrote:
Hi Folks,
I was hoping that someone might be able to help me with this or direct
me to another internet group that would
Summary:
DHCP is not getting set-up correctly on the Linux side.
The
present problem is that the initial dhcp connection does not seem to be
pro
Dr. David Kirkby wrote:
Thank you very much for that - and everyone else that replied. I had not
seen your post before I see others mentioning /etc/network/interfaces,
so edit that. so was not sure what to put for the broadcase, although
since the original ended in .255, I went for that too.
R
Gilbert, Joseph wrote:
There are two other standard ways to have scripts run with root privileges.
1) For automated tasks, schedule it in root's crontab. 'man crontab' for
more info
2) Use setuid for scripts or programs that are to be run by users who need
root perms to perform a specific task pro
tom midgley wrote:
I built an iso, using
'http://non-us.cdimage.debian.org/jigdo-area/3.0_r2/jigdo/i386/woody-i386-7.jigdo'.
The installer gave the the following message :
"The installation program couldn't find any directory containing the
files rescue.bin, drivers.tgz"
- it was right, they w
Derek "The Monkey" Wueppelmann wrote:
Hello All,
I'm currently running debian 3.0 r3 and have run into an interesting
issue with my NFS mounts. On one of my debian systems (I have just done
an apt-get update/upgrade on all my systems) when copying or creating a
file on one of the NFS mounted direct
ognjen Bezanov wrote:
Hi all, while not technically debian related it has something to do with
linux.
I want to capture data from my /dev/dsp device but the devices defaults
are 8bit mono sound, i want to know how to set the samplerate and
mono/stereo from the command line, a google search showed m
Vadim wrote:
Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
That's my understanding as well, then, is there any other way I can
sort messages with cyrus?
Sure, filter them before they get to Cyrus. If you want to do all
decision
making with Sieve, make sure the filters add headers you can test
against.
So
John L Fjellstad wrote:
William Ballard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
I have an external USB 2.0 2.5" hard drive, shows up as /dev/sda, with
an ReiserFS partition. If I yank it with it mounted ReiserJS panics.
I have the fstab entry marked as sync, rw.
I think it might be because reiserfs is a jo
David Clymer wrote:
On Thu, 2004-10-28 at 05:49, Micheal Mukherji wrote:
My apologies if you feel its not a thing related to debian.
Is the 'maximum file size' a constraint of a particular file system
implementation or the constraint of operating system?
Both, I believe. For example, 32bit versions
Micha Feigin wrote:
Is it possible to change the root device on a running linux system?
Yes; use the pivot_root system call. I don't know of any command that
provides access to that, though. It is mainly used to switch from the
initrd to the normal root filesystem.
Ben.
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David Baron wrote:
Partitions, created by linux fdisk, seem to have errors (disabling
parted/qtparted, etc.) The table looks like this (I do not know whether it
made it this way--I only gave fdisk types and sizes, or other things caused
the errors. There were originally two fat32s plus one linux
David Berg wrote:
Need some help hammering out a tar/mkisofs command to backup my disks to
dvd. I'm looking to burn two root level directories (/home,/var and
/usr, /) to they're own dvd. Problem is I don't have room to build the
tarball or iso on the hard disk before I burn it. Using a command
I have a C++ program which requires g++ 3.4 to build due to parser bugs
in older versions of g++. I'm currently building on a development
machine running mostly woody with some packages from sarge, including
g++-3.4 of course. This requires version 2.3.2 of libc6 itself, and any
binaries I bu
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