erdir for root. Thus, in first case
/home/Public/root/www/wiki and in the second case /home/Public/root/www will
be served to the user by Apache.
Is this correct behavior or i should file a bug?
(i use debian wheezy)
--
Dmitriy Matrosov
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On 09/17/12 13:05, Dmitriy Matrosov wrote:
[1]: Though, note, that (/var/lib/dpkg/status) file will be listed in
`apt-cache showpkg` output even for uninstalled packages, which config
files
still present. E.g. for status, like:
Status: deinstall ok config-files
Just want to add: if you
On 09/16/12 22:32, Sharon Kimble wrote:
> On 15 September 2012 19:45, Dmitriy Matrosov wrote:
>> On 09/15/12 21:38, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
>>>
>>> On Sb, 15 sep 12, 12:53:46, Ed Jabbour wrote:
>>>>
>>>> I'd like to remove packages gotten f
On 09/16/12 00:45, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Sb, 15 sep 12, 19:03:28, Hendrik Boom wrote:
On Sat, 15 Sep 2012 13:39:29 +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
I've solved this by having one grub in the MBR and installing each grub
in the corresponding first sector of the partition. Not recommended by
grub
On 09/15/12 22:52, Hendrik Boom wrote:
On Sat, 15 Sep 2012 13:40:16 +0400, Dmitriy Matrosov wrote:
On 09/15/12 00:42, Hendrik Boom wrote:
On Fri, 14 Sep 2012 23:25:03 +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Vi, 14 sep 12, 17:12:38, Hendrik Boom wrote:
Of course, after I've made my copy
On 09/15/12 18:23, lee wrote:
Can't we have a boot manager which is independent of the installed OSs?
Grub kinda does its own thing already, and if there was something like a
standardised API through which OSs could tell the boot manager how they
are to be booted, we would install the boot manag
On 09/15/12 21:38, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Sb, 15 sep 12, 12:53:46, Ed Jabbour wrote:
I'd like to remove packages gotten from deb-multimedia and replace
some from the Debian repos. However, removing them will also remove a
bunch of libs and kde progs. E.g., apt-get remove libavcodec53
yields:
On 09/15/12 00:42, Hendrik Boom wrote:
On Fri, 14 Sep 2012 23:25:03 +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Vi, 14 sep 12, 17:12:38, Hendrik Boom wrote:
Of course, after I've made my copy (with slight changes to /etc/fstab)
I have two nearly identical sets of partitions, so it may be tricky to
tell t
On 09/12/12 23:44, Kris Deugau wrote:
I already have this and it's been working well for quite a while:
dpkg-query --showformat '\${status}\t\${version}\n' -W $pkg
Unfortunately I've just discovered it fails when $pkg is a virtual
package, and I have no way to tell ahead of time if this is t
2011/11/24 lrhorer :
> Dmitriy Matrosov wrote:
>
>> 2011/11/24 lrhorer :
>>> OK, so here's the deal. I compiled and installed ncid on one of my
>>> Debian servers Everything seems to be working just fine. There's
>>> one small item, though. Whe
2011/11/24 Arno Schuring :
> lrhorer (lrho...@satx.rr.com on 2011-11-24 03:38 -0600):
>> OK, so here's the deal. I compiled and installed ncid on one of my
>> Debian servers Everything seems to be working just fine. There's
>> one small item, though. When I took the init scripts and ran
>> upda
2011/11/24 lrhorer :
> OK, so here's the deal. I compiled and installed ncid on one of my
> Debian servers Everything seems to be working just fine. There's one
> small item, though. When I took the init scripts and ran update-rc.d,
> it gave me a warning saying "stop runlevel arguments (0 1 6)
2011/11/24 Victor Nitu :
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> <..>
>
> How can I start the dhcp server *after* booting the system, to avoid
> manual interaction? Tried a (re) update-rc.d , putting it in rc.local,
> making a separate script, any more ideas?
>
>
> TIA,
>
> Victor
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