Long Wind wrote:
Thank Geoff! with usb3 disk plugged to lenovo running buster
i see msg below, but i'm not sure if usb3 is used
May 31 10:21:18 debian kernel: [13385.174292] usb 5-6: new high-speed USB
device number 12 using ehci-pci
Definitely looks like usb 2, the ehci driver also points to
l0f...@tuta.io wrote:
$ apt policy linux-image-5.10.0-0.bpo.3-amd64
linux-image-5.10.0-0.bpo.3-amd64:
Installed: 5.10.13-1~bpo10+1
Candidate: 5.10.13-1~bpo10+1
Version table:
*** 5.10.13-1~bpo10+1 100
100 http://deb.debian.org/debian buster-backports/main amd64 Packages
Seeds Notoneofmy wrote:
Well, as the subject suggests, I'm a bit fed up with the logic behind
how installed programs are sorted out in the Applications menu.
The need to go hunt down an installed application seems yester century.
I just installed Picard, and it does not show up in Sound and Vid
I've never had an Intel GPU but always had the impression they were pretty
solid, but my opinion is changing.
Note that kernel 5.5 may still have issues:
https://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=news_item&px=Linux-5.5-Intel-Missed-Graphics
Regards,
Geoff
Hi John,
The binary in the debian package was compiled without alsa support,
you've reminded me to file a bug for it.
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=888704
Regards,
Geoff
John Conover wrote:
Has anyone got Xoscope(1) on Debian 9 amd64 to work?
It looks as if it does not
Patrick Wiseman wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 3, 2010 at 6:49 PM, Patrick Wiseman wrote:
>> On Sat, Jan 30, 2010 at 8:40 AM, Patrick Wiseman wrote:
>>> Anyway, it's
>>> working now with the 190.53 driver (installed using the nvidia
>>> installer) and the 2.6.26 kernel, so I'm happy for now!
>> Since an xo
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
> Paul Cartwright wrote:
>> pardon me if this was already beat to death, but I was away last
>> week.. Today I booted into my new 2.6.25-2 kernel and I tried to run
>> my normal NVIDIA...-pkg1.run script. It complained about the XEN
>> kernel and failed. So
>
>
>
> I can
Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 07/11/08 12:26, Steve C. Lamb wrote:
>> On Fri, Jul 11, 2008 at 02:23:59PM -0300, Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
>>> I was able to add the button to the toolbar by customizing it. And there
>>> is that option in the Message menu. However, both the button and the
>>> menu en
Chuck Payne wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am trying to update a couple packages, I don't want to update
> everything and when I do like
>
> apt-get upgrade calmd
>
> I get a list of some 400 other pacakges that will be ugprade and I don't
> want that.
>
apt-get upgrade will upgrade all packages, try apt-
andy wrote:
> Geoff Reidy wrote:
>> Marko Randjelovic wrote:
>>
>>> andy wrote:
>>>
>>>> Thanks Geoff. I had also read that during the course of my earlier
>>>> research on this issue. But ...
>>>>
>>>> :~
Sven Arvidsson wrote:
> On Sat, 2007-01-06 at 02:02 +1100, Geoff Reidy wrote:
>> It's awful, if I just type in "/usr/bin" I get "/usr/src//bin" because
>> of it's autocompletion, so you have to type slowly and watch what it's
>> doing.
>
Marko Randjelovic wrote:
> andy wrote:
>> Thanks Geoff. I had also read that during the course of my earlier
>> research on this issue. But ...
>>
>> :~$ uname -r
>> 2.6.18-3-686
>>
>> Viola! 686 and still no 1GB mem recognised, only 3/4s (776400KB) of
>> it, as seen below:
>>
>> :~$ free
>>
Sven Arvidsson wrote:
> On Thu, 2007-01-04 at 07:26 -0500, Carl Fink wrote:
>> They're the standard GNOME dialogs, and you're absolutely right. They fall
>> into the Microsoft Error: cool-looking, terrible usability. But apparently
>> GNOME is immune to user comments.
>>
>> They are inferior (an
Douglas Tutty wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 05, 2007 at 10:42:45AM +, andy wrote:
>> Andrei & Andrew
>>
>> Thanks for the suggestion(s). I am presuming that there is a Debian-way
>> of compiling one's own kernel with the configs and bigmem image. Can
>> someone point me in the direction of some decen
B.Hoffmann wrote:
>
> Talking about b/w laser printer. As it's for personal use the highest
> page number per minute is not essential, and 4MB memory would probably
> be overkill.
> Important to me is 1.) usb connectivity these days and/or 2.) ethernet
> to connect to my router (D-link DI-604) for
Ron Johnson wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Nvidia GX 5200 (128MB RAM)
> xorg 7.0.22
> nvidia binary driver 1.0-8762
> linux-source-2.6.16 (home-rolled kernel)
>
>
> As the subject mentions, I get good speed in Planet Penguin, and
> also in Google Earth, and also in glxheads but glxgears in *slw*.
>
> Any
Rodney Gordon II wrote:
Recently I have built my own compilation of wine on Debian, three
different revisions (0.9.6 .7 and .8). All of these versions are
compiled correctly. I have noticed an odd problem with these builds of
wine, and the commercial cedega fork of wine on Debian.
My dilemma:
I
Simon wrote:
> Hi There,
>
> We have a one of our servers producing a "sensord: Sensor alarm" in the
> syslog. Its a dual athlon box and here is the output of #sensors:
>
> (Any idea of whats happening here? Im sure that there is no case sensor
>
> web1:/proc# sensors
> w83627hf-isa-0c00
> A
Ron Johnson wrote:
Unfortunately, I can't determine it's package using the usual tool:
$ dpkg -S /usr/bin/[
dpkg: /usr/bin/[ not found.
$ dpkg -S "/usr/bin/["
dpkg: /usr/bin/[ not found.
$ dpkg -S '/usr/bin/['
dpkg: /usr/bin/[ not found.
$ dpkg -S '/usr/bin/\['
coreutils
Ibrahim Mubarak wrote:
I worte just a sec ago a message about debian mirrors. Could it be that
the problem I am facing here is due to that one?
Anyone else getting this problem?
Thanks,
ib
The non-US packages are now part of main so those line in sources.list
are no longer required.
Geof
Jon Dowland wrote:
Geoff Reidy wrote:
It would take about 10 seconds to verify this!
modprobe tun
ifconfig tun0
Debian sid 2.6.11 kernel.
Is this too much to ask?
anubis:/home/jon# modprobe tun
anubis:/home/jon# ifconfig tun0
tun0: error fetching interface information: Device not found
Geoff Reidy wrote:
CoolFox wrote:
1) Load the right module for your ethernet device
2) ifconfig eth0
3) route add default netmask 0.0.0.0 gw (ip of your gateway)
if it is already done, try :
/etc/init.d/networking restart
tun is the right module, it creates an interface that e.g. a guest
CoolFox wrote:
1) Load the right module for your ethernet device
2) ifconfig eth0
3) route add default netmask 0.0.0.0 gw (ip of your gateway)
if it is already done, try :
/etc/init.d/networking restart
tun is the right module, it creates an interface that e.g. a guest OS on
qemu can use
Roberto C. Sanchez wrote:
Have you tried Google? It could be one of several things and there are
literally hundreds of mailing list and support forum posts encompassing
pretty much every version of the kernel on every distro out there. Try
that first.
-Roberto
I've tried google already of
Hi all,
I am running sid and since upgrading kernel-image-2.6.11-1-k7 from
version 2.6.11-3 to 2.6.11-5 I can't get a tun interface to work.
The tun module is loaded and the device is there:
crw-rw 1 root root 10, 200 2005-05-31 20:25 /dev/net/tun
but the interface won't come up:
# ifco
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