leep.
They wouldn't need to because it looks like it's shipped with the main
network-manage package which contains various files with 'plugin' in
their name, including libnm-settings-plugin-ifupdown.so.
As we've seen from the OPs latest reply, the plugin is configured to
not manage interfaces.
--
Tixy
;Unhandled', not for the address. The address is probably determined
> at runtime and not hardcoded.
I sure those hex values aren't 'addresses' but the ID's for the secure
monitor calls Paul already identified.
Looking at the Linux sources I found the header for constructing these
monitor calls: include/linux/arm-smccc.h
So it might be worth looking at the files that include that. There are
various drivers for firmware, and a watchdog driver amongst other
things... drivers/watchdog/arm_smc_wdt.c
--
Tixy
terface.
I also have a more vague memory that you could put config into
/etc/network/interfaces then in some circumstance NetworkManager would
not try and manage that interface, and in others it would take over.
(Perhaps selected by allow hotplug option in the ifupdown config?)
--
Tixy
hen the original batteries got
rather feeble. (After 7 years).
I've now stopped using it though because of the cost of the electricity
it uses. It uses 18W when just sitting there ready for action, which
worked out at 40GBP a year!
--
Tixy
ith the latest Debian 6.1 kernel if you don't
explicitly want the 6.5 one from backports.
[1] https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1057969
--
Tixy
On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 18:51 +, Tixy wrote:
> > On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 18:16 +, Tixy wrote:
> > > > On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 12:06 -0600, John Hasler wrote:
> > > > > > Tixy writes:
> > > > > > > > Where could your machine
On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 18:16 +, Tixy wrote:
> On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 12:06 -0600, John Hasler wrote:
> > Tixy writes:
> > > Where could your machine be getting this IP address from? It's the
> > > same IP address shown in your output when you
On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 12:06 -0600, John Hasler wrote:
> Tixy writes:
> > Where could your machine be getting this IP address from? It's the
> > same IP address shown in your output when you used the incorrect
> > address 'ftp.security.debian.org' and for m
I typed the above line exactly. apt-get update searches for
> security.debian.org:80 [57.128.81.193] and times out, no connection
Where could your machine be getting this IP address from?
It's the same IP address shown in your output when you used the
incorrect address 'ftp.security.debian.org' and for me that doesn't
resolve to any IP address.
--
Tixy
On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 14:16 +0100, Ralph Aichinger wrote:
> On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 12:51 +0000, Tixy wrote:
> >
> > I have the same options in the forward chain except that I haven't
> > qualified them with an interface name. Didn't occur to me that I
> > w
tables-nft-seems-to-take-no-effect-in-nftables
tcp flags syn tcp option maxseg size set rt mtu
# connections from the internal net to the internet or to other
# internal nets are allowed
iifname $DEV_PRIVATE accept
# the rest is dropped by the above policy
}
--
Tixy
s and any argument at the end applies to the last option letter.
$echo hello|cut -zb2-5
ello$
(the 'z' option says use NUL byte for line terminator so in this case
it didn't output the newline and my '$' command prompt got printed
straight after the 'ello'.
--
Tixy
t;
> If I could access it, I could display the file. If there is no file,
> then these directory entries shouldn't exist.
Filesystem directories entries hold more than file and directory
objects. As well as symbolic links, there's named FIFOs, named sockets,
and devices.
E.g.
$ mkfifo a-fifo
$ nc -lkU a-socket&
$ ln -T target -s a-link
$ ls -l a-*
prw-r--r-- 1 tixy tixy 0 Jan 17 12:07 a-fifo
lrwxrwxrwx 1 tixy tixy 6 Jan 17 12:08 a-link -> target
srwxr-xr-x 1 tixy tixy 0 Jan 17 12:07 a-socket
--
Tixy
o transfer bytes
to/from a serial port on another computer.
--
Tixy
nreadable (pending) sectors
> > Jan 02 15:07:39 tiassa smartd[740]: Device: /dev/sda [SAT], 1 Currently
> > unreadable (pending) sectors
>
> These are logged at suspiciously even times, like something is
> looking at the disk every 30 minutes exactly.
Perhaps 'smartd' the "SMART Disk Monitoring Daemon" ;-)
--
Tixy
That might
explain why it didn't play nicely with your Debian desktop and wants to
update itself to new versions. (Non-ESR versions don't get security
updates so I assume whoever built the software you installed wanted
users to keep up-to-date and included a mechanism to ensure that.)
--
Tixy
On Sun, 2023-12-24 at 23:05 +, Albretch Mueller wrote:
[...]
> Why would %S be in the range second (00..60), instead of (00..59)?:
To support leap seconds [1].
[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leap_second
--
Tixy
On Fri, 2023-12-22 at 12:15 -0500, Pocket wrote:
> This is a test of the emergency broadcast system
Please stop spamming the 1000 or so people subscribed to this list.
--
Tixy
have already dropped support
> for i386. amd64 would be the more future-proof choice.
Just announced today [1] it looks like Debian will drop i386 installs
for the next release.
[1] https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel-announce/2023/12/msg3.html
--
Tixy
pened a few years ago to me when an update broke
kernels running under the Xen hypervisor, which the VPS running my
email was.
--
Tixy
On Sat, 2023-11-25 at 13:49 +, Tixy wrote:
> On Sat, 2023-11-25 at 11:46 +, Tim Woodall wrote:
> > OK. This is weird! Something is joining those two lines.
>
> Not at this end it isn't. For me, all 3 of your diffs look the same on
> screen and are binary the same a
treating it as being in quoted-printable encoding?
Though looking at the RFC for that, it looks like deleting the trailing
space should have caused the problem (by turning it into a soft line
break) not fixed it. So it's perhaps some other quirk.
--
Tixy
a message making that point several years ago,
I'm sure I've mentioned that here before. I did it in my last job as my
employer used Google for mail, so I just forwarded everything to an
email account on my email server at home.
--
Tixy
and I've wasted quite a few hours after not
noticing it's auto-mounting the disk I'm copying too and so trashing my
clone. (I find out the copy is bad when doing a binary compare after
the multi-hour copying is done.)
--
Tixy
t a kill list and then if my
script returns 'true' I have evolution set to delete them.
--
Tixy
On Thu, 2023-11-16 at 14:04 -0600, David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 16 Nov 2023 at 13:02:28 (+0100), Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> > On 2023-11-15 13:54:51 -0600, David Wright wrote:
> > > On Wed 15 Nov 2023 at 20:01:20 (+0100), Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> > > > On 2023-11
s dropped, assuming it isn't
dropped for some major region, like broken compilers etc.
--
Tixy
they're
> > still
> > releasing for it.)
>
> If these can run the `armhf` port you should be fine for a few
> more years. For `armel` the writing is on the wall, tho.
They're armel. ARMv5 Thumb mode only.
--
Tixy
se, but so far they're still
releasing for it.)
--
Tixy
truct, he opined.
>
> But the bookworm-backports kernel is even newer.
> So why not this one?
Because it's a different package? bookworm-backports has a linux-6.5
package which is not a newer version of the linux-6.1 package it's
totally separate as far as the packaging system is concerned.
--
Tixy
elected by
the preempt= command-line parameter. PREEMPT_DYNAMIC allows
distributors to ship a single kernel while letting users pick the
preemption mode that works best for their workload.
So if you specificity need a real-time kernel this won't give it to
you.
[1] https://lwn.net/Articles/944686/
--
Tixy
a why. To me it seemed as if /etc/nftables.conf file
> was not executed (I have rebooted many times so this file should run).
[...]
Did you enable the nftables service? To do that, use:
# systemctl enable nftables.service
and to see status of the service
# systemctl status nftables.service
--
Tixy
armour' package? I remember doing this in years
past when it first started getting installed and putting noise on boot
screen and in logs.
--
Tixy
i:00/:00:02.0/drm/card0/card0-LVDS-1/intel_backlight/brightness
The make file executable
chmod a+x /etc/rc.local
UPDATE: rc.local now needs a shebang at the top, i.e. #!/bin/sh
1. Create /home/tixy/bin/bl- to reduce brightness in steps
#!/bin/bash
device="/sy
n't want why don't you change the script, or just uninstall
Network Manager?
--
tixy
ould either have to change all of
> your scripts to use s-nail instead of mailx, or
[...]
That brings back memories. I did that and switched to using s-nail by
name for scripts that send me status and backup report emails with
filtered logs as attachments.
--
Tixy
project?)
I still use s-nail on all my machines.
--
Tixy
On Tue, 2023-10-10 at 17:11 +0200, Anders Andersson wrote:
> This is a bit crazy. It can't be a "fresh install" if you have the
> amd64 kernel trying to configure the closed firmware for a raspberry
> pi.
As Махно pointed out in another reply [1], this does really seem to be
the case. If you follo
g. ssh) to give BACKUP access. If PRODUCTION is
something like a laptop that you use when not at home, then you may not
want to have said service exposing itself on strange wifi networks.
--
Tixy
ot; implying the opposite may true
sometimes.
[1]
https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux_for_real_time/7/html/reference_guide/chap-timestamping
--
Tixy
o a tmpfs (it has to, at this
> point). If the machine locks up, the log is lost...
Logs will appear on the screen so long as you don't have the 'quiet'
parameter on the Linux commandline.
--
Tixy
On Sat, 2023-08-26 at 00:55 -0400, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> I'm getting the
> message, "No Popularity contest entry for kde-full" (and friends). I
> use kde-full and I have popularity contest enabled, so there should be
> at least one entry.
Perhaps because they're metapackages?
--
Tixy
On Fri, 2023-08-25 at 19:47 +0200, john doe wrote:
> On 8/25/23 13:44, Tixy wrote:
> > On Fri, 2023-08-25 at 10:47 +0200, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > > Yes, I think a bare remote is the way to go in this context
> >
> > You can make a repo bare by editing it&
tion. I do this after copying the .git directory to my remote server
when setting up a new repo.
Google returns a Stack Overflow answer [1] that says you can do the
same with:
git config --bool core.bare true
[1]
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2199897/how-to-convert-a-normal-git-repository-to-a-bare-one
--
Tixy
ult they will only do a fast-
forward operation. There are commandline options and config setups to
change this.
--
Tixy
50096
[2] https://www.virtualbox.org/ticket/21796
--
Tixy
he package tracker shows it's history,
looks like one of the libraries it depends on isn't present in the
correct version.
--
Tixy
On Wed, 2023-07-19 at 01:24 +0200, Stefan Schumacher wrote:
> I noticed that pulseaudio is not part of Debian Bookworm anymore.
Yes it is [1] and it's still running on my machine after upgrading to
Bookworm. (I run the LXDE desktop.)
[1] https://packages.debian.org/bookworm/pulseaudio
--
Tixy
Hmmm, perhaps I did something else to cause cryptsetup-initramfs to be
removed?
Either way, it seems safe advice to other people with an encrypted root
partition to mark the package as manually installed to help prevent
issues.
--
Tixy
On Sun, 2023-06-11 at 15:24 -0400, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> On Sun, Jun 11, 2023 at 2:12 AM Tixy wrote:
> >
> > On Sat, 2023-06-10 at 23:55 -0400, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> > > Debian's wiki says to use apt-get:
> > > https://wiki.debian.org/DebianUpgrade. Als
tings, have done since I googled how to do this a
few releases ago.
> Any hints what to test or where to search for a solution?
After changing lvm.conf did you rebuild initramfs and reboot?
--
Tixy
.
Or maybe the wiki page should be deleted, or just say go RTFM, i.e.
read the release notes for the release you want to upgrade to.
--
Tixy
On Thu, 2023-05-04 at 20:09 +0200, zithro wrote:
>
> A recent email from the Debian security team confirms this (Advisory
> DSA-5396-2) :
>
> "The webkit2gtk update released as 5396-1 introduced a compatibility
> problem that caused Evolution to display e-mail incorrectly. Evolution
> has been u
-4.0
> > libjavascriptcoregtk-4.0-18
> > libwebkit2gtk-4.0-37
>
> Ah, thank you very much for that information. In the meanwhile, I
> found
> that there is already a bug report available at Debian about that.
That's good, because I too can only read email by hitting Ctrl-U to
view the source.
--
Tixy
e-liner to get a list of
installed packages and remove them all. Of course, this would break at
some point after removing a package with executable programs used by
package scripts. ;-)
--
Tixy
possibilities that spring to mind is that
this is and error, a noop, or means 'every package'. The latter you be
real bad, the other two now a useful suggestion to people. Of course,
it could be special cased to mean 'purge everything not installed',
which count be useful, but the man page doesn't say that.
--
Tixy
18-amd64).
Because this issue seemed familiar I looked at my bash command history
and that has me cd'ing into that directory and doing a du command there
and then deleting stuff. So I guess I've also resorted to manually
cleaning it up in the past.
--
Tixy
offline use' configured or
actually look at the remote email folders again it will re-download
them.
--
Tixy
close
Evolution. (I've always hated the idea of Wastebaskets, if I delete
something I want it deleted, not just hidden and taking up space).
--
Tixy
re using Google's Gmail where 'folders' aren't really folders, just
tags applied in a database. Who knows how it's going to behave when
they Google maps that onto the IMAP protocol.
--
Tixy
ard all mail to
proper IMAP sever (Dovecot) run by me and used that for work email.
--
Tixy
t;bookworm" to "testing", will it
> do that, and (other than the instabilities of testing) is there any
> liability to it?
Testing doesn't get explicit security support so there's no point in
having 'testing-security' lines in sources.list (I guess it'll give an
error anyway).
--
Tixy
but no luck yet in my searches.
I installed 'thermald' to stop my CPUs hitting the max junction
temperature and hard resetting after a few minutes. I was quite
surprised that the standard kernel doesn't actually have thermal
protection which throttles CPU clocks and requires an external
userspace program to do this.
--
Tixy
fix a broken
email server. For most people, email service is pretty critical so you
will likely want a second fallback email server somewhere else. This is
what I do, I used to have a VPS for this but to save money I recently
moved to an email hosting service that supports receiving emails for
other domains.
--
Tixy
ected.
And it broke threading.
--
Tixy
I accidentally deleted a sentence in my last reply, here's the
corrected version...
On Tue, 2023-03-07 at 15:38 +0800, Ken Young wrote:
> Hello
>
> For debian 11, service is just a wrapper to systemctl, is it right?
It's a 217 line shell script and looking at it it checks for which init
system i
be a service that
# has one or more .socket files, we also stop the .socket units.
# Users who need more control will use systemctl directly.
Personally, I still use 'service' through habit and won't change until
it doesn't do what I expect.
--
Tixy
On Tue, 2023-02-28 at 14:52 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 28, 2023 at 06:32:27PM +0000, Tixy wrote:
> > On Tue, 2023-02-28 at 13:16 -0500, Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
> > [...]
> > > All I did was modify /etc/apt/sources.list from Bullseye to Bookworm, then
&g
e. If you looked at the release notes [1] it suggests
# apt upgrade --without-new-pkgs
# apt full-upgrade
Then lists some possible issues and there remedy.
[1]
https://www.debian.org/releases/testing/amd64/release-notes/ch-upgrading.en.html#minimal-upgrade
--
Tixy
gt; new name for eth0
Or eno for ethernet too. My ethernet started out as eno2 when I
did the initial install and this changed to eno1 when I disabled the
onboard wireless in the bios.
--
Tixy
lease it fraught with
problems. As is oft pointed out here, see...
https://wiki.debian.org/DontBreakDebian
--
Tixy
On Sat, 2023-02-18 at 07:09 +, piorunz wrote:
> On 18/02/2023 06:17, Tom wrote:
>
>
> > It also has 2 drives one is chip and the other spins.
>
> What?
>
I'm guessing that's one SSD and one spinning magnetic media hard drive.
--
Tixy
new
section 'non-free-firmware'. See...
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2023/01/msg00706.html
--
Tixy
ore starting
linux, and linux itself just uses whatever mode the hardware is set to.
--
Tixy
amfs.conf to put it back to what seems
to be the default 'MODULES=most' rather than 'MODULES=dep'.
--
Tixy
which says it's been fixed in sid. And the
PTS shows it was fixed yesterday in old-stable and sid. But no sign I
can see that anything is being done for stable (Bullseye) which is what
Sijmen asked about. (I wouldn't know where to look for stable security
update activity).
--
Tixy
On Wed, 2023-01-25 at 08:06 +, Tixy wrote:
> My final idea: have you used a wireless keyboard or mouse?
or wireless headphones.
or mouse? (I'm
clutching at straws here, as I don't think they use the bluetooth
standard). I have wireless devices on one of my machines and the
receiver for the PC is a tiny USB device that only sticks out about 5mm
from the case, just wondered if you have such a thing plugged in and
overlooked.
--
Tixy
talled.
[1]
https://tracker.debian.org/news/1406376/accepted-linux-614-1-source-into-unstable/
--
Tixy
uspend device, error -110
>
What would be useful is the log of the boot before that, where usb 1-5
worked, to see log messages for 'usb 1-5' to find out what it is.
--
Tixy
on then that would be a smoking gun,
and you could prove it by booting the earlier kernel or reverting
firmware.
--
Tixy
ng using an older kernel, presumably
there is one still installed as Debian doesn't automatically uninstall
kernels.
Also, looking at old kernel logs from back when it was working would be
useful (/var/log/kernel.N.gz where N if the biggest number there is).
Hopefully that will show what device is on usb 1-5 (though I believe
port numbers may change over time and depend on what's plugged in).
--
Tixy
On Fri, 2023-01-20 at 14:56 +0200, Anssi Saari wrote:
> Tixy writes:
>
> > Surely it's also straightforward to just copy the data in the partition
> > then resize the filesystem...
> >
> > cp /dev/sdX1 /dev/sdY1
> > resize2fs /dev/sdY1
>
> Sure
On Thu, 2023-01-19 at 19:56 +, Tixy wrote:
>
> Surely it's also straightforward to just copy the data in the partition
> then resize the filesystem...
>
> cp /dev/sdX1 /dev/sdY1
> resize2fs /dev/sdY1
>
> Assuming you've already partitioned the target
.
Surely it's also straightforward to just copy the data in the partition
then resize the filesystem...
cp /dev/sdX1 /dev/sdY1
resize2fs /dev/sdY1
Assuming you've already partitioned the target disk /dev/sdY to how you
want it. (And assuming the filesystem is ext2..ext4)
--
Tixy
eb, e.g. Redhat's site, Arch
wiki etc.
--
Tixy
Kindle file
> out of Amazon's greedy hands, so I can point Calibre at it?
I doubt that's possible because I assume these things are protected
with DRM to stop people from copying them, or escaping the clutches of
Big Corp who want to monitor what you do in order to sell you more
stuff.
[1] https://www.theregister.com/2009/07/18/amazon_removes_1984_from_kindle/
--
Tixy
#x27;m sure.
Yep, I remembered correctly...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/COM_file
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DOS_MZ_executable
And there seems to be a newer format used when Windows was
introduced...
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Executable
--
Tixy
On Tue, 2022-12-27 at 13:47 +, Tim Woodall wrote:
> On Tue, 27 Dec 2022, Tixy wrote:
>
> > On Mon, 2022-12-26 at 21:37 +, Tim Woodall wrote:
> > > >
> > > But now I'm concerned about disks in a raid-1. Everything gets written
> > > when th
On Tue, 2022-12-27 at 11:31 +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> Tixy (12022-12-27):
> > The card could know what blocks of flash have been written to, it's the
> > thing that has done the writing.
>
> Indeed. And as I said already, unless the card is pathologically
> un
On Mon, 2022-12-26 at 21:26 +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> Tixy (12022-12-26):
> > He didn't mention filesystems.
> >
> > The controller in the card would surely know what flash blocks contain
> > data, so writing the whole card first would reserve those block
On Mon, 2022-12-26 at 21:37 +, Tim Woodall wrote:
> >
> But now I'm concerned about disks in a raid-1. Everything gets written
> when the raid rebuilds.
>
> I've found fstrim - but that only seems to be for filesystems.
>
> How do I tell the card that the free space in the VG really is free?
you only ever used the first few GB (say by putting a
filesystem on a partition a fraction the size of the card). Then
there's lots of unused flash blocks that can be cycled through by any
ware levelling algorithm the card implements.
--
Tixy
the LAN need some NAS services.
>
It won't be 'immediate' as it takes time for the motor to get a disk
spinning at the correct speed, about 3 seconds for my 3 inch drives.
--
Tixy
27;) is the bleeding edge in-development
distribution and 'experimental' doesn't contain a full distribution,
it's just a place for developers to distribute experimental packages.
--
Tixy
ue that hasn't got anything to
> do with these services but I have no idea what it might be.
The above, and presumably 'remote CUPS printers' in the earlier post,
involve the network and related services like DNS or DHCP.
--
Tixy
age other than
> causing
> delays.
>
If you use Google to search for mei_me you'll lots o similar reports
going back a decade, e.g. https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=168403
These seem to suggest blacklisting the module or disabling Management
Engine Interface in the BIOS.
--
Tixy
On Sat, 2022-11-12 at 19:01 +1000, David wrote:
> What are you running?
> Stable, Testing, Unstable?
The subject line if prefixed with 'sid'. So Unstable I presume.
--
Tixy
ttps://systemd.io/HOME_DIRECTORY/
So might be worth running the 'homectl' command to see if it exists, it
doesn't on my the Debian 11 install. So like I said, probably a red
herring.
--
Tixy
On Thu, 2022-10-20 at 17:41 +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 17/10/2022 22:50, Tixy wrote:
> > # Set spindown time for disk
> > if NAS1=`findmnt -n -o SOURCE /nas1/main`; then /sbin/hdparm -S120
> > $NAS1; fi
> >
> >
> >
> >
> &g
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