> On 19 Nov 2018, at 16:59, Reco wrote:
>
> LVM requires certain kernel modules and hooks to be present in
> initramfs.
> If your current installation lacks them, I suggest you to install lvm2
> before the backup to save yourself the hassle of regenerating initramfs
> after the restore.
Unfort
Another option would be:
(1) Install the system as it was (i.e. with physical partitions);
(2) Restore the backed up configuration/files.
(3) Move to LVM.
How cumbersome would be point 3?
> On 19 Nov 2018, at 12:35, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
>
> On Mon, Nov 19, 2018 at 07:01:07AM +0100, solitone wrote:
>> When I was playing with my disk's partition table I messed it up and
>> lost everything. It was a dual boot system with macOS and Debian.
>>
&
Hi,
When I was playing with my disk's partition table I messed it up and lost
everything. It was a dual boot system with macOS and Debian.
Thanks to the back2l utility I have a full backup of Debian. Now I would
reinstall it and recover all the backed up files. However, I didn’t use LVM and
no
On 17/11/2018 16:50, Stefan Monnier wrote:
Really? I thought his old drive was SATA (hence his worries that his
new drive would need new drivers).
No, the old original drive is PCIe 3.0 x4 AHCI. The new one is PCIe 3.0
x4 NVMe.
On 17 Nov 2018, at 16:06, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> Didn't use LVM? Too bad: that means there's a risk your new dirve and
> partitions will get new identifiers so your fstab may need to be adjusted.
Ehm.. no.. I didn’t!
> macOS doesn't touch EFI, AFAIK, so don't expect the Time Machine to
> touch
On 16/11/2018 14:46, Stefan Monnier wrote:
I would expect the clone to work just fine. I'd expect your initrd
contains drivers for both SATA and NVMe anyway.
OK. Now that I know that initrd does contain NVMe drivers, I would ask
whether my strategy for cloning is sensible.
Firstly, here's m
On 16/11/2018 14:46, Stefan Monnier wrote:
I would expect the clone to work just fine. I'd expect your initrd
contains drivers for both SATA and NVMe anyway.
But it's easy to check:
zcat /boot/initrd.img- | cpio -vt | grep nvm
will show you the relevant files in the your initrd.
You shou
Another issue I have is--how to migrate my debian system from the old
original SSD to the new larger SSD?
As for macOS [1], it should be easy. There is a macOS application called
Time Machine that allows to backup macOS from the old SSD and to restore
it to the new SSD. This would work with a
On 15/11/2018 21:48, deloptes wrote:
Check first if someone has used it on your type
of hardware and what is the feedback - I assume you are not the first. NVMe
is working fine - debian provide the kernel which provides the support and
I have seen M.2 working just fine
Late 2016 - Mid 2017 MacB
On 15/11/2018 21:01, deloptes wrote:
I also do not think you have to stick to this specific
drive (JetDrive 850) - perhaps macOS certified, but from linux perspective
it would make no difference.
The thing is the form factor, which unfortunately is proprietary [1].
The connector resembles the
Hi, I've got a compatibility question regarding SSDs.
I run debian 9.6 on a MacBookPro12,1 (Early 2015, 13"). I'm thinking of
upgrading the stock 128 GB SSD [1]. Specifically, I'm considering the
Trascend JetDrive 850 [2].
The original SSD uses a PCIe 3.0 x4 interface and the AHCI protocol.
On 27/03/18 19:02, Don Armstrong wrote:
> You can use either. `shutdown -h now` on a machine with systemd actually
> invokes systemctl with the equivalent of systemctl poweroff
Yes, I've checked again and now 'systemctl poweroff' does power off the
machine. No idea on what changed.
What's the current best practice to shut down the system? In the old
days I used to:
# shutdown - h now
but then I read of the systemd way:
# systemctl poweroff
However, with the latter the system does shut down, although the machine
does not power off (I have to physically press the off button).
On 16/03/18 10:34, Abdullah Ramazanoglu wrote:
> On Fri, 16 Mar 2018 10:20:42 +0100
> solitone wrote:
>
>> It was a fresh install. May it depend on the fact that I used an
>> outdated installer?
>
> Possibly. I had installed stretch + xfce from scratch and got n-m
>
On 16/03/18 08:27, Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote:
> Did you upgrade or was this a fresh install?
>
> task-xfce-desktop recommends network-manager-gnome (and thus
> network-manager) on sid and stretch:
> https://packages.debian.org/sid/task-xfce-desktop
It was a fresh install. May it depend on the fact
Just installed scratch with xfce4 on an oldish machine, downloading all
the needed packages through my wifi adapter.
On first boot wifi is down, and there is no application I can use to
choose and connect to my wifi access point.
I realize that xfce's own Airconfig has never lifted off and is
cur
On 14/01/18 20:08, Brian wrote:
> don't you think worth the effort?
Yes, I do. And I've reinstalled apparmor, and will try intrigeri's solution.
On 12/01/18 21:37, Brian wrote:
> Do you have a plan to inform the AppArmor team of your detailed findings?
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=887163
Apparently it's a well known issue.
Cheers
On 13/01/18 20:51, Brian wrote:
>> Do you have a plan to inform the AppArmor team of your detailed findings?
>
> Thought not.
>
> Pointing the finger at a 3+ year old post on another OS is easier than
> engaging in a detailed bug report which involves time and effort. And
> people wonder why bugs
On 30/11/17 08:48, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
> On 30.11.2017 10:45, solitone wrote:
>> Hi, since a few days, hyperlink no longer works in my Thunderbird.
>> When I click a hyperlink in a message, Chromium (my system's default
>> web browser) should open and displ
On 04/12/17 12:49, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> On Fri, Dec 01, 2017 at 03:30:50PM +0100, solitone wrote:
>> On 01/12/17 15:22, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
>>> AppArmor is not enabled in current
>>> stable, so you should only hit this bug if you are using stable's
>>
On 24/12/17 11:24, Jerome BENOIT wrote:
> I read that Cinnamon and MATE, both former clones of GNOME[2], have HiDPI in
> mind:
> is there any other possibility ?
I use KDE's Plasma, which supports HiDPI pretty well.
On 01/12/17 22:59, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
On 01.12.2017 22:19, Michael Biebl wrote:
I think it might be useful to open a (wishlist) bug report against the
linux package to not add the recommends when building for stretch-backports
Isn't AppArmor required in buster and also required in s
y, but was installed with
the latest kernel update from stretch backports. I think it was
installed because of that backported kernel version:
Start-Date: 2017-11-26 06:57:11
Commandline: apt upgrade
Requested-By: solitone (1000)
Install: libapparmor-perl:amd64 (2.11.0-3, automatic), apparmor:amd64
On 30/11/17 08:48, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
I had this problem too, and yes AppArmor is the reason.
Yes, I had a look at logs and I can confirm that apparmor is indeed the
culprit:
---
~$ sudo journalctl -kaf --no-hostn
Hi, since a few days, hyperlink no longer works in my Thunderbird. When
I click a hyperlink in a message, Chromium (my system's default web
browser) should open and display the link. This has been working fine
for long, but now it no longer happens.
I checked everything that's pointed out in a
On 16/10/17 17:43, tv.deb...@googlemail.com wrote:
package "testdisk"
Testdisk worked beautifully well for me
This is serious hacking :^)
On 30/09/17 13:04, Reco wrote:
the next thing I have to suspect is that your backup misses
/dev directory (possibly /proc and /sys). The contents for those are
irrelevant. You simply do not have /dev, /proc, /sys in your root
filesystem.
No, I don't, you're perfectl
On 28/09/17 08:58, Reco wrote:
It's initrd that first tries to mount tmpfs filesystems on /root (and
fails), and only *then* mounts your root filesystem to /root (with the
intention to switch to it as /).
Is the stock initrd supposed to work like this? When I boot my
production system, I end u
On 27/09/17 14:01, solitone wrote:
Although mkfs had warned me, I mistakenly formatted the entire file,
like this:
$ sudo mkfs.ext4 restore.img
Now I've redone it the right way, using a loop device, and I'll see how
it goes.
It's a struggle! Now that I partitioned the imag
On 27/09/17 08:56, Reco wrote:
I'm curious to know how you'd achieve this.
Although mkfs had warned me, I mistakenly formatted the entire file,
like this:
$ sudo mkfs.ext4 restore.img
Now I've redone it the right way, using a loop device, and I'll see how
it goes.
Thank you!
On 26/09/17 17:31, Reco wrote:
On 26/09/17 13:01, solitone wrote:
It's strange, since it finds /dev/sda, i.e. the entire disk:
=
[ 6.438693] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] 188743680 512-byte logical blocks:
(96.6 GB/90.0 GiB)
[ 6.469182] s
On 26/09/17 17:31, Reco wrote:
On Tue, Sep 26, 2017 at 01:12:52PM +0200, solitone wrote:
However now it fails
because it tries to mount /dev and /run on /root/dev and /root/run, rather
than simply /dev and /run:
=
[...]
Gave up waiting
On 26/09/17 13:01, solitone wrote:
It's strange, since it finds /dev/sda, i.e. the entire disk:
=
[ 6.438693] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] 188743680 512-byte logical blocks:
(96.6 GB/90.0 GiB)
[ 6.469182] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] Write Prote
ruser. Watch out for permissions.
GNU Parted 3.2
Using /media/solitone/Maxtor/vmimages/alan_restore.img
Welcome to GNU Parted! Type 'help' to view a list of commands.
(parted) p
Model: (file)
Disk /media/solitone/Maxtor/vmimages/alan_restore.img: 96.6GB
Sector size (logical/physical): 512B
On 24/09/17 11:51, Reco wrote:
Cheat it then and run QEMU like this (I don't know what's your root
filesystem is called, you may need to replace sda2 with something else):
qemu-system-x86_64 -hda \
-kernel \
-initrd \
-append "root=/dev/sda2 ro init=/bin/bash"
Hi Rec
On 24/09/17 11:51, Reco wrote:
ACLs are easy. Even tar(1) knows them.
It's things like these that give you headache:
$ /sbin/getcap /bin/ping
/bin/ping = cap_net_raw+ep
# lsattr /etc/resolv.conf
i-e /etc/resolv.conf
# getfattr -d /var/log/messages
# file: var/log/messages
user.
, I've done all these steps.
Fix extended file attributes, capability labels, SELinux labels if any
etc. By hand, that is.
This is hard, since I'm unaware of what files have extended attributes.
For instance, I've just found out that /media/solitone has an ACL, but I
would need
On 22/09/17 08:08, Reco wrote:
Execute this on your source system.
grep MODULES /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf
If it says MODULES=most then you're in luck as it means your initrd
contains all kernel modules for all kinds of hardware.
And restoring from backup into QEMU-KVM means you only n
It's time to test my backups. Apart from user files, I also back up
system files, except for the following directories that are excluded:
/dev, /lost+found, /media, /mnt, /proc, /run, /sys, /tmp.
I would try and restore them to a virtual machine (KVM). Would it be
possible? Is there a way to c
I'll unlock the root account then.
When I boot in rescue mode, I get this message:
Cannot open access to console, the root account is locked. See
sulogin(8) man page for more details
When I press Enter to continue, it continues bootup in normal graphical
mode.
Would it be wiser to unlock the root account, so that I can go in
On 19/09/17 22:01, deloptes wrote:
what if you do
cd .../brcm/
sudo ln -s brcmfmac43602-pcie.bin brcmfmac43602-pcie.txt
On reboot I had a kernel panic. After removing that link everything
works again. These are the messages I got:
=
On 19/09/17 19:02, solitone wrote:
what about intel-microcode that I've just
installed? Can I expect some performance related benefit?
I gather that microcode updates are usually issued to fix errata in the
CPU's design [1], and without the intel-microcode package installed an
old
On 19/09/17 14:11, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Sep 19, 2017 at 07:54:32AM +0200, solitone wrote:
On 18/09/17 07:11, Jimmy Johnson wrote:
The packages you need to install are firmware-linux* and intel-microcode.
Would firmware-linux-nonfree bring any advantage as far as performance is
On 18/09/17 07:11, Jimmy Johnson wrote:
The packages you need to install are firmware-linux* and intel-microcode.
Would firmware-linux-nonfree bring any advantage as far as performance
is concerned? I don't have it installed, and everything works fine on my
machine, but I wonder whether I sho
On Sunday, 3 September 2017 21:33:55 CEST Dejan Jocic wrote:
> On 03-09-17, solitone wrote:
> > But is there anything that can do code autocomplation, for C++ or Java for
> > instance? Like getting the list of methods available for an object, when
> > typing a dot, as a
On Saturday, 2 September 2017 15:01:37 CEST The Wanderer wrote:
> I'm not sure what you would qualify as a "programming editor", but what
> I use to write code (when nano won't do) is geany, which is a graphical
> syntax-highlighting editor with various other features useful to a
> programmer.
But
On Friday, 25 August 2017 01:22:09 CEST Gene Heskett wrote:
> Works fine ~ for EN, and utf8 here.
On a MacBookPro 12,1 with italian keyboard works fine as well
~ (right-alt + ì)
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On Thursday, 24 August 2017 02:37:41 CEST kamaraju kusumanchi wrote:
> gdm3 is the most the popular display manager with lightdm, sddm trailing
> behind.
I choose kde desktop during installation, and sddm whas installed.
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On Saturday, 29 July 2017 18:40:58 CEST solitone wrote:
> From what I gather, the patch was included in kernel version 4.8-rc2:
>
> $ git describe bafb2f7d4755bf1571bd5e9a03b97f3fc4fe69ae
> v4.8-rc2-641-gbafb2f7d4755
>
> The kernel shipped with Stretch is version 4.9.30:
>
On Tuesday, 1 August 2017 14:15:52 CEST solitone wrote:
> Let's consider a practical example, the history of patch
> "drm/i915/execlists: Reset RING registers upon resume". This patch was
> committed 641 commits after version 4.8-rc2:
>
> $ git describe bafb2f7d47
Hi, please help me understand some general practices involved in kernel
development.
Specifically, I'm interested in how patches are included or reverted in
different kernel
versions.
Let's consider a practical example, the history of patch "drm/i915/execlists:
Reset RING
registers upon resu
On Wednesday, 26 July 2017 21:48:30 CEST solitone wrote:
> I haven't yet figured out which kernel version contains such patch, though.
> BTW, I have also submitted a bug to debian, pointing out that solution, but
> it doesn't seem to have been considered yet:
> https://b
On Thursday, 27 July 2017 00:05:08 CEST Cindy-Sue Causey wrote:
> What I'm remembering is that I would
> close the lid outside, unplug it, bring it inside, plug it back in,
> and open the lid hoping it would wake up as we expect = right where I
> left off out on the porch.
>
> Quite a few times it
On Wednesday, 26 July 2017 04:15:06 CEST behrad eslami wrote:
> Yes it is. its new for me. after upgrade i have these error
>
> On Tuesday, 25 July 2017 13:13:41 CEST behrad eslami wrote:
> > Jul 23 20:23:45 laptop kernel: [ 90.862717] [drm] GPU HANG: ecode
> > 9:0:0xd23b808f, in chromium [1484],
On Tuesday, 25 July 2017 13:13:41 CEST behrad eslami wrote:
> Jul 23 20:23:45 laptop kernel: [ 90.862717] [drm] GPU HANG: ecode
> 9:0:0xd23b808f, in chromium [1484], reason: Hang on render ring, action:
> resetJul 23 20:23:45 laptop kernel: [ 90.862721] [drm] GPU hangs can
> indicate a bug anyw
On Tuesday, 25 July 2017 14:25:59 CEST Joel Rees wrote:
> Can you boot without the Mac OS partition?
I'm using grub to boot debian.
To boot MacOS, I need to press the option key (⌥) to start up to Apple's
Startup Manager, rather than grub. Startup Manager allows me to choose the
MacOS partitio
On Monday, 24 July 2017 21:01:37 CEST Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> AFAIK, parted (the command line program) cannot move the start of a
> partition and its contents. Only gparted (the GUI program) can.
Yes, Pascal, you're right:
> Note that after version 2.4, the following commands were removed:
> chec
I never use MacOs, so I want to just keep debian, so at least I'll put its 22
GB space to better use. I used to keep it just for some sporadic firmware
update, but frankly I don't think I'll need this again in the future.
The issue is that MacOs is at the start of the disc:
~$
~$ sudo /sbin/par
On Sunday, 23 July 2017 09:30:30 CEST Hans wrote:
> I do not want to mourne or cause any anger, and I do not expect it to be
> fixed at all. Remember, people do this in theire spare and free time, so we
> cannot expect, to be it fixed at all.
Well, great things have been developed in this spare an
On Sunday, 23 July 2017 08:58:41 CEST solitone wrote:
> I'll file a new bug on bugs.freedesktop.org, since there are no open bugs on
> that.
https://bugs.freedesktop.org/show_bug.cgi?id=101884
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On Sunday, 23 July 2017 02:54:06 CEST behrad eslami wrote:
> I guess this is VGA kernel driver bug but i cant resolv it
> https://lists.debian.org/debian-kernel/2017/02/msg00210.html
> https://lists.debian.org/debian-kernel/2017/02/msg00211.html
> [3.100956] [drm] Finished loading i915/skl_dmc_
On Thursday, 20 July 2017 02:28:32 CEST behrad eslami wrote:
> I increase swap and have same problem yet.
Did you increased the swap partition, or are you using a swap file?
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On my previous laptop with jessie hibernation didn't work. On my current
laptop with stretch hibernation doesn't work either.
During the several updates that interested stretch in the last few months, the
symptoms changed, and I don't remember exactly their evolution at the moment.
Currently, w
On Friday, 21 July 2017 16:09:15 CEST Curt wrote:
> The man page sends you to '/usr/share/doc/apt/examples/configure-index.gz',
> where the boolean values are exclusively (I think) "true" or "false", as
> are all the default values in the /etc/apt/apt/apt.conf.d "fragments."
I see, but what confus
Is anyone using Android Studio on stretch? Have you managed to run apps on an
Android Virtual Device (AVD)?
I've tried everything. The emulator seems to start, I get no errors, and the
emulated device appears on my screen (at least when using software
accelaration, otherwise it doesn't start at
On Thursday, 20 July 2017 08:25:41 CEST David Wright wrote:
> On Wed 19 Jul 2017 at 16:21:57 (+0200), to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > On Wed, Jul 19, 2017 at 03:48:03PM +0200, solitone wrote:
> > > On Wednesday, 19 July 2017 15:22:33 CEST to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > > >
On Thursday, 20 July 2017 10:05:56 CEST Dan Purgert wrote:
> That being said, most network admins worth anything will be approaching
> the problem from their side too (e.g. with band steering), in order to
> "encourage" client devices to connect to the 5 GHz signal.
I've tried the band steering op
Although this issue is widely discussed, but I didn't find a way to solve it.
My access point provides both 2.4 GHz and 5 GHz bands, and I'd like my WiFi
adapter chose 5 GHz over 2.4.
To accomplish this, I reduced the AP's TX power for 2.4 GHz, and increased
that for 5 GHz. The point is that wh
On Wednesday, 19 July 2017 23:02:04 CEST to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> There is this function StringToBool in apt-pkg/contrib/strutl.cc:
>
> [...]
>
> |// Check for positives
> |if (strcasecmp(Text.c_str(),"no") == 0 ||
> |
> |strcasecmp(Text.c_str(),"false") == 0 ||
> |
On Wednesday, 19 July 2017 15:22:33 CEST to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> echo "APT::Clean-Installed no;" > /etc/apt/apt.conf.d/no-autoclean
I've set it to "false", not to "no". The manual says "off", but didn't find any
occurence of "on" and "off" in the other apt config files, just "true" or
"false
>From 'man apt-get':
autoclean (and the auto-clean alias since 1.1)
[...]
The configuration
option APT::Clean-Installed will prevent installed packages
from being erased if it is set to off.
I've just lost some cached package files, although they are in
Usually the language used here is english. I translate your question, so more
people can understand it.
On Tuesday, 18 July 2017 07:52:18 CEST Gabriele Cossetti wrote:
> I've just installed Debian 9.0 on a IBM PC 386. I have the a
> Sitecom N150 USB WI-FI adapter that won't work after installati
On Wednesday, 12 July 2017 11:55:25 CEST Joerg Desch wrote:
> I could use the Windows license key of the dead
> windows notebook and run it inside VirtualBox. Do you know if the USB
> connection to the Garmin devices runs through the virtual host?
Yes, I used to have a VirtualBox instance on my pr
On Wednesday, 12 July 2017 11:07:39 CEST Joerg Desch wrote:
> I'm using a Garmin Edge 520 for my bycicle and a (new) Forerunner for
> running. How can I access Garmin Connect without installing the Windows
> tools?
>
> The Garmin Edge 520 is already registered to my Garmin Connect account.
> I've
On Sunday, 11 June 2017 20:06:48 CEST Brian wrote:
> if you change your sources.list to use a suitable
> one from snapshot.debian.org it will be found.
I didn't know that, thanks!
On Sunday, 11 June 2017 10:39:25 CEST Dejan Jocic wrote:
> In case that you are on stable, perhaps in old stable repository, or its
> backports, after you add those to sources.list.
No, I'm on stretch, so I'm using the stretch repository:
deb http://ftp.it.debian.org/debian/ stretch main non-free
On Sunday, 11 June 2017 08:39:25 CEST Lisi Reisz wrote:
> please, Solitone, let me and the list know what I am supposed to have said.
No Lisi, I don't have more info than the list regarding what you supposedly
said on this
topic :-)
In any case, I've just removed the hold on t
--- Begin Message ---
UTC Time: June 10, 2017 9:55 AM
From: solit...@mail.com
On Saturday, 10 June 2017 05:45:22 CEST Fungi4All wrote:
> apt
>
> Hold a package:
> sudo apt-mark hold
>
> Remove the hold:
> sudo apt-mark unhold
That's ok. I can then:
$ sudo apt upgrade
to upgrade that package to
On Saturday, 10 June 2017 05:45:22 CEST Fungi4All wrote:
> apt
>
> Hold a package:
> sudo apt-mark hold
>
> Remove the hold:
> sudo apt-mark unhold
That's ok. I can then:
$ sudo apt upgrade
to upgrade that package to the latest available version.
But my question was: once I've upgrated it,
On Friday, 9 June 2017 23:38:40 CEST Jimmy Johnson wrote:
> I've never downgrade using apt, but with synaptic it's not too hard,
Hi Jimmy, and thanks for your reply. I'm under Plasma Desktop, so I don't have
synaptic--I use KDE's Discover. Although I use it only for automatic updates.
For instal
I am on Debian 9 (scratch), and I have a MacBook Pro 12,1 with retina display.
Few days ago I upgraded Google Chrome from version 58 to 59:
google-chrome-stable:amd64 (58.0.3029.110-1, 59.0.3071.86-1)
This new version no longer supports HiDPI. As a result everything in Chrome is
so small that I w
On Thursday, 20 April 2017 08:41:26 CEST Kent West wrote:
> I installed on a Dell (don't recall the model number now, but it's a recent
> model), and I found that the firmware appears to be buggy, in that you can
> specify a UEFI installation to boot, and it shows the setting you enter,
> but it ig
On Thursday, 20 April 2017 08:07:51 CEST Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 20, 2017 at 03:12:33PM +1000, John Elliot V wrote:
> > Will stretch RC3 smoothly transition to stable (with an apt-get
> > dist-upgrade) when stretch is released?
>
> Yes. In fact there's a very strong possibility you won
On Tuesday, 18 April 2017 00:30:47 CEST Karagkiaouris Diamantis wrote:
> do i have to disable the secure boot and then proceed with uefi
> installation?
Yes, you should disable secure boot. I had to do this when I installed Jessie
on an HP UEFI laptop.
On Thursday, 13 April 2017 12:44:06 CEST solitone wrote:
> I tried and reset NVRAM, a nonvolatile random-access memory that
> Macs use to store certain settings like sound volume, display resolution,
> and (I realise only now) startup disk selection.. and GRUB doesn't start
> any
On Thursday, 13 April 2017 11:02:06 CEST solitone wrote:
> Apparenlty the only way I can restore functioning of the integrated keyboard
> and trackpad is by booting up with an external usb keyboard and an external
> usb mouse plugged in. I have the usual issues in grub and during boot
On Thursday, 13 April 2017 11:20:34 CEST Michael Lange wrote:
> Another thought: if that is possible, have you tried to boot into a live
> system, just to rule out a hardware issue?
I had used Apple Diagnostics to perform a hardware check, and nothing wrong
was found.
After that, I tried and re
On Thursday, 13 April 2017 00:27:22 CEST Michael Lange wrote:
> I would try to install a different kernel (if possible with external
> keyboard) and boot into that one, if the problem disappears the culprit is
> most likely the kernel.
I managed to boot into the older kernel that I still had in th
On Thursday, 13 April 2017 09:53:05 CEST Dejan Jocic wrote:
> If you have old kernel, you do not have to choose it in the GRUB menu during
> boot, you can set up your GRUB to boot from it automatically.
I have a submenu entry in my grub.cfg:
solitone@alan:~$ grep --color menu /boo
On Thursday, 13 April 2017 01:23:02 CEST Dejan Jocic wrote:
> He should have old kernel still installed, right? If that is the case,
> he could simply boot with old kernel.
Yes, I still have 4.9.0-1-amd64.
The point is even in the GRUB menu screen my keyboard no longer works well,
which is even
On Wednesday, 12 April 2017 22:29:25 CEST Mart van de Wege wrote:
> It's USB-related, so I'd say either the kernel package or udev.
Ok, thanks. These are the related packages that were upgrated:
linux-image-4.9.0-2-amd64:amd64 (4.9.13-1, 4.9.18-1)
udev:amd64 (232-19, 232-22)
libudev1:amd64 (232-1
On Wednesday, 12 April 2017 19:55:12 CEST Jochen Spieker wrote:
> I'd write a bug report. Your e-mail is a pretty good start.
To Debian BTS? Related to the kernel package? I have no clues as to what
component might be actually involved.
Thanks,
Davide
two external usb devices attached, and
like before everything started working after some pretty long time.
As I said, the culprit might be yesteday's upgrade. Among others, the kernel
was upgraded:
Start-Date: 2017-04-11 07:33:56
Commandline: packagekit role='update-package
On Wednesday, 5 April 2017 19:49:29 CEST Teemu Likonen wrote:
> If hibernation is like s2disk then yes, it works. I don't use it often,
> though.
Yes, it's suspend to disk. I would use it, but unfortunately in my system it
doesn't work (screen does not turn on).
Ciao
On Wednesday, 5 April 2017 11:24:12 CEST Teemu Likonen wrote:
> My laptop's (Apple Macbook Air) suspend-resume works
> well with Debian 8
Does hibernation work as well? I have a MacBook Pro 12,1 with Debian 9 and
while suspend does work, I didn't manage to have hibernate working reliably.
Hi,
this morning I experienced a bad issue that worried me for a while, but
happily it ended well with no consequences.
After resuming from suspend, the monitor was black, and I had to press the
power button to hard shutdown the computer.
On reboot, the monitor still didn't switch on. I tried
On Friday, 17 February 2017 03:54:22 CET Felix Miata wrote:
> I forgot to hold the non-broken mc version 4.8.17 before upgrading, so want
> to revert to the older packages in the cache:
> # ll /var/cache/apt/archives/mc*
> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 510906 May 8 2016 mc_3%3a4.8.17-1_amd64.deb
> -rw-
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