;; :
- "File systems that do not support RENAME_EXCHANGE such as ZFS or NFS
cannot perform live conversion (Bug 1186637)"
- "Conversion fails if there's a mount point below
(/usr)/{bin,sbin,lib,lib64}"
Good luck
--
++
zithro / Cyril
weird problems.
I think it's just a coincidence that the provider uses 192.168.0.2
internally and the OP host has the same address in its network.
--
++
zithro / Cyril
values are not
used/read.
But you never know, so belts and suspenders !
--
++
zithro / Cyril
lents).
The lists are available on: lists.debian.org
You should check for compatibility on the Debian ARM pages, and maybe
the Kernel ARM pages.
First, find your exact architecture name (aarch64, ...), then model, etc.
--
++
zithro / Cyril
ither I didn't understand this
solutions or they were not proper described (at least for me).
Show us what you found.
Maybe the problem has been solved in a newer kernel ?
If that's the case, you may try newer kernels from backports.
--
++
zithro / Cyril
ur platform/model
(Chromebook ARM).
Also, if you're not ready to spend time, follow recent guides.
--
++
zithro / Cyril
; '{}' \;
/usr/bin/rvlc:2:exec /usr/bin/vlc -I "rc" "$@"
/usr/bin/pa-info:83:'aplay -L'
/usr/bin/cvlc:2:exec /usr/bin/vlc -I "dummy" "$@"
/usr/sbin/alsa-info:110:withaplay() {
/usr/sbin/alsa-info:116:aplay -l >> $FILE 2>&1
[OUTPUT TRUNCATED]
HTH
--
++
zithro / Cyril
Also, it's nice to report the bug where you got the disk image, so
others won't waste their time for the same bug.
If you solved your problem, propose a patch, so others may benefit.
HTH !
--
++
zithro / Cyril
ate" before using it, but iirc it warns you to do it if
you forget.
--
++
zithro / Cyril
IK ...), so the only
way is to reflect the IR from the sun.
Or there is some animal walking the tree.
So your PIR is either broken or way too sensitive.
Some provide a sensitivity setting via a potentiometer, but YMMV.
Usually, sensitivity is correlated to the range (ie. meters) of the IR
sensor.
On 29 Aug 2023 18:19, gene heskett wrote:
On 8/28/23 12:20, zithro wrote:
On 28 Aug 2023 09:29, gene heskett wrote:
Have you checked all the cron files and the systemd timers ?
cron yes, systemd timers no, don't know how.
man systemctl ; look for "timer" (in vi(m) us
tried to look for some help from different sources or the
thing will take too long a time.
On Mon, Aug 28, 2023 at 8:40 PM zithro wrote:
On 28 Aug 2023 19:00, Christian Britz wrote:
On 28.08.23, 18:44, zithro wrote:
On 27 Aug 2023 12:09, Mario Marietto wrote:
$ uname -a
Linux chromarietto 5.
On 28 Aug 2023 19:00, Christian Britz wrote:
On 28.08.23, 18:44, zithro wrote:
On 27 Aug 2023 12:09, Mario Marietto wrote:
$ uname -a
Linux chromarietto 5.4.244-stb-cbe
#8 SMP PREEMPT Sat Aug 19 22:19:32 UTC 2023 armv7l GNU/Linux
Is it normal to get this "old" kernel on bookworm AR
and $XAUTHORITY environment variables are not
set. These two variables will be retained if the
org.freedesktop.policykit.exec.allow_gui annotation on an
action is set to a nonempty value; this is discouraged, though, and
should only be used for legacy programs.
--
++
zithro / Cyril
wn reason, it reports an error like this :
libvirt on bookworm is 9.0.0-4
"Warning : Failed to set up UEFI /
The Libvirt version does not support UEFI /
Install options are limited"
Look for this error message, it may be quicker and less error prone than
compiling everything.
--
++
zithro / Cyril
ing the bell to
evade PIR detection ^^
Any help in finding this will be hugely appreciated.
Cheers, Gene Heskett.
--
++
zithro / Cyril
ry 2022, so things may have changed, didn't test
since.
For reference, the related Qubes post, although not containing much more
info:
https://forum.qubes-os.org/t/installation-report-payload-digest-error-for-pkg-xen-hypervisor-2001/9644
(remove bracket stuff when replying)
]
--
++
zithro / Cyril
know he's rather a top poster, respectful and polite.
Gene, if you took it personnaly, I sincerely apologize.
That was really NOT my intent.
--
++
zithro / Cyril
orked, you will find in the syslog :
"IPv6: Loaded, but administratively disabled, reboot required to enable".
If you're not using GRUB, you will have to find where kernel options
should be entered (also called kernel command line).
--
++
zithro / Cyril
llowing it regularly, to learn things about Debian.
What did I learn ? Random people SUCK. Big time.
But I guess it's the XXI century plague.
People using other people's time to spare their own.
Sorry for the noise, if you get that oxymoron ;)
--
++
zithro / Cyril
On 03 Aug 2023 01:25, Celejar wrote:
I'm not sure I understand your point: if we assume that the fact that
my adapter burned indicates that my particular adapter must have been of
very poor quality, than this implies that such adapters in general are
not dangerous (which, as I've noted, is suppor
n't quickly jump to conclusions, follow the flow !
https://www.cgdirector.com/gpu-power-cable-guide/
https://www.pcworld.com/article/395059/one-cable-or-two-for-powering-a-graphics-card-heres-the-answer.html
--
zithro / Cyril
On 02 Aug 2023 03:21, Celejar wrote:
when I opened the case, sure enough, the
cable feeding the GPU had burned and broken.
Fortunately, I don't see damage to the system's power cable or to the
GPU itself, just to the 6 pin to 8 pin PCIE adapter cable (the HP PSU
has only 6 pin cables, and the GP
On 15 Jul 2023 02:30, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
So I have been looking at new computers and most of them come with SSD's
but they are so much smaller than my 2 TB computer that I am not sure
what is better. I read a couple of pieces on different groups but still
am not sure. SSD's are faster bu
On 14 Jul 2023 10:53, Joe wrote:
On Fri, 14 Jul 2023 09:27:12 +0200
Bruno Kleinert wrote:
Hello,
I'm looking for a wireless way to measure temperature and humidity
indoor with hardware off the shelf and software included in Debian 12
bookworm.
Sensors --> Radio --> Receiver --> Any typical P
On 23 Jun 2023 17:56, Fred wrote:
Or you could try Devuan which is Debian without systemd.
I did, when I didn't know Debian still had sysv.
But since you can do it on Debian directly, I don't see the point now.
Maybe more polished packages, ie. no surprises like "if you install this
package, I
On 23 Jun 2023 16:41, mick.crane wrote:
On 2023-06-23 11:58, Nicolas George wrote:
Andy Smith (12023-06-23):
It seemed fine the way it was. The only reason why I didn't answer
is that I don't know anything about removing systemd!
Me I know just a little about it, enough to know that discussio
On 21 Jun 2023 17:48, Zakaria Farhati wrote:
Hello,
I have installed Debian 12 for a couple of weeks, 2 days ago, I noticed
that when I plug the power cable, the system/desktop does not respond and
freezes for 1 min. What should I do to solve this issue?
The first thing is to check logs for rel
On 21 Jun 2023 17:52, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
Since "shocking", "disrespect" and "vulgarity" are pretty subjective
measures (they are still very legitimate, though), it would be nice
and constructive if you gave people the chance to understand what you
are taking issue with.
Otherwise, we have n
On 20 Jun 2023 18:21, Charles Curley wrote:
On Tue, 20 Jun 2023 16:52:47 +0200
Anders Andersson wrote:
I'm running Gnome. Maybe synaptic is not compatible with xfce?
Nope. I have synaptic running here with xfce4 on Bullseye.
synaptic0.90.2 amd64
xfce4 4.16all
On 14 Jun 2023 19:30, Tom Browder wrote:
I’ve been running httpd for many years, long before systemd came along.
Somewhere in the various upgrades over the years I lost the old rotating
logs.
Now I would like to initiate the rotating logs again. Can I do that with
systemd somehow?
Isn't that t
On 02 Jun 2023 17:34, Mario Marietto wrote:
Excuse me,but there is something within your argumentation that I don't
like and I want to express what it is. Let's take Linux as an example of
what I want to say. Linux is well known to be an OS that can be installed
on the old machines,helping the pe
On 02 Jun 2023 14:31, Michael Stone wrote:
I don't recommend xen for new projects. It has more pieces and tends to
be more fragile than qemu+kvm, for no real benefits these days. (IMO)
Define "more pieces" and "more fragile" ?
It has a really low TCB and still used by amazon for their cloud.
I
On 26 May 2023 11:47, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Hi,
mick.crane wrote:
root@pumpkin:~# fdisk -l /dev/sda
Disk /dev/sda: 223.57 GiB, 240057409536 bytes, 468862128 sectors
...
Disklabel type: dos
...
Device Boot Start End Sectors Size Id Type
/dev/sda1 * 2048 466862079 46686
On 05 May 2023 18:07, Lee wrote:
On 5/4/23, zithro wrote:
I think you also need
user_pref("widget.gtk.overlay-scrollbars.enabled", false);
and this is also nice
user_pref("widget.non-native-theme.scrollbar.size.override", 20);
I tried them all, but now there's a
On 25 Apr 2023 16:46, charlie derr wrote:
Greetings fine free software people.
A number of years ago, the little arrows at the top and bottom of the scrollbar to the
right of my "message list" view in thunderbird (I'm currently using debian
stable) disappeared
[...]
Any clue whether it's possi
On 14 May 2023 02:36, Tom Reed wrote:
$ telnet 193.106.250.xx 587
Trying 193.106.250.xx...
telnet: Unable to connect to remote host: Connection timed out
Run wireshark/dumpcap or tcpdump on the client to check if you get the
TCP reset packet.
You can also run it server-side, to see if the ser
On 09 May 2023 23:21, Andy Smith wrote:
Hello,
On Tue, May 09, 2023 at 05:40:18AM +0200, zithro wrote:
In short, zero time taken.
For a comparatively large response. Almost as if that was their goal
(trolling)!
Cheers,
Andy
Well he's using 225 chars, me 424, it's only ~ the dou
On 09 May 2023 18:06, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
On 2023-05-05 15:04:27 +0200, zithro wrote:
journalctl after GUI LOGOFF
[...]
May 05 14:09:14 debzit sshd
On 09 May 2023 17:47, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
Hi,
On 2023-05-04 21:07:17 +0200, zithro wrote:
Here is what happens chronologically :
1. I start various SSH connections to a host, some normal, some with X
forwarding, like that: "ssh user@host" and "ssh -X -n user@host GUI_APP&
On 07 May 2023 16:41, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
Hello,
after upgrading to bookworm, my windows guest does not start anymore, but
throws an error message:
Fehler beim Starten der Domain: internal error: qemu unexpectedly closed the
monitor: 2023-05-07T14:27:35.862395Z qemu-system-x86_64: -device
{"dr
On 07 May 2023 12:14, Дмитрий wrote:
the stable version of Neodim 9.0 in debian 12 is the SEVENTH version, and in
order to get the current version, you need to drag something like Homebrew, it
really pisses you off and pushes you away from using the distribution
Ahah this post ! ^^
For futur
On 06 May 2023 07:07, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Sat, May 06, 2023 at 10:24:52AM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
Thanks both for the pointers, will report back with results
On 05 May 2023 19:14, Max Nikulin wrote:
Does it happen for newly created user with no customization?
Never tried !
I recommended to do it just for a case that you added something to init
files for the "zithro" user.
AFAIK I didn't customize a lot, as I'm rarely loggin
On 06 May 2023 06:45, David Wright wrote:
*I login to VC1 and startx for an Xserver*
I think that's why you don't have my problem, your user is always logged
in, even when you close X.
Is the greeter just deferring the ssh command until you login?
Nope, they work without X "direct" login.
On 03 May 2023 18:22, Curt wrote:
You really don't have to tread dangerous waters (or rather wade into
them, unless your Jesus) because you can simulate without root privileges.
curty@einstein:~$ apt -s purge
NOTE: This is only a simulation!
Quick nitpicking.
Even if "-s" is easily remembered
On 05 May 2023 15:46, Charles Curley wrote:
On Fri, 5 May 2023 12:29:53 +0200
zithro wrote:
That would be nice for them to tell you what THEY consider a valid
MAC addr, as I don't think Debian produces MACs with z or x in it ...
Maybe they check against a valid manufacturer (which is th
On 05 May 2023 16:10, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
I have now full logs of before/after GUI logon/logoff, I posted them in the
other post.
Will try to make sense of it with this lead ... after a needed break ^^
I saved that for a look during weekend, now I'm supposed to fix
an update of... forget it
On 05 May 2023 14:11, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Fri, May 05, 2023 at 01:58:55PM +0200, zithro wrote:
On 05 May 2023 06:32, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
dbus is a candidate. Let me explain: I have a funny setup -- no systemd,
no dbus (still, Debian buster, and X).
I'm on bullseye, I know h
debzit systemd[1]: session-c2.scope: Consumed 12.947s
CPU time.
May 05 14:04:45 debzit lightdm[23289]: pam_unix(lightdm:session):
session opened for user zithro(uid=1000) by (uid=0)
May 05 14:04:45 debzit systemd-logind[480]: Removed session c2.
May 05 14:04:45 debzit systemd-logind[480]: New session
On 05 May 2023 07:33, David wrote:
On Thu, 4 May 2023 at 19:07, zithro wrote:
this is a rather strange problem, I hope the title is explicit enough.
Subject: Logging off an X session closes all ssh -X connections
started previously from outside X
Yeah, I meant title==subject, I was hoping
On 05 May 2023 06:32, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
dbus is a candidate. Let me explain: I have a funny setup -- no systemd,
no dbus (still, Debian buster, and X).
I'm on bullseye, I know how to switch back to old init, but have no clue
about Dbus (kinda a Linux-GUI-with-systemd noob).
Which DE/DM y
On 05 May 2023 05:30, David Wright wrote:
Isn't it this issue?
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=19023885
Looks like it, yes !
I'm afraid I can't replicate the problem, though, as I don't have
a "log off" button or menu entry. That might suggest that the
problem is in something I don't r
On 05 May 2023 04:13, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 05/05/2023 02:07, zithro wrote:
2. using VNC or rdesktop, I then log on to X on the machine, do some
stuff, then hit "log off" from the desktop menu.
Immediately, ALL the previous SSH connections started in step 1 get
closed, hence all the
On 05 May 2023 12:20, dmacdoug wrote:
Well, it appears to me that all Mozilla products have the same problem and
for Firefox there is a theme add on named "Custom Scollbars" made by Wesley
Branton which allows to change the color of the scrollbar and to make
limited changes to the width but does
On 05 May 2023 06:08, David Christensen wrote:
On 5/4/23 19:52, David Christensen wrote:
That said, Wi-Fi does not work with my Ubuiquitti Networks UniFi setup
-- it doesn't like the MAC address.
A further problem -- Debian is changing the MAC address of the Wi-Fi
adapter ("MAC address spoof
On 05 May 2023 04:52, David Christensen wrote:
I was going to surf eBay and find another Wi-Fi card, but then I had one
last idea -- double-checking the the CMOS/NVRAM settings via Setup. I
cut the settings down to the bare minimum for Wi-Fi:
Settings
+ Wireless
+ Wireless Switch
On 05 May 2023 08:29, Michel Verdier wrote:
Le 5 mai 2023 zithro a écrit :
If on USB/external drive, preferably format the drive so it can be read on
multiple OS. So prefer FAT32/exFAT, and avoid ext4, ZFS, NTFS, APFS, etc.
As I don't need to restore debian on windows I choose to form
On 05 May 2023 03:12, Byung-Hee HWANG wrote:
Usually i do backup into Google Drive (with only very important files).
So if system is crash, i go to re-install entire after format.
I hope you encrypt your data, and you have a good internet connection !
The easiest and fastest way to backup is on
On 05 May 2023 03:02, Maureen L Thomas wrote:> I need to start writing
down everything I do so I don't forget again.
This is one of the best advice you can follow, and don't think it's
because of your age !
We ALL forget stuff we only do once in a while, and not only with
computers ...
Just re
On 05 May 2023 01:55, David Christensen wrote:
Try Enable Wi-Fi a couple three more times -- nope
Try Debian 9 -- nope.
Try Windows 7 Pro -- nope.
It looks like I have a dead Wi-Fi adapter.
Or a dead Wifi killswitch (the physical radio button) ?
Last thought, don't you have :
- a mechanica
On 05 May 2023 01:03, Maureen L Thomas wrote:
Ok so I cannot download any files to fix my /var section. I have a 2 TB
seagate that has a USB 3 cord to it. I do not have an open USB port so
I plugged it in to my USB hub thingy and it got shut down. It is no
longer usable. So the question is
On 05 May 2023 00:24, David Christensen wrote:
# ls -l /var/lib/systemd/rfkill
total 12
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2 May 4 12:15 pci-:03:00.0:wlan
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2 May 24 2022 pci-:0b:00.0:wlan
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2 May 4 13:04 platform-dell-laptop:wlan
Strange, looks like you
On 04 May 2023 23:26, David Christensen wrote:
On 5/4/23 13:36, Christoph Brinkhaus wrote:
Am Thu, May 04, 2023 at 01:14:12PM -0700 schrieb David Christensen:
[ 80.070510] iwlwifi :03:00.0: reporting RF_KILL (radio disabled)
[ 80.070571] iwlwifi :03:00.0: RF_KILL bit toggled to di
On 29 Apr 2023 05:31, Gareth Evans wrote:
It seems Google Remote Desktop, a Chrome extension, does not work properly with
Buster + Mate. I haven't tried with Bullseye, which is not an option in the
environment concerned due to CUPS bugs, but in Buster there is about 5 seconds
of remote-mouse-
On 04 May 2023 22:10, Dan Ritter wrote:
zithro wrote:
On 04 May 2023 21:38, Dan Ritter wrote:
It's not hidden, it's part of the theme. You can install and
change themes -- look for packages with the keyword gtk theme,
and in XFCE's settings manager, it's under appearanc
On 04 May 2023 22:11, Dan Ritter wrote:
zithro wrote:
Well, I'm currently using "Greybird-dark" (so not the default).
But it seems there's no GUI to alter the theme itself.
Right, you have to select a different theme.
Or write your own.
-dsr-
Well, I just tried half
On 04 May 2023 21:38, Dan Ritter wrote:
zithro wrote:
On 28 Apr 2023 00:58, dmacdoug wrote:
On Tue, Apr 25, 2023 at 02:46:38PM +, charlie derr wrote:
A number of years ago, the little arrows at the top and bottom of the
scrollbar to the right of my "message list" view in thunde
On 01 May 2023 14:53, Brian wrote:
On Mon 01 May 2023 at 13:41:10 +0200, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Mon, May 01, 2023 at 09:37:59AM +0200, john doe wrote:
[...]
Please refrain from polluting the list when you do not get an answer.
I think repeating a question after a while doesn't count as
with X(org).
The client is running XFCE (but has MATE installed), the remote server
is only running MATE (no other DE installed).
It happens since at least a year.
Ideas anyone ?
Have a nice evening,
zithro
On 28 Apr 2023 00:58, dmacdoug wrote:
On Tue, Apr 25, 2023 at 02:46:38PM +, charlie derr wrote:
Greetings fine free software people.
A number of years ago, the little arrows at the top and bottom of the
scrollbar to the right of my "message list" view in thunderbird (I'm
currently using deb
On 04 May 2023 17:40, Tixy wrote:
On Thu, 2023-05-04 at 12:07 +0200, Christoph Pleger wrote:
Hello,
I have had just the same problem. I think it is caused by the last
security upgrade by unattended-upgrades of these packages:
gir1.2-javascriptcoregtk-4.0
gir1.2-webkit2-4.0
libjavascriptcoreg
On 04 May 2023 14:42, Igor Korot wrote:
Hi,
I am trying install Debian Buster on the VirtualBox as a guest.
I set the VM to use HostOnly network with DHCP enabled, but when I ran the
installer it failed to auto-configure the network.
How do I solve it?
Thank you.
P.S.: I need python 2, theref
On 02 May 2023 00:19, NetValue Operations Centre wrote:
Good thinking, trying that.
I worked through some of the cpu features, and when removing the line:
the test VM on 5.10.0-22-amd64 booted successfully.
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/x86/protection-keys.txt
"Memory Protec
On 13 Apr 2023 01:15, Dan Ritter wrote:
zithro wrote:
On 12 Apr 2023 22:15, Greg Wooledge wrote:
RFCs are there for having a common ground, right ?
Sort of.
At various meetings, a grad student was "volunteered" to take
notes. Not quite certain of how accurately he had transcribed
On 12 Apr 2023 22:15, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 10:04:42PM +0200, zithro wrote:
So it seems that, despite (incomplete?) standards, each provider
(in the whole mail chain, MUA, MTA, etc) "does what he wants" ?
Why do you sound surprised? This is how everyt
On 12 Apr 2023 19:51, Albretch Mueller wrote:
I always use a Debian live DVD while exposed.
The thing is that in order to squeeze every minute of attention I
possibly can I tend to:
a) just close the lid of my laptop
b) while keeping the DVD player attached to the laptop
c) then, reopen
On 12 Apr 2023 19:20, John Hasler wrote:
zithro writes:
To not have to handle issues with security or availability of an own
mail server.
I use pobox.com's paid service. Email is their business. I run Postfix
locally using the Pobox server as a smarthost and use Fetchmail to
download my
[Note: I snipped everything for easier read, and
replied to the most recent email]
Thank you all for your constructive answers !
This was a really interesting read.
So it seems that, despite (incomplete?) standards, each provider
(in the whole mail chain, MUA, MTA, etc) "does what he wants" ?
On 12 Apr 2023 19:56, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 06:40:45PM +0200, zithro wrote:
[...]
But they don't work for you.
Well, in a sense, yes, and freely ^^
You don't want to be convinced
No, that's not how life works. How pretentious is that sentence .
On 12 Apr 2023 18:12, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 06:00:25PM +0200, zithro wrote:
On 12 Apr 2023 11:21, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 08:23:23AM +0100, Brad Rogers wrote:
On Tue, 11 Apr 2023 21:08:51 +
"Andrew M.A. Cater" wrote:
Hello An
On 12 Apr 2023 11:21, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Wed, Apr 12, 2023 at 08:23:23AM +0100, Brad Rogers wrote:
On Tue, 11 Apr 2023 21:08:51 +
"Andrew M.A. Cater" wrote:
Hello Andrew,
If you are subscribed to the mailing list and you post, you should see
a copy turn up in your mailing list ma
On 12 Apr 2023 13:54, Byung-Hee HWANG wrote:
If you are subscribed to the mailing list and you post, you should see
a copy turn up in your mailing list mails
Unless your email provider is google, or somebody covertly using google.
Now why would you want to do that?
I have experience. Gmail
On 12 Apr 2023 04:12, The Wanderer wrote:
Some mail services apparently treat this "discard incoming messages that
look like duplicates of ones you already have a copy of" behavior as a
feature; Gmail is the best-known example. That has problems when (as
with this mailing list) the incoming copy
On 11 Apr 2023 22:28, gene heskett wrote:
On 4/11/23 13:36, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
There are a bunch of cups manpages: there are lots of documents online.
The people recommending you avahi/bonjour/zeroconf are recommending it
because it works - for them and for 99.9% of people.
And its both
On 11 Apr 2023 22:18, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Apr 11, 2023 at 09:56:05PM +0200, zithro wrote:
Do you know when resolv.conf started appearing ?
I guess after TCP/IP got invented ?
The wikipedia page does not mention it.
<https://man.openbsd.org/resolv.conf> says it first appea
On 11 Apr 2023 22:39, Tom Furie wrote:
In the headers of every mail on debian lists are some "List-*" headers. In
there you can find an address and subject to get help on list commands etc.
(At least, I assume it still works. I haven't used it in a long time and
didn't bother to check before writ
On 11 Apr 2023 22:18, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Apr 11, 2023 at 09:56:05PM +0200, zithro wrote:
Do you know when resolv.conf started appearing ?
I guess after TCP/IP got invented ?
The wikipedia page does not mention it.
<https://man.openbsd.org/resolv.conf> says it first appea
Hello all,
I have two questions about the Debians ML usage.
1. when subscribing, the confirmation message says "By default, copies
of your own submissions will be returned."
What is the meaning of "default" and "returned" here ?
I understand that I should get my own replies. But I never get th
I thought :
- you can install as many kernel packages as you want, whether built or
downloaded
- updates don't automatically remove old kernels/initrd by default
So I wonder, why handling it manually ?
What is the advantage, except for adding -confusion- ?
On 11 Apr 2023 13:25, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>> On 11 Apr 2023 08:55, Richard Hector wrote:
Well, it's not in resolver(5) (which is for resolv.conf) on Red Hat 5.0.5.
It wasn't in the man page from Red Hat 5.2 when I checked in 2017, either.
Thanks for the history digging !
Do you know when re
On 11 Apr 2023 19:09, gene heskett wrote:
On 4/11/23 10:04, zithro wrote:
On 11 Apr 2023 04:56, gene heskett wrote:
On 4/10/23 16:53, zithro wrote:
Why can't you follow others advice, hell, if you don't trust us,
even the perfectly correct and up-to-date manpages ?
After reading th
On 11 Apr 2023 00:28, Andy Smith wrote:
Hello,
On Tue, Apr 11, 2023 at 12:04:24AM +0200, zithro wrote:
So, I got curious about his claim
Well you can't say you haven't been warned. This rabbit hole goes
very deep and the bottom will not contain the answers you seek!
Cheers,
Andy
On 11 Apr 2023 16:43, Marc Auslander wrote:
On 4/11/2023 9:30 AM, zithro wrote:
The solution is in "man update-initramfs" :
update-initramfs -c -k $KERNEL_VERSION
-c creates a new initramfs
-k specifies the version of the kernel
This breaks when package update tries to update-init
On 11 Apr 2023 04:56, gene heskett wrote:
On 4/10/23 16:53, zithro wrote:
Why can't you follow others advice, hell, if you don't trust us, even
the perfectly correct and up-to-date manpages ?
After reading the posts of others, I'm more and more thinking your
simply a troll (or a
On 11 Apr 2023 02:17, Marc Auslander wrote:
I'm on Buster.
In /boot I keep a copy of the current working linux named by appending
-knowngood to the four files. My idea is that if an update fails, I
have a recent working linux. This is different from vmlinuz.old which
is the previous kernel
On 10 Apr 2023 22:58, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 10:53:41PM +0200, zithro wrote:
Why can't you follow others advice, hell, if you don't trust us, even the
perfectly correct and up-to-date manpages ?
After reading the posts of others, I'm more and more thinkin
On 4/10/23 13:30, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Up to the resolv.conf, that is exactly what I do. But that change to
resolv.conf adding the search line has been required since red hat 5.0
in 1998. until bullseye. Just last week I found it is not needed in an
armbian bullseye install.
What ?! Red Hat ?
On 10 Apr 2023 03:23, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 09 Apr 2023 at 21:48:22 (+0200), zithro wrote:
IOW, while I run crontab -e on bookworm, inside my emacs session,
I want a subshell to run crontab -l, but the latter has to run on
bullseye in order to pick up the old crontab. I'm not sure
On 09 Apr 2023 17:20, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Welcome to the Gene Heskett show, starring Gene Heskett.
We've told Gene that his configuration is wrong *so* many times, over
*so* many years. There are very many, very long, threads dedicated to
trying to help Gene get his network configuration to a
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