On Mon, Jan 13, 2025 at 01:31:30PM +, Andy Smith wrote:
Debian doesn't, ifupdown does, which is perfectly believable since
ifupdown is quite an old package with not many people working on it. It
simply hasn't been updated to stop using brctl.
More importantly, who cares? It gets the job don
Hi,
On Sun, Jan 12, 2025 at 11:35:53PM -0300, Luís Felipe wrote:
> If I create a bridge directly using "ip link add name br0 type bridge"
> it works normally, but I want to leave it in etc/network/interface so
> that it is a persistent and automatic configuration. Please, I need
> some help with t
On Sun, 12 Jan 2025 23:35:53 -0300
Luís Felipe wrote:
>
> If I create a
> bridge directly using "ip link add name br0 type bridge" it works
> normally, but I want to leave it in etc/network/interface so that it
> is a persistent and automatic configuration. Please, I need some help
> with this be
I'm trying to configure a persistent bridge through
/etc/network/interfaces. My configuration is as follows: iface ens192
inet manual auto br0 iface br0 inet static bridge_ports ens192
#address 10.60.0.20/24 #gateway 10.60.0.1 However, this returns the
following errors: ifup[742]: Cannot find devic
s is an Intel Mac. If it has a touchbar, does the touchbar still work?
> > [Signs of life]
> >
>
>
> Below are point to point responses.
>
> The touchbar does not work.
>
AskUbuntu pointed to the following resource:
https://github.com/Dunedan/mbp-2016-li
Hi,
I feel some packages are missing,
You are right. More precisely, what is missing is a firmware, the
brcm/brcmfmac4364-pcie.Apple Inc.-MacBookPro15,1.bin
firmware.
Cheers,
Jerome
On my side, apt-file cannot find it on Sid.
[ 5.253947] brcmfmac :03:00.0: firmware: failed to l
wrote:
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 5:28 PM Andrew M.A. Cater
wrote:
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 11:06:44PM +0530, Nilesh Patra wrote:
> Quoting Nicolas George:
> > lina (12024-08-22):
> > > however, the internal keyboard does not work
>
rote:
>
>> On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 11:06:44PM +0530, Nilesh Patra wrote:
>> > Quoting Nicolas George:
>> > > lina (12024-08-22):
>> > > > however, the internal keyboard does not work
>> > > Sorry to ear it. Did it been laid off? Is it el
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 5:28 PM Andrew M.A. Cater
wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 11:06:44PM +0530, Nilesh Patra wrote:
> > Quoting Nicolas George:
> > > lina (12024-08-22):
> > > > however, the internal keyboard does not work
> > > Sorry to ear it. D
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 5:28 PM Andrew M.A. Cater
wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 11:06:44PM +0530, Nilesh Patra wrote:
> > Quoting Nicolas George:
> > > lina (12024-08-22):
> > > > however, the internal keyboard does not work
> > > Sorry to ear it. D
The internal keyboard does not work during installation,
I have been using the external keyboard starting from installation.
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 5:06 PM Eddie wrote:
> You might try disconnecting the external keyboard and try to boot a
> live-usb of the desired os. If the live-usb bo
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024, 12:54 PM Nicolas George wrote:
> Nilesh Patra (12024-08-23):
> > What drives such a hostile and uncalled-for reply?
>
> It was sarcastic, but in no way hostile.
>
Either way it was unnecessary and will do nothing but alienate people from
this list. And so perhaps from Debia
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 11:06:44PM +0530, Nilesh Patra wrote:
> Quoting Nicolas George:
> > lina (12024-08-22):
> > > however, the internal keyboard does not work
> > Sorry to ear it. Did it been laid off? Is it eligible for unemployment
> > benefits?
> >
>
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 11:52:23PM +0530, Nilesh Patra wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 07:54:13PM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> > Nilesh Patra (12024-08-23):
> > > What drives such a hostile and uncalled-for reply?
> >
> > It was sarcastic, but in no way hostile.
>
> I encourage you to re-read
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 1:35 PM Nilesh Patra wrote:
>
> Quoting Nicolas George:
> > lina (12024-08-22):
> > > however, the internal keyboard does not work
> > Sorry to ear it. Did it been laid off? Is it eligible for unemployment
> > benefits?
> >
>
You might try disconnecting the external keyboard and try to boot a
live-usb of the desired os. If the live-usb boots, a fresh install from
the live session may boot ok. Sorry no further help than this.
On Fri, Aug 23, 2024 at 07:54:13PM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> Nilesh Patra (12024-08-23):
> > What drives such a hostile and uncalled-for reply?
>
> It was sarcastic, but in no way hostile.
I encourage you to re-read what you wrote.
> And you might notice that (1) it also contained the usefu
Nilesh Patra (12024-08-23):
> What drives such a hostile and uncalled-for reply?
It was sarcastic, but in no way hostile.
And you might notice that (1) it also contained the useful answer and
(2) it is for now the only reply. So we might wonder which is best: no
reply at all, or a reply with sarc
Quoting Nicolas George:
> lina (12024-08-22):
> > however, the internal keyboard does not work
> Sorry to ear it. Did it been laid off? Is it eligible for unemployment
> benefits?
>
> More seriously, start by explaining your problem with more accuracy than
> “does not wo
lina (12024-08-22):
> however, the internal keyboard does not work
Sorry to ear it. Did it been laid off? Is it eligible for unemployment
benefits?
More seriously, start by explaining your problem with more accuracy than
“does not work”.
Regards,
--
Nicolas George
uot;macbook79"
>
>
> XKBMODEL="macbook78"
>
>
> *XKBMODEL="macintosh"*
>
> *XKBMODEL="macintosh_old"*
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> On Thu, Aug 22, 2024 at 9:29 AM lina wrote:
>
>> Hi
>>
>> I have a macb
pro since 2019, now I finally install the debian stable
> version,
>
> however, the internal keyboard does not work, here is the output with the
> external keyboard.
> # more /etc/default/keyboard
> # KEYBOARD CONFIGURATION FILE
>
> # Consult the keyboard(5) manual page.
Hi
I have a macbook pro since 2019, now I finally install the debian stable
version,
however, the internal keyboard does not work, here is the output with the
external keyboard.
# more /etc/default/keyboard
# KEYBOARD CONFIGURATION FILE
# Consult the keyboard(5) manual page.
XKBMODEL
On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 14:16 +0100, Ralph Aichinger wrote:
> On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 12:51 +, 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
> > would
> > need to do that as there are only
On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 12:51 +, 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
> would
> need to do that as there are only two networks my LAN and 'the
> internet'.
You probably don't need to
On Thu, 2024-01-18 at 12:31 +0100, Ralph Aichinger wrote:
[...]
> So it seems clamping the mss on the NAT/PPPoE-Machine running Debian no
> longer works. For this I use/used the follwing rules:
>
> iifname "ppp0" tcp flags syn tcp option maxseg size set rt mtu;
> oifname "ppp0" tcp flags syn tcp o
Hello everybody, related question to what I asked a few days ago:
Since I touched my /etc/nftables.conf rules a few days ago to enable
IPv6 I've got IPv6 working completely (thanks again for your help with
suggesting logging packets), but I seemingly broke mss clamping for
IPv4 in doing so (or may
On Thu, Nov 02, 2023 at 02:14:17PM -0500, David Wright wrote:
>
> I suspect this may be an X-Y problem. The OP appears to already have
> a working sid, but it's on a disk that may be failing.
>
> https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2023/11/msg00013.html
>
> The idea of upgrading an installati
On Thu 02 Nov 2023 at 12:09:55 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Thu, Nov 02, 2023 at 04:56:59PM +0100, Martin wrote:
> > I have installed old distribution
> > # deb cdrom:[Debian GNU/Linux 9.1.0 _Stretch_ - Official amd64 DVD Binary-1
> > 20170722-11:29]/ stretch contrib main non-free
> > (becau
On Thu, Nov 02, 2023 at 04:56:59PM +0100, Martin wrote:
> I have installed old distribution
> # deb cdrom:[Debian GNU/Linux 9.1.0 _Stretch_ - Official amd64 DVD Binary-1
> 20170722-11:29]/ stretch contrib main non-free
> (because that was newest distribution I had on DVD with me)
>
> I configured
I have installed old distribution
# deb cdrom:[Debian GNU/Linux 9.1.0 _Stretch_ - Official amd64 DVD Binary-1
20170722-11:29]/ stretch contrib main non-free
(because that was newest distribution I had on DVD with me)
I configured network and now I am trying to update the system to sid.
I commente
On 15/12/2022 10:30, Ash Joubert wrote:
Also affects sid. For those affected, the bug is:
#1026072: firefox: fails to start (cannot load libnssutil3.so)
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=1026072
I have run "apt-mark hold firefox" and will continue to hold firefox (at
107.0.1-1 on
On Thu, 15 Dec 2022 08:49:07 -0500
songbird wrote:
Hello songbird,
> thank you for pointing that out.
NP. I do similar things - i.e. set stuff up in a non-conventional way,
then forget about it. Then I can't understand why people don't see
what I see. When light dawns, and I realise it's *
Brad Rogers wrote:
...
> songbird's subject is ambiguous;
> Could mean "testing repo..."
> Could mean "I am testing v108"
>
> AFAICS the issue only affects sid, since Firefox only exists there never
> anywhere else. Only firefox-esr is migrated out of sid. Now, that's not
> to say the bad ver
On Thu, 15 Dec 2022 10:30:44 +1300
Ash Joubert wrote:
Hello Ash,
>Also affects sid. For those affected, the bug is:
songbird's subject is ambiguous;
Could mean "testing repo..."
Could mean "I am testing v108"
AFAICS the issue only affects sid, since Firefox only exists there never
anywhere
On 15/12/2022 04:31, songbird wrote:
i had to downgrade afterwards,
bug has been reported so no more bugs need to be filed.
just a warning to others who may be running testing.
the specific error message is:
XPCOMGlueLoad error for file /usr/lib/firefox/libnssutil3.so:
/usr/lib/firef
i had to downgrade afterwards,
bug has been reported so no more bugs need to be filed.
just a warning to others who may be running testing.
the specific error message is:
XPCOMGlueLoad error for file /usr/lib/firefox/libnssutil3.so:
/usr/lib/firefox/libnssutil3.so: cannot open shared
ote:
> Debian.org/download does not work. Not a single link works. All it says is
> “unable to connect”. I get this issue on every browser I use
Do you have http testing tools like curl by your hands? It would be useful to
take a look at what they say.
Is Debian.org/download ok on your en
Works for me too here in Sweden with Telia as an ISP
On Mon, Sep 12, 2022 at 10:42 AM Corentin Bardet
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> > Debian.org/download does not work. Not a single link works. All it says
> is “unable to connect”. I get this issue on every browser I use
>
> Debian do
Hi,
> Debian.org/download does not work. Not a single link works. All it says is
> “unable to connect”. I get this issue on every browser I use
Debian download page does work here from France.
Kevin Price , le 12 sept 2022 :
> Your IPv4 address 17.58.6.50 is allocated to Apple Inc.
Am 12.09.22 um 01:09 schrieb Tom Zarcone:
> Debian.org/download does not work. Not a single link works.
So double-check https://www.debian.org/download again.
All it says is “unable to connect”. I get this issue on every browser I use
Do you happen to be in a country whose government restri
On 2022-09-11 at 19:09, Tom Zarcone wrote:
> Debian.org/download does not work. Not a single link works. All it
> says is “unable to connect”. I get this issue on every browser I use
Works flawlessly for me, with all of Firefox, w3m, and wget.
(https://debian.org/download redirects to
Debian.org/download does not work. Not a single link works. All it says is
“unable to connect”. I get this issue on every browser I use
On Lu, 01 feb 21, 02:12:43, sebul wrote:
> Hello.
> I have a Lenovo IdeaCentre Mini 5 01IMH05. Spec is
> https://psref.lenovo.com/Detail/IdeaCentre/IdeaCentre_Mini_5_01IMH05?M=90Q70006KA
> I installed Debian 10.7 on it.
What image did you use for that (exact name and URL if possible)?
> How can I
On 2021-01-31 12:12 p.m., sebul wrote:
Hello.
I have a Lenovo IdeaCentre Mini 5 01IMH05. Spec is
https://psref.lenovo.com/Detail/IdeaCentre/IdeaCentre_Mini_5_01IMH05?M=90Q70006KA
I installed Debian 10.7 on it.
How can I use wireless networks on Lenovo IdeaCentre Mini 5?
This might help:
ht
Hello.
I have a Lenovo IdeaCentre Mini 5 01IMH05. Spec is
https://psref.lenovo.com/Detail/IdeaCentre/IdeaCentre_Mini_5_01IMH05?M=90Q70006KA
I installed Debian 10.7 on it.
How can I use wireless networks on Lenovo IdeaCentre Mini 5?
On 31.12.2020 18:06, Hassans Tech wrote:
In addition, the output of aplay -l
Is: List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices
card 0: Audio [Intel HDMI/DP LPE Audio], device 0: HdmiLpeAudio [Intel
HDMI/DP LPE Audi]
Subdevices: 1/1
Subdevice #0: subdevice #0
card 0: Audio [Intel HDMI/DP LPE A
In addition, the output of aplay -l
Is: List of PLAYBACK Hardware Devices
card 0: Audio [Intel HDMI/DP LPE Audio], device 0: HdmiLpeAudio [Intel
HDMI/DP LPE Audi]
Subdevices: 1/1
Subdevice #0: subdevice #0
card 0: Audio [Intel HDMI/DP LPE Audio], device 1: HdmiLpeAudio [Intel
HDMI/DP
Additional info that I forgot to add:
The output of lspci -knn
Is: 00:00.0 Host bridge [0600]: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium
Processor x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Series SoC Transaction Register [8086:2280]
(rev
36)
Subsystem: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor
x5-E8000/J3x
Hi, so I have successfully installed Debian 10 (testing) and I am
experiencing audio issues.
The output of lspci is as follows:
00:00.0 Host bridge: Intel Corporation Atom/Celeron/Pentium Processor
x5-E8000/J3xxx/N3xxx Series SoC Transaction Register (rev 36)
00:02.0 VGA compatible controller: Inte
Thanks for the tip! I will have to check those out as well. I believe I
did have the non free when I setup to ensure Wi-Fi support. I don't know
if the miscellaneous non free was included with that build.
I used an unofficial build from here using the netinst.iso writtento a
USB.
https://cdimag
Also - check carefully what firmware it might require. You have, for
example, installed firmware-linux-nonfree, firmware-misc-nonfree to enable
non-free firmware possibly?
On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 10:12 PM riveravaldez
wrote:
> On 9/5/20, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > On Saturday, September 05, 2
On 9/5/20, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Saturday, September 05, 2020 12:34:37 PM Aaron Elmquist wrote:
>> Well, I don't think it's a hardware issue. The computer is less than a
>> year old and it's been used sporadically over the last year. Any
>> thoughts
>> on how to rule hardware out as an
On Saturday, September 05, 2020 12:34:37 PM Aaron Elmquist wrote:
> Well, I don't think it's a hardware issue. The computer is less than a
> year old and it's been used sporadically over the last year. Any thoughts
> on how to rule hardware out as an issue?
Sorry, no, not off the top of my head,
Well, I don't think it's a hardware issue. The computer is less than a
year old and it's been used sporadically over the last year. Any thoughts
on how to rule hardware out as an issue?
On Sat, Sep 5, 2020 at 6:18 AM wrote:
> On Friday, September 04, 2020 07:55:43 PM Aaron Elmquist wrote:
> >
On Friday, September 04, 2020 07:55:43 PM Aaron Elmquist wrote:
> I'm on debian buster using KDE as my GUI. My trackpoint was working quite
> well until a month or two ago (maybe more). Now it has some odd behavior
> where it will snap to the bottom of the screen every so often when I'm
> using it
Hi,
I'm on debian buster using KDE as my GUI. My trackpoint was working quite
well until a month or two ago (maybe more). Now it has some odd behavior
where it will snap to the bottom of the screen every so often when I'm
using it.
Seems like the input is very sensitive to the bottom direction.
On Thu, 27 Aug 2020 03:04:21 + (UTC)
Long Wind wrote:
> it crash, reboot can also fail
> at first i thought it's hard disk faultlater i realize that it's more
> likely caused by wireless bug i don't have time to file bug report
It looks like this issue has come up before in Buster.
https://
it crash, reboot can also fail
at first i thought it's hard disk faultlater i realize that it's more likely
caused by wireless bug
i don't have time to file bug report
Eugen Dedu wrote:
> Thank you to all for your comments. After the post, it worked ok until
> yesterday. Yesterday I shut down the laptop and noticed that the
> problem affected grub again, so X is not faulty. I opened the laptop,
> but only the back cover; the keyboard is on the front cover, an
Hi,
I have a Dell Latitude 5580 laptop, and have been a happy debian unstable user
for 20 years. I have a very weird problem with its builtin keyboard which slows
down my work significantly (ctrl-c, ctrl-x, ENTER etc. do not work):
Since several months ago some keys on my keyboard do not
On 8/12/20 5:24 AM, songbird wrote:
Dan Ritter wrote:
Doug McGarrett wrote:
Someone along this thread mentioned key-pullers. I have a couple of IBM
model M
keyboards that haven't been cleaned in years. They work well anyway, but I'd
like to clean
the keys. Where could I get one of those key-
Dan Ritter wrote:
> Doug McGarrett wrote:
>>
>> Someone along this thread mentioned key-pullers. I have a couple of IBM
>> model M
>> keyboards that haven't been cleaned in years. They work well anyway, but I'd
>> like to clean
>> the keys. Where could I get one of those key-puller tools?
>> (If
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Oh, one other thing I should mention -- on most keyboards (at least the ones
> I've cleaned) there are some metal pieces (essentially springs) under many of
> the larger (wider) keys. I am pretty sure they are intended to allow
> pressing
> either end (or the center
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Oh, one other thing I should mention -- on most keyboards (at least the ones
> I've cleaned) there are some metal pieces (essentially springs) under many of
> the larger (wider) keys. I am pretty sure they are intended to allow
> pressing
> either end (or the cente
Doug McGarrett wrote:
>
> Someone along this thread mentioned key-pullers. I have a couple of IBM
> model M
> keyboards that haven't been cleaned in years. They work well anyway, but I'd
> like to clean
> the keys. Where could I get one of those key-puller tools?
> (If you ever get a chance to ge
Oh, one other thing I should mention -- on most keyboards (at least the ones
I've cleaned) there are some metal pieces (essentially springs) under many of
the larger (wider) keys. I am pretty sure they are intended to allow pressing
either end (or the center) of those long keys (e.g., the space
On 8/11/20 9:53 AM, Dan Ritter wrote:
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
The way I clean (a non-laptop) keyboard is by disassembling it and putting all
the parts in a fresh (i.e., clean) washtub of warm water with dishsoap, let it
soak for a few minutes, then rinse with clean water and let dry, often
On Tuesday, August 11, 2020 10:28:37 AM Stefan Monnier wrote:
> That should work as well, but I was never able to disassemble any part
> of a keyboard without having the impression that I was breaking it, so
> I prefer to refrain from any such thing.
I started doing it a long time ago, so have pro
> The way I clean (a non-laptop) keyboard is by disassembling it and putting
> all
> the parts in a fresh (i.e., clean) washtub of warm water with dishsoap, let
> it
> soak for a few minutes, then rinse with clean water and let dry, often
> overnight (I almost always have a spare keyboard, but
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> The way I clean (a non-laptop) keyboard is by disassembling it and putting
> all
> the parts in a fresh (i.e., clean) washtub of warm water with dishsoap, let
> it
> soak for a few minutes, then rinse with clean water and let dry, often
> overnight (I almost always
On Monday, August 10, 2020 10:34:56 PM Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > IIRC, this is about a keyboard on a laptop -- I would not put any part of
> > that in a dishwasher.
>
> You sure can, tho you'll want to put only the keyboard (many other parts
> of a laptop can go safely into the dishwasher, actuall
t;technically"?
>
> What do you think might be "technically" going on?
On Mon 10 Aug 2020 at 13:56:43 (+0200), Eugen Dedu wrote:
>
> I have a Dell Latitude 5580 laptop, and have been a happy debian
> unstable user for 20 years. I have a very weird problem with its
> IIRC, this is about a keyboard on a laptop -- I would not put any part of
> that
> in a dishwasher.
You sure can, tho you'll want to put only the keyboard (many other parts
of a laptop can go safely into the dishwasher, actually, but indeed you
probably don't want to put the whole laptop in).
IIRC, this is about a keyboard on a laptop -- I would not put any part of that
in a dishwasher.
On Monday, August 10, 2020 07:04:39 PM Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > I suspect it is a hardware problem, and what I would do is get the manual
> > for the laptop and look into how hard it might be to clean
> I suspect it is a hardware problem, and what I would do is get the manual for
> the laptop and look into how hard it might be to clean the keyboard.
Definitely a good idea, since it's easy to do and can solve the problem
(depending on the problem's origin, obviously).
> You might try blowing o
On 8/10/20 7:56 AM, Eugen Dedu wrote:
Hi,
I have a Dell Latitude 5580 laptop, and have been a happy debian
unstable user for 20 years. I have a very weird problem with its
builtin keyboard which slows down my work significantly (ctrl-c,
ctrl-x, ENTER etc. do not work):
Since several
On Monday, August 10, 2020 07:56:43 AM Eugen Dedu wrote:
> I have a Dell Latitude 5580 laptop, and have been a happy debian
> unstable user for 20 years. I have a very weird problem with its
> builtin keyboard which slows down my work significantly (ctrl-c, ctrl-x,
> ENTER etc.
ENTER etc. do not work):
>
> Since several months ago some keys on my keyboard do not work, in all
> the applications (e.g. gnome-terminal, emacs, thundebird, firefox).
> When I press on them, very often nothing happens (usually, I press on
> them for 10 seconds to make appear
Hi,
I have a Dell Latitude 5580 laptop, and have been a happy debian
unstable user for 20 years. I have a very weird problem with its
builtin keyboard which slows down my work significantly (ctrl-c, ctrl-x,
ENTER etc. do not work):
Since several months ago some keys on my keyboard do not
On Saturday 02 May 2020 07:19:13 The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2020-05-02 at 06:57, Sven Joachim wrote:
> > On 2020-05-02 10:57 +0200, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> >> Am Samstag, 2. Mai 2020, 06:32:02 CEST schrieb Andrei POPESCU:
> >>> Ugh. For such situations one should either have good backups or
> >>> a r
On 2020-05-02 at 08:32, Carl Fink wrote:
> On 5/2/20 7:19 AM, The Wanderer wrote:
>
>> Manual recovery like this *can* be done, but I do not recommend
>> embarking upon it without very strong reason. (In my case, I needed
>> to fix the filenames and permissions of my entire /home partition
>> an
On 5/2/20 7:19 AM, The Wanderer wrote:
Manual recovery like this *can* be done, but I do not recommend
embarking upon it without very strong reason. (In my case, I needed to
fix the filenames and permissions of my entire /home partition anyway,
and that includes irreplaceable data measuring in te
On 2020-05-02 at 06:57, Sven Joachim wrote:
> On 2020-05-02 10:57 +0200, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
>
>> Am Samstag, 2. Mai 2020, 06:32:02 CEST schrieb Andrei POPESCU:
>>> Ugh. For such situations one should either have good backups or
>>> a reasonably fast and automated method of reinstalling the
>>>
On 2020-05-02 10:57 +0200, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> Am Samstag, 2. Mai 2020, 06:32:02 CEST schrieb Andrei POPESCU:
>> On Vi, 01 mai 20, 22:32:58, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
>> > Hello,
>> >
>> > I had an accidential / in a
>> >
>> > # chown -R install-user /xyz/dfak /
>> >
>> > command. Changing the owner
Am Samstag, 2. Mai 2020, 06:32:02 CEST schrieb Andrei POPESCU:
> On Vi, 01 mai 20, 22:32:58, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I had an accidential / in a
> >
> > # chown -R install-user /xyz/dfak /
> >
> > command. Changing the ownership / recursively is certainly not a good
> > idea.
>
On Vi, 01 mai 20, 22:32:58, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I had an accidential / in a
>
> # chown -R install-user /xyz/dfak /
>
> command. Changing the ownership / recursively is certainly not a good idea.
Ugh. For such situations one should either have good backups or a
reasonably fast a
gt; #chown -R root /etc /bin /usr ...
>
> (all directories why were owned by install-user).
>
> That was certainly overdone, so I used
>
> find . \! -user root -print
>
> on another system with a similar package list to get a list of files which
> are not owned by root.
>
used
find . \! -user root -print
on another system with a similar package list to get a list of files which are
not owned by root.
What still does not work is "su -".
The log in /var/log/auth.log is given by
May 1 22:07:46 h370 unix_chkpwd[12768]: check pass; user unknown
May 1 22:
Thanks Andrei. The firmware image (thanks Debian team!) did in fact
have my wi-fi driver, saving a step. There is still one issue, and one
point of feedback.
The issue is that despite not needing the second USB, the partitioner
still complains that the free space is too small and I cannot use
guid
On Mi, 11 mar 20, 12:58:21, Alan Tu wrote:
>
> I have the second USB inserted into a different USB port. I need this
> second USB to have my *.ucode firmware file on it, for my Intel wifi
> chip. Therefore this second USB has a FAT32 partition at first.
I would suggest you use an image that inclu
On 2020-03-11 12:58, Alan Tu wrote:
Hi, I need some ideas for getting Debian 10.3 to install and boot.
I prefer the "CD-1" Debian Installer image, available via [1] or [2].
I would wipe the target drive, install Debian, and then install the
Wi-Fi drivers.
David
[1]
https://cdimage.de
sees the wi-fi firmware file, gets onto the network, and
now its time to partition. At this point I'm ready to erase the second
USB and make it my permanent live USB. For whatever reason, the
installer complains that the free space is too small [2], and guided
partitioning does not work for me.
Suppo
On Wed, Nov 20, 2019 at 11:58:16AM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 20, 2019 at 07:55:33PM +0300, Reco wrote:
> > On Wed, Nov 20, 2019 at 05:03:36PM +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > > I'd recommend using the more flexible find, like so:
> > >
> > > find ping -type f -name "*.sh" -exec
On Wed, Nov 20, 2019 at 07:55:33PM +0300, Reco wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 20, 2019 at 05:03:36PM +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > I'd recommend using the more flexible find, like so:
> >
> > find ping -type f -name "*.sh" -exec chmod -v +x {} +
>
> find ping -type f -name '*.sh' -print0 | xargs -0
Hi.
On Wed, Nov 20, 2019 at 05:03:36PM +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Wed, Nov 20, 2019 at 02:06:07PM +, Bonno Bloksma wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I have a directory with some sub directories and all of those have one or
> > more shells scripts.
> > This script need the execute bit s
On Wed, Nov 20, 2019 at 02:06:07PM +, Bonno Bloksma wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I have a directory with some sub directories and all of those have one or
> more shells scripts.
> This script need the execute bit set so I thought a simple chmod -R -v +x
> ping/*.sh would do it, NOT :-(
On Wed, Nov 20, 2019 at 02:06:07PM +, Bonno Bloksma wrote:
> So now want only the *.sh (shell script) files
>
> beheerdertio@einpingme:~$ ls -R ping/*.sh
> ping/getloss-all.sh ping/getloss.sh ping/showloss-today.sh
> ping/showtime-today.sh
> But neither recurses into the directories.
>
Hi,
I have a directory with some sub directories and all of those have one or more
shells scripts.
This script need the execute bit set so I thought a simple chmod -R -v +x
ping/*.sh would do it, NOT :-(
Why not? ls does not seem to recurce either so it must be something general I
am missing
Fi
On 6/5/19 10:26 PM, Simon S wrote:
> I think i found the culprit:
>
> I use the debian apt repo for machinekit and the rt kernel:
> deb [arch=armhf] http://repos.rcn-ee.com/debian/ stretch main
>
> This repo installs libGL.so.1.0.0 instead of libGL.so.1.2.0.
> I forced to use the default debian a
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