On 2024-11-29 03:06, Darac Marjal wrote:
* "systemctl list-units --all" will list all the services installed on
your system. You can search that for something likely looking (e.g.
something beginning with "mysql" or similar).
this works for me. thank you for your help.
mysql it successed finally.
My question is how I can know the installed package name rather than
by guessing?
I can think of a couple of options:
* "dpkg -L mysql-server" will give you a list of files installed by that
package. If you're lucky, one of those will be a .service fi
> They got failed, no package was found.
>
> Then I run systemctl restart mysql it successed finally.
>
> My question is how I can know the installed package name rather than by
> guessing?
$ dpkg -l | grep -i mysql
But that gives you the Debian package name which is not what
question is how I can know the installed package name rather than by
guessing?
Thanks
On Thu, Mar 23, 2023 at 10:50:48AM -0400, John wrote:
> I get an error message which is absolutely the last thing before poweroff
> that is NOT ever reported in kern.log nor by dmesg.
>
> It reads like this:
> 48.255417 DMAR: DRHD: handling fault status reg 2
> 48.255457 DMR: [DMA Read] request
On 2023-03-23 at 10:50, John wrote:
> I get an error message which is absolutely the last thing before
> poweroff that is NOT ever reported in kern.log nor by dmesg.
Typically, the very last messages from before power-off would be
expected to come from the kernel, as it should be the last thing s
I get an error message which is absolutely the last thing before poweroff that
is NOT ever reported in kern.log nor by dmesg.
It reads like this:
48.255417 DMAR: DRHD: handling fault status reg 2
48.255457 DMR: [DMA Read] request device [00:17.0] PASID fault addr
aboe9000 [fault reason
Ok
I will take this matter up with the application developers
thanks for your assistance to date.
On 29/01/22 06:10, Bijan Soleymani wrote:
On 2022-01-28 11:36, Patrick Dunford wrote:
It is not relevant whether the issue occurs in other applications
because they all use the file open dialogs
On 2022-01-28 11:36, Patrick Dunford wrote:
It is not relevant whether the issue occurs in other applications
because they all use the file open dialogs in ways that are specific to
their application which the end user has no control over and therefore
it cannot be tested for
If it doesn't oc
On Sat 29 Jan 2022 at 05:36:25 (+1300), Patrick Dunford wrote:
> On 29/01/22 05:16, Bijan Soleymani wrote:
> > On 2022-01-28 11:10, Patrick Dunford wrote:
> > > Which is the name of the package relating to the file open
> > > dialog to use in a bug report?
> >
> > I think it depends on the applica
Hi
It is not relevant whether the issue occurs in other applications
because they all use the file open dialogs in ways that are specific to
their application which the end user has no control over and therefore
it cannot be tested for
The application has been tested on various operating sys
On 2022-01-28 11:10, Patrick Dunford wrote:
Which is the name of the package relating to the file open dialog to use
in a bug report?
I think it depends on the application :)
Do you see it in other applications?
If so, you can figure out what GUI toolkit/environment it is gtk, qt,
gnome, kde
Hello
I am using debian bookworm with kde and have noticed a bug in an
application which is using a file open dialog. The problem only occurs
in bookworm and is not present when using the same combination of kde
and software on a system running bullseye.
Which is the name of the package rela
On Tue 02 Mar 2021 at 07:48:57 (-0800), Bug Report wrote:
> I would to know the proper way to describe the package name for the
> 10.7.0 and 10.8.0 stable release installer? I plan on filing a bug
> report, and thought I would check here first.
debian-installer
Cheers,
David.
I would to know the proper way to describe the package name for the
10.7.0 and 10.8.0 stable release installer? I plan on filing a bug
report, and thought I would check here first.
RS
Dave writes:
> I am trying to submit a bug report - but as a novice, I do not know
> what "package" to report in the ReportBug program.
Bluez (but send the bug report to Raspbian, not Debian). The
maintainers will sort it out if it's actually one of the libraries.
--
John Hasler
jhas...@newsguy
Good Day,
Yesterday (28 Mar 2020), I updated my Raspberry Pi 4 running Raspbian
Buster and only three files were installed:
bluez
libbluetooth3
libicu63
Prior to these files being installed, both my Bluetooth keyboard and mouse
functioned normally. Once the three files were installed and the
No, but since every one works in memory, one of its segments may be
defective.
Memtest writes and reads ... but not concurrent.
2017-08-27 23:16 GMT+02:00 Fungi4All :
>
> From: zoltan...@gmail.com
> To: Debian User
>
> I would try to exchange the memories by swapping...
>
> 2017-08-27 16:36 GMT+
> From: zoltan...@gmail.com
> To: Debian User
>
> I would try to exchange the memories by swapping...
>
> 2017-08-27 16:36 GMT+02:00 Alexander V. Makartsev :
>
>> Package: linux-image-4.9.0-3-amd64
>> Version: 4.9.30-2+deb9u3
>> Maintainer: Debian Kernel Team
>>
>> I've already checked memory wit
I would try to exchange the memories by swapping...
2017-08-27 16:36 GMT+02:00 Alexander V. Makartsev :
> Package: linux-image-4.9.0-3-amd64
> Version: 4.9.30-2+deb9u3
> Maintainer: Debian Kernel Team
>
> I've already checked memory with memtest86+ and found no errors. My
> hardware pretty recen
Package: linux-image-4.9.0-3-amd64
Version: 4.9.30-2+deb9u3
Maintainer: Debian Kernel Team
I've already checked memory with memtest86+ and found no errors. My
hardware pretty recent (Skylake i5 CPU and H170 Chipset based mobo)
Also these errors always begin with "kernel: alsa-sink-ALC88: Corrupte
kernel team
linux-image-
May be a memory error?
2017. aug. 27. 12:13 ezt írta ("Alexander V. Makartsev" ):
Hello.
On rare occasion, I have these strange system lockups that seems to be
tied to "ALC88" sound driver\kernel module.
I am unable to determine package name
Hello.
On rare occasion, I have these strange system lockups that seems to be
tied to "ALC88" sound driver\kernel module.
I am unable to determine package name to file a bug report.
All information I have is this syslog from previous boot. Got it with
"journalctl -b -1"
>
nation again it sends disable command
>> again! it doesn't toggle thee state, it disable it in all cases! so I want
>> to know the package name to report !
>> Thank you in advance!
>
> Is the problem specific to KDE? For example, does the touchpad perform
> as expecte
state, it disable it in all cases! so I want
> to know the package name to report !
> Thank you in advance!
Is the problem specific to KDE? For example, does the touchpad perform
as expected if you run another desktop environment such as Xfce or
LXDE?
If the problem is specific to KDE, I
in all cases! so I want
> to know the package name to report !
> Thank you in advance!
Hi.. I don't know what package you're looking for, am just writing
because it's not clear if you find yourself locked out completely. My
experience here is within Xfce4 desktop manager,
Hi, I am using Debian 9 (Testing) with KDE
when I press hotkeys for disabling touchpad (FN + F1) the touchpad got
disabled but when I press the combination again it sends disable command
again! it doesn't toggle thee state, it disable it in all cases! so I want
to know the package name to r
t; Hi all.
>
> Hello.
>
>> I'd like to send bug report by using reportbug.
>> But I couldn't judge which package name I choice.
>>
>> The other day, I upgrade and dist-upgrade for my sid.
>> Since then, this error occured in booting.
On Tue, 22 Dec 2015 14:08:09 +0900, Katsutoshi Itoh
wrote:
> Hi all.
Hello.
> I'd like to send bug report by using reportbug.
> But I couldn't judge which package name I choice.
>
> The other day, I upgrade and dist-upgrade for my sid.
> Since then, this error oc
Hi all.
I'd like to send bug report by using reportbug.
But I couldn't judge which package name I choice.
The other day, I upgrade and dist-upgrade for my sid.
Since then, this error occured in booting.
Could you teach me which package i choose?
[3.182434] [drm:intel_pipe_conf
On 07/07/11 at 09:43pm, Wolodja Wentland wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 07, 2011 at 13:39 +0100, kuLa wrote:
> > On 07/07/11 13:17, Wolodja Wentland wrote:
> > > As always there are multiple to do this :)
> > >
> > > * dpkg -S /path/to/file
> > > * apt-file search /path/to/file
> > > * dlocate -
Wolodja Wentland wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 07, 2011 at 10:22 +0100, Joao Ferreira Gmail wrote:
>> how can I tell which package installs a given file ?
>> something like:
>>
>> # find-package-from-file /usr/lib/libxml2.so.2
>> libxml2
>
> As always there are multiple to do this :)
>
> * dpkg -S /
On Thu, Jul 07, 2011 at 13:39 +0100, kuLa wrote:
> On 07/07/11 13:17, Wolodja Wentland wrote:
> > As always there are multiple to do this :)
> >
> > * dpkg -S /path/to/file
> > * apt-file search /path/to/file
> > * dlocate -S /path/to/file
> >
> > I prefer to use either apt-file or dl
On Thu, 07 Jul 2011 10:37:57 +0100, Joao Ferreira Gmail wrote:
> On Thu, 2011-07-07 at 10:24 +0100, kuLa wrote:
>> dpkg -S /usr/lib/libxml2.so.2
>
> cool. thx
And for packages that are not installed in your system you can use the
online query ("package contents") which avoids the needing of ins
Joao Ferreira Gmail writes:
> how can I tell which package installs a given file ?
apt-file search "given file"
--
html messages are obsolete
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Arch
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 07/07/11 13:17, Wolodja Wentland wrote:
> As always there are multiple to do this :)
>
> * dpkg -S /path/to/file
> * apt-file search /path/to/file
> * dlocate -S /path/to/file
>
> I prefer to use either apt-file or dlocate. The former
On Thu, Jul 07, 2011 at 10:22 +0100, Joao Ferreira Gmail wrote:
> how can I tell which package installs a given file ?
> something like:
>
> # find-package-from-file /usr/lib/libxml2.so.2
> libxml2
As always there are multiple to do this :)
* dpkg -S /path/to/file
* apt-file search /path
On Thu, 2011-07-07 at 10:24 +0100, kuLa wrote:
> dpkg -S /usr/lib/libxml2.so.2
cool. thx
Joao
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive: http://lists.debian.org/1310031477.2380.3.ca..
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 07/07/11 10:22, Joao Ferreira Gmail wrote:
> Hello,
>
> how can I tell which package installs a given file ?
>
> something like:
>
> # find-package-from-file /usr/lib/libxml2.so.2
> libxml2
hi,
dpkg is your friend :-)
dpkg -S /usr/lib/libxml2.s
Hello,
how can I tell which package installs a given file ?
something like:
# find-package-from-file /usr/lib/libxml2.so.2
libxml2
thx
jmf
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive:
packages you can install
all of the build dependencies with
$ sudo apt-get build-dep $SOMEPACKAGENAME
Such as:
$ sudo apt-get build-dep gzip
> If at any time I want to search if a package is present in Debian or not, how
> do I search for it?
> as eg. Software called ABCB, has Debian pac
PRAKHAR gaur wrote:
--Forwarded Message Attachment--
Date: Thu, 9 Sep 2010 13:38:05 -0700
From: field.engin...@gmail.com
To: prakhar_aaid...@hotmail.com; debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Package Name Confusion
Yes Prakhar, please tell us what you're wanting to do?
My guess i
On Fri, 10 Sep 2010 03:39:36 -0400 (EDT), Prakhar Gaur wrote:
> Jimmy Johnson wrote:
>> Yes Prakhar, please tell us what you're wanting to do?
>> My guess is you are wanting to build a kernel?
>
> I am trying to use a tutorial at Linux.com to build a Kernel Module.
> http://www.linux.com/learn/l
--Forwarded Message Attachment--
Date: Thu, 9 Sep 2010 13:38:05 -0700
From: field.engin...@gmail.com
To: prakhar_aaid...@hotmail.com; debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: Package Name Confusion
>Yes Prakhar, please tell us what you're wanting to do?
>My guess is you are wanting
PRAKHAR gaur wrote:
Hi,
I think I did not put the question properly.
The question is...
There is a package called as "kernel-devel" in Fedora, what is the equivalent
one in Debian?
Any help would be appreciated,
Prakhar Gaur
Yes Prakhar, please tell us what you're wanting to do?
My guess
On Thu, 9 Sep 2010 16:23:00 +0530
PRAKHAR gaur wrote:
>
> Hi,
> I think I did not put the question properly.
> The question is...
> There is a package called as "kernel-devel" in Fedora, what is the
> equivalent one in Debian?
>
> Any help would be appreciated,
>
> Prakhar Gaur
>
Looks a lot
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi!
PRAKHAR gaur wrote:
> I think I did not put the question properly.
> The question is...
> There is a package called as "kernel-devel" in Fedora, what is the equivalent
> one in Debian?
Since most of us know more about debian than about fedora, i
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
On 09/09/2010 06:53 AM, PRAKHAR gaur wrote:
>
> Hi,
> I think I did not put the question properly.
> The question is...
> There is a package called as "kernel-devel" in Fedora, what is the equivalent
> one in Debian?
>
> Any help would be apprecia
Hi,
I think I did not put the question properly.
The question is...
There is a package called as "kernel-devel" in Fedora, what is the equivalent
one in Debian?
Any help would be appreciated,
Prakhar Gaur
ow about "build-essentials",
> "module-init-tools".
> The author mentions "kernel-devel"in Fedora, what is the equivalent one in
> Debian?
> If at any time I want to search if a package is present in Debian or not, how
> do I search for it?
> as e
or mentions "kernel-devel"in Fedora, what is the equivalent one in
Debian?
If at any time I want to search if a package is present in Debian or not, how
do I search for it?
as eg. Software called ABCB, has Debian package name abc.deb.
How do I get to know that ABCB is named abc.deb ?
BTW
On 2010-07-26 05:57 +0200, Ron Johnson wrote:
> And if you're into The Once And Future Apt, it's:
> # apt-get -d install xserver-xorg-core=2:1.8.99.905-1
Seems you need to be root to do this, which is not the case for
$ aptitude download xserver-xorg-core=2:1.8.99.905-1
Sven
--
To UNSUBSCRIB
On 07/25/2010 01:01 PM, Sven Joachim wrote:
On 2010-07-25 19:43 +0200, Malte Forkel wrote:
I can use
apt-get source[=version]
to fetch and extract a source package, given its name (and optionally,
its version).
But is there any equivalent for binary packages? I.e., is there a tool
that dow
Am 25.07.2010 20:01, schrieb Sven Joachim:
> Yes, aptitude can do that. Here's an example fetching the experimental
> version of xserver-xorg-core:
>
> ,
> | % LANG=C aptitude download xserver-xorg-core=2:1.8.99.905-1
> | Get:1 http://ftp.de.debian.org experimental/main xserver-xorg-core
> 2
On 2010-07-25 19:43 +0200, Malte Forkel wrote:
> I can use
>apt-get source [=version]
> to fetch and extract a source package, given its name (and optionally,
> its version).
>
> But is there any equivalent for binary packages? I.e., is there a tool
> that downloads a binary package, given the
I can use
apt-get source [=version]
to fetch and extract a source package, given its name (and optionally,
its version).
But is there any equivalent for binary packages? I.e., is there a tool
that downloads a binary package, given the package's name (and
optionally its version)?
Thanks, Malte
On Wed, 26 Aug 2009 10:57:35 +0530 Kousik Maiti
sent this information:
>Use cups.
Thank you
Kousik
--
Registered Linux User:- 329524
.
Life is this simple: We are living in a world that is absolutely
transparent and the Divine is shining thr
Found it thank you.
Sorry for the noise.
Charlie
--
Registered Linux User:- 329524
.
The first thing you learn in life is you're a fool. The last thing you
learn is you're the same fool. Sometimes I think I understand
everything. Then I regai
Use cups.
On Wed, Aug 26, 2009 at 10:50 AM, Charlie wrote:
>
> Just got a new hard drive after the old one died, trying to get printer
> working, can't recall the package name that has all the printer
> information and drivers.
>
> Can someone please inform me.
Just got a new hard drive after the old one died, trying to get printer
working, can't recall the package name that has all the printer
information and drivers.
Can someone please inform me.
Thank you
Charlie
--
Registered Linux User:- 3
).
>
> How does one get some text in the search box in aptitude to match the
> start of line or end of line of the package name, or alternatively,
> search by description?
I run into this every time I install on a new box. I do a multi-term
search:
mc ~dcommander
Since only mc ha
used apt-get to install mc).
How does one get some text in the search box in aptitude to match the start
of line or end of line of the package name, or alternatively, search by
description?
The search in aptitude is a regular expression with some extensions,
use ^ to match beginning and $ to match end
e probably aware that you can use "aptitude install mc", aren't
you?
> How does one get some text in the search box in aptitude to match the
> start of line or end of line of the package name, or alternatively,
> search by description?
The standard chars ^ and $ match t
gt; How does one get some text in the search box in aptitude to match the start
> of line or end of line of the package name, or alternatively, search by
> description?
The search in aptitude is a regular expression with some extensions,
use ^ to match beginning and $ to
tart of line or end of line of the package name, or alternatively,
search by description?
Arthur.
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Jeff D writes:
[...]
> something like this:
> $ dpkg -S /bin/bash
> bash: /bin/bash
Ron Johnson writes:
[...]
> Also:
> $ apt-file search /bin/bash
> bash: /bin/bash
> bash: /usr/bin/bashbug
> bash-minimal: /bin/bash-minimal
> bash-static: /bin/bash-static
These don't look like what I expe
On 01/07/09 19:32, Jeff D wrote:
On Wed, 7 Jan 2009, Harry Putnam wrote:
Last time I ran debian was several yrs ago.. back then I learned a way
using dpkg to extract the packagename of files found on the
machine... Assuming they came in using apt and dpkg.
I even kept a note about it which of
On Wed, 7 Jan 2009, Harry Putnam wrote:
> Last time I ran debian was several yrs ago.. back then I learned a way
> using dpkg to extract the packagename of files found on the
> machine... Assuming they came in using apt and dpkg.
>
> I even kept a note about it which of course is no where to be fo
Last time I ran debian was several yrs ago.. back then I learned a way
using dpkg to extract the packagename of files found on the
machine... Assuming they came in using apt and dpkg.
I even kept a note about it which of course is no where to be found
now that I need it again.
Anyone know how to
In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, David Watson wrote:
[...]
> Hello Kees,
>
> The capital A means that aptitude has marked the package as being=20
> automatically installed. This means that the package was installed because=
>=20
> it is a dependency of something you asked to be installed, and wil
2007/6/17, Kees de Koster <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
Hello, can't find the meaning from the capital letter A before the
package name in aptitude, not in the help, Faq and man, also looked
around in Google.
So maybe somebody can tell me.
___
The Package List
The package list display
On Sunday 17 June 2007 20:38:43 Kees de Koster wrote:
> Hello, can't find the meaning from the capital letter A before the
> package name in aptitude, not in the help, Faq and man, also looked
> around in Google.
>
> So maybe somebody can tell me.
>
> Kees
> --
>
Hello, can't find the meaning from the capital letter A before the
package name in aptitude, not in the help, Faq and man, also looked
around in Google.
So maybe somebody can tell me.
Kees
--
Satyrs have more faun.
Linux Registered User #300181 | GnuPG Key ID: 0x1E2F467B
--
To UNSUBS
No, I did not know about that. Neat trick. Thanks
Tony
-Original Message-
From: celejar [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Thursday, January 25, 2007 11:35 AM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Re: screen width of dpkg -l|grep package name
On 1/25/07, Tony Heal <[EMAIL PROTEC
On 1/25/07, Tony Heal <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[snip]
Here is my issue. If I use dpkg –l | grep cupsys I get this. Note that the
package name is incomplete. I believe this is caused by the screen width
getting set to 80 columns.
ii cupsys 1.1.23-10sarge Common UNIX Pr
I am trying to determine how to get a complete list of installed packages
using 'dpkg -l'.
Here is my issue. If I use dpkg -l | grep cupsys I get this. Note that the
package name is incomplete. I believe this is caused by the screen width
getting set to 80 columns.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Timothy Wu wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am trying to upgrade libstdc++.so.6.0.8 to a newer version in the
> /usr/lib directory. I used aptitude to install libstdc++6-dev
> package. But the /usr/lib so file is still not updated. I suspect
> that's not the package
On Sat 2006-12-02 17:37:29 +0800, Timothy Wu wrote:
> Given an existing file, Is there any method to find out which package the
> file comes from? If I can find out which package the file is from, maybe I
> can guess the name of the newer package.
dpkg -S /path/to/file
--
David Hart <[EMAIL PRO
Hi,
I am trying to upgrade libstdc++.so.6.0.8 to a newer version in the /usr/lib
directory. I used aptitude to install libstdc++6-dev package. But the
/usr/lib so file is still not updated. I suspect that's not the package for
it.
Given an existing file, Is there any method to find out which pac
David Baron wrote:
Now we have four.
1. Vmware: Proprietary. I installed their free version and could not complete
bootup afterwards. Booted up knoppix and removed the vmware. Problem was with
those ip numbers.
I installed this and the previous beta's and have no problems running
anything.
Now we have four.
1. Vmware: Proprietary. I installed their free version and could not complete
bootup afterwards. Booted up knoppix and removed the vmware. Problem was with
those ip numbers.
2. Qemu: More of an emulater, very safe and very easy. Requires a non-free ko
to run acceptably. Knoppi
On 6/8/06, Lei Kong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all,
My system is debian testing, I just found I lost man pages
for basic system calls, like open(), read() write() ...
Can someone tell me what is the package I need to install?
manpages-dev
Regards.
--
http://arhuaco.org/
--
To UNSUBSCRIB
Hi all,
My system is debian testing, I just found I lost man pages
for basic system calls, like open(), read() write() ...
Can someone tell me what is the package I need to install?
Thanks.
Lei Kong
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Conta
On Monday September 6 at 11:18pm
Craig Jackson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> If I would like to know the name of a package, for example dhcp,
> installed on the system, I would run
>
> dpkg -l | grep dhcp
>
> Most of the time I get the right name and I'm happy. But there are
> times when t
On Tue, 2004-09-07 at 05:18, Craig Jackson wrote:
> Hi,
> If I would like to know the name of a package, for example dhcp,
> installed on the system, I would run
>
> dpkg -l | grep dhcp
>
> Most of the time I get the right name and I'm happy. But there are times
> when the name of the package is
On Mon, Sep 06, 2004 at 11:18:42PM -0500, Craig Jackson wrote:
> Hi,
> If I would like to know the name of a package, for example dhcp,
> installed on the system, I would run
>
> dpkg -l | grep dhcp
>
> Most of the time I get the right name and I'm happy. But there are times
> when the name of th
On Mon, 6 Sep 2004 23:18:42 -0500
Craig Jackson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
> If I would like to know the name of a package, for example dhcp,
> installed on the system, I would run
>
> dpkg -l | grep dhcp
>
> Most of the time I get the right name and I'm happy. But there are
> times when t
Hi,
If I would like to know the name of a package, for example dhcp,
installed on the system, I would run
dpkg -l | grep dhcp
Most of the time I get the right name and I'm happy. But there are times
when the name of the package is so long that I cannot tell what the name
is.
In that situation if
On Sun, 2004-08-22 at 01:17 -0400, Kevin Mark wrote:
> On Sat, Aug 21, 2004 at 02:06:30PM -0400, Greg Folkert wrote:
> > On Sat, 2004-08-21 at 12:12 -0400, John Harrold wrote:
> > > Hey,
> > >
> > > I was trying to run a perl script on a Debian box and it kept complaining
> > > that I didn't have
On Sat, Aug 21, 2004 at 02:06:30PM -0400, Greg Folkert wrote:
> On Sat, 2004-08-21 at 12:12 -0400, John Harrold wrote:
> > Hey,
> >
> > I was trying to run a perl script on a Debian box and it kept complaining
> > that I didn't have the right perl module installed (in this case
> > the Date::Forma
o Debian, and I'm very pleased with it. Though, I'm
> not yet familiar with all of the nuances.
Hi folks,
maybe it needs a programmatic solution?
debian perl function finder
input: standard perl formated name
output: debian package name
% foobar date::format
libtimedate-perl
or may
On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 15:25:14 -0400
John Harrold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Sometime in August Jacob S. assaulted the keyboard and produced:
>
> | I agree it can be a little confusing at times.
> |
> | A quick search on packages.debian.org for "date::format" returned
> the| following:
> |
> |
Sometime in August Jacob S. assaulted the keyboard and produced:
| I agree it can be a little confusing at times.
|
| A quick search on packages.debian.org for "date::format" returned the
| following:
|
| usr/share/man/man3/Date::Format.3pm.gz - interpreters/libtimedate-perl
So is this the defa
On Sat, 2004-08-21 at 12:12 -0400, John Harrold wrote:
> Hey,
>
> I was trying to run a perl script on a Debian box and it kept complaining
> that I didn't have the right perl module installed (in this case
> the Date::Format module). Typically typically I can look through the
> available packages
On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 12:12:11 -0400
John Harrold <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hey,
>
> I was trying to run a perl script on a Debian box and it kept
> complaining that I didn't have the right perl module installed (in
> this case the Date::Format module). Typically typically I can look
> through t
Hello!
On Sat, Aug 21, 2004 at 12:12:11PM -0400, John Harrold wrote:
> [...]
> with 'date' in them. So I was wondering if there was something out there
> that maps perl modules to the Debian package that provides them. Perhaps I
> just need to be more creative when using apt-cache.
In general the
Hey,
I was trying to run a perl script on a Debian box and it kept complaining
that I didn't have the right perl module installed (in this case
the Date::Format module). Typically typically I can look through the
available packages with 'apt-cache search' and find the correct debian
package to ins
On Mon, Oct 28, 2002 at 04:34:38PM -0500, Paul Smith wrote:
> %% Dave Sherohman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> ds> Quick and easy way to convince them: "Really? How's about I stand
> ds> here and watch you exploit it." Shouldn't take more than 5-10
> ds> minutes of banging their head against
%% Dave Sherohman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
ds> On Fri, Oct 25, 2002 at 04:58:09PM -0700, nate wrote:
>> tripped dozens of rules in my IDS and came back to me pissing their
>> pants saying my SSH was vulnerable because it wasn't the absolute newest,
>> took some time to convince them(ha
On Fri, Oct 25, 2002 at 04:58:09PM -0700, nate wrote:
> tripped dozens of rules in my IDS and came back to me pissing their
> pants saying my SSH was vulnerable because it wasn't the absolute newest,
> took some time to convince them(had to talk to one of their engineers
> who understood what backp
1 - 100 of 122 matches
Mail list logo