—Racecar backwards is racecar, racecar upside down is expensive—
—My wife can type tesseradecades while drinking a cup of tea—
On Sun 04 Jul 2021 at 15:38:45 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sun, Jul 04, 2021 at 03:34:22PM -0400, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> > On 7/4/21, David Wright wrote:
> > >
On Sun, Jul 04, 2021 at 03:34:22PM -0400, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> On 7/4/21, David Wright wrote:
> > On Fri 02 Jul 2021 at 02:24:20 (-0400), Albretch Mueller wrote:
> >> David Chartash at the corpora research mailing list pointed out to me
> >> I could find what I wanted at:
> >>
> >> http://k
On 7/4/21, David Wright wrote:
> On Fri 02 Jul 2021 at 02:24:20 (-0400), Albretch Mueller wrote:
>> David Chartash at the corpora research mailing list pointed out to me
>> I could find what I wanted at:
>>
>> http://kbdlayout.info/
>
> That's for Windows, isn't it.
Yes, but at the end of the
On Sun, Jul 04, 2021 at 10:25:13AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
[...]
> My point about the mapping of unicode → keys depressed² seems to
> have been missed. On this keyboard, I can type ø by
> . holding AltGr and typing o
> . typing CapsLock / o
> . typing CapsLock o /
Ah, Compose on CapsLock. Gre
On Fri 02 Jul 2021 at 02:24:20 (-0400), Albretch Mueller wrote:
> David Chartash at the corpora research mailing list pointed out to me
> I could find what I wanted at:
>
> http://kbdlayout.info/
That's for Windows, isn't it.
> and within Debian using `man 5 keyboard`
Yes, as it says, this w
It occurred to me that my use of the term "mapping" may have been a
little confusing. I used it in general and as part of my corpora
research I am moving away from UTF-8. That is all I am doing.
lbrtchx
On 7/2/21, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> you're starting from some MASSIVELY incorrect assumptions,
> but up until now, correcting all the background noise was never
> important, because you were just poking around out of curiosity. Or so
> we thought.
I don't understand why "we" think "I was just pok
On Fri, Jul 02, 2021 at 02:24:20AM -0400, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> From your examples you included I will only need yielded glyphs if
> they are commonly used in a language. Now, defining "commonly used"
> would be an entirely different, yet valid question.
>
> I will have to code my way throug
David Chartash at the corpora research mailing list pointed out to me
I could find what I wanted at:
http://kbdlayout.info/
and within Debian using `man 5 keyboard`
> There's no such table: it cannot exist. Which unicode number would you
> assign to CapsLock, or RightShift. There are several
On Thu 01 Jul 2021 at 12:46:01 (-0400), Albretch Mueller wrote:
> $ ls -l /etc/console-setup/boottime.kmap.gz
> ls: cannot access '/etc/console-setup/boottime.kmap.gz': No such file
> or directory
> $
>
> Or did you mean in the /etc/console-setup of the installation CD/DVD?
> ~
No idea. That was
On Thu, Jul 01, 2021 at 12:46:01PM -0400, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> Given the baseline option a user chooses as "language" during
> installation, the codes sent by the keyboard should be interpreted.
> There should be files with the associations of (unicode) numbers and
> keys on a keyboard. I d
$ ls -l /etc/console-setup/boottime.kmap.gz
ls: cannot access '/etc/console-setup/boottime.kmap.gz': No such file
or directory
$
Or did you mean in the /etc/console-setup of the installation CD/DVD?
~
$ file /etc/console-setup/compose.KOI8-R.inc
/etc/console-setup/compose.KOI8-R.inc: ASCII text
On Thu 01 Jul 2021 at 01:59:41 (-0400), Albretch Mueller wrote:
> there should be files mapping (most probably unicode) number <->
> gliph for each language.
> From where can I get them?
I'm not quite sure I can reconcile your subject line and text.
For the body text, you could look at a site li
* Albretch Mueller [21-07/01=Th 01:59 -0400]:
> there should be files mapping (most probably unicode) number
> <-> glyph for each language. From where can I get them?
Does have what you want?
If not, try `locate kmap`.
On Monday, September 22, 2014 1:50:02 AM UTC+5:30, Paul van der Vlis wrote:
> op 21-09-14 14:33, lee schreef:
> > Hi,
> > what's the Debian or Linux equivalent to MS Windows terminal server
> > sessions through the remote desktop thing they have?
> > I would like to be able to let a user work remot
2014/09/21 21:52 "lee" :
>
> Hi,
>
> what's the Debian or Linux equivalent to MS Windows terminal server
> sessions through the remote desktop thing they have?
>
> I would like to be able to let a user work remotely in an X11 session
> (preferably with fvwm, if I have to xfce, if it can't be avoide
- Original Message -
> From: "lee"
>
> Hi,
>
> what's the Debian or Linux equivalent to MS Windows terminal server
> sessions through the remote desktop thing they have?
>
> I would like to be able to let a user work remotely in an X11 session
> (preferably with fvwm, if I have to xfce,
- Original Message -
> From: "Joe"
>
> On Sun, 21 Sep 2014 14:33:53 +0200
> lee wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > what's the Debian or Linux equivalent to MS Windows terminal server
> > sessions through the remote desktop thing they have?
> >
> > I would like to be able to let a user work remo
- Original Message -
> From: "lee"
>
> John Hasler writes:
>
> > lee writes:
> >> what's the Debian or Linux equivalent to MS Windows terminal server
> >> sessions through the remote desktop thing they have?
> >
> >> I would like to be able to let a user work remotely in an X11 session
op 21-09-14 14:33, lee schreef:
> Hi,
>
> what's the Debian or Linux equivalent to MS Windows terminal server
> sessions through the remote desktop thing they have?
>
> I would like to be able to let a user work remotely in an X11 session
> (preferably with fvwm, if I have to xfce, if it can't be
John Hasler writes:
> lee writes:
>> what's the Debian or Linux equivalent to MS Windows terminal server
>> sessions through the remote desktop thing they have?
>
>> I would like to be able to let a user work remotely in an X11 session
>> (preferably with fvwm, if I have to xfce, if it can't be a
lee writes:
> what's the Debian or Linux equivalent to MS Windows terminal server
> sessions through the remote desktop thing they have?
> I would like to be able to let a user work remotely in an X11 session
> (preferably with fvwm, if I have to xfce, if it can't be avoided gnome
> --- KDE only c
On Sun, 21 Sep 2014 14:33:53 +0200
lee wrote:
> Hi,
>
> what's the Debian or Linux equivalent to MS Windows terminal server
> sessions through the remote desktop thing they have?
>
> I would like to be able to let a user work remotely in an X11 session
> (preferably with fvwm, if I have to xfce
> -- Forwarded message --
> Date: Tue, 13 May 2014 06:03:30
> From: Testosticore
> To: Scott Ferguson ,
> debian-user@lists.debian.org
> Subject: Re: Re: Debian Linux 7 and Realtek soundcards
> Resent-Date: Mon, 12 May 2014 22:21:09 + (UTC)
>
On 13/05/14 17:12, Filip wrote:
> On Tue, 13 May 2014 16:55:43 +1000
> Scott Ferguson wrote:
>
>>
>> Which release?
>>
>> pciutils 1:3.1.9-6
>>
>
> Debian Jessie, pciutils 1:3.1.9-6.
>
> HP hardware.
> It all depends on the hardware ...
Sort of. The hardware populates /proc/bus/pci, but
/u
On Tue, 13 May 2014 16:55:43 +1000
Scott Ferguson wrote:
>>
> >> Why?
> >>
> >> Why when searching for "audio" would you need case-insensitive??
> >>
> >> Multimedia *audio* controller
> >>
> >>
> >> An extra three keystrokes for no gain. Extra noise, no signal.
> >>
> >
> > $ lspci |grep audio
On 13/05/14 16:16, Filip wrote:
> On Tue, 13 May 2014 13:55:04 +1000
> Scott Ferguson wrote:
>
>
>>>
>>> $ lspci | grep audio
>>>
>>> Use instead:
>>>
>>> $ lspci | grep -i audio
>>
>> Why?
>>
>> Why when searching for "audio" would you need case-insensitive??
>>
>> Multimedia *audio* controller
On Tue, 13 May 2014 13:55:04 +1000
Scott Ferguson wrote:
> >
> > $ lspci | grep audio
> >
> > Use instead:
> >
> > $ lspci | grep -i audio
>
> Why?
>
> Why when searching for "audio" would you need case-insensitive??
>
> Multimedia *audio* controller
>
>
> An extra three keystrokes for n
On 13/05/14 08:03, Testosticore wrote:
> If this doesn't work:
Please don't top post. Interleaved posting is the polite protocol for
this list.
>
> $ lspci | grep audio
>
> Use instead:
>
> $ lspci | grep -i audio
Why?
Why when searching for "audio" would you need case-insensitive??
Multim
If this doesn't work:
$ lspci | grep audio
Use instead:
$ lspci | grep -i audio
On Sunday, 11 May, 2014 03:06 PM, Scott Ferguson wrote:
On 11/05/14 16:53, Bret Busby wrote:
Hello.
I have this weekend, managed to install Debian 7.5 amd64 xfce version
onto a laptop computer.
However, the sou
On 11/05/14 08:53, Bret Busby wrote:
Hello.
I have this weekend, managed to install Debian 7.5 amd64 xfce version
onto a laptop computer.
However, the sound does not work.
In searching, I have found that the laptop apparently has a Realtek
soundcard (and, an inbuilt Intel something soundcard t
On Sun, 11 May 2014 14:53:06 +0800 (WST)
Bret Busby wrote:
>
> I am therefore wondering whether, somewhere, packages exist (.deb
> packages, that make installation relatively easy for those of us not
> skilled "in the black arts"), for the hardware drivers that may be on
> the firmware ISO's
On 05/11/2014 09:53 AM, Bret Busby wrote:
> Hello.
>
> I have this weekend, managed to install Debian 7.5 amd64 xfce version
> onto a laptop computer.
>
> However, the sound does not work.
>
> In searching, I have found that the laptop apparently has a Realtek
> soundcard (and, an inbuilt Intel
On 11/05/14 16:53, Bret Busby wrote:
> Hello.
>
> I have this weekend, managed to install Debian 7.5 amd64 xfce version
> onto a laptop computer.
>
> However, the sound does not work.
Ouch. But easily fixed.
>
> In searching, I have found that the laptop apparently has a Realtek
> soundcard (
Hi,
On Thu, Jun 06, 2013 at 08:11:45AM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> >On Jo, 06 iun 13, 14:11:21, atar wrote:
> >>Hi there!!
> >>
> >>I wanted to know please where can I enrich my knowledge about Linux
> >>at general and especially about Debian regarding variety of topics
BTW, sorry for double mailing but I also think it's worth mentioning
that nowadays its just Debian. It has other kernels available, such as
hurd and kfreebsd. One thing is debian e a total different thing is
Linux.
--
I challenge you to play the game in which there is no loser but
everything is f
Machtelt Garrels wrote a terrific introductory guide in its simplicity.
http://tldp.org/LDP/intro-linux/html/intro-linux.html
IMHO, it's impossible to have a "perfect guide" or best in some
universal sense. Similar to what happens with software, our knowledge
grows with gaps and it's up to us wh
If you are looking for some more targeted but generic tutorials:
The Geek Stuff: http://www.thegeekstuff.com
nixcraft: http://www.cyberciti.biz/faq/
HowtoGeek: http://www.howtogeek.com
Howto Forge: http://www.howtoforge.com
There is a wealth of information on those sites about Linux, other *nixes
On Thursday 06 June 2013 19:10:24 Tixy wrote:
> On Thu, 2013-06-06 at 14:11 +0300, atar wrote:
> > I wanted to know please where can I enrich my knowledge about Linux at
> > general and especially about Debian
>
> The Debian Handbook may be useful. It's available on a running Debian
> system by ins
On Thu, 2013-06-06 at 14:11 +0300, atar wrote:
> I wanted to know please where can I enrich my knowledge about Linux at
> general and especially about Debian
The Debian Handbook may be useful. It's available on a running Debian
system by installing the 'debian-handbook' package, or online as a f
On Thu, Jun 06, 2013 at 02:11:21PM +0300, atar wrote:
> I wanted to know please where can I enrich my knowledge about Linux
> at general and especially about Debian
Linode's got some great tutorials:
https://library.linode.com/
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
On Thursday 06 June 2013 14:11:45 Richard Owlett wrote:
> Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> > On Jo, 06 iun 13, 14:11:21, atar wrote:
> >> Hi there!!
> >>
> >> I wanted to know please where can I enrich my knowledge about Linux
> >> at general and especially about Debian regarding variety of topics
> >> such
On Thu, 06 Jun 2013 08:11:45 -0500
Richard Owlett wrote:
> Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> > On Jo, 06 iun 13, 14:11:21, atar wrote:
> >> Hi there!!
> >>
> >> I wanted to know please where can I enrich my knowledge about Linux
> >> at general and especially about Debian regarding variety of topics
> >> s
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Jo, 06 iun 13, 14:11:21, atar wrote:
Hi there!!
I wanted to know please where can I enrich my knowledge about Linux
at general and especially about Debian regarding variety of topics
such as the system boot process, what are tty's? and where are
located the scripts that
On Jo, 06 iun 13, 14:11:21, atar wrote:
> Hi there!!
>
> I wanted to know please where can I enrich my knowledge about Linux
> at general and especially about Debian regarding variety of topics
> such as the system boot process, what are tty's? and where are
> located the scripts that the system r
Hi Teemu:
Thanks for the most useful information. To make the story short, could you
point out - from the huge assembly you likked to - a specific device that
incorporates a monitor sufficiently wide and well resolved to read papers
from scientific journals? And listen to discussions. In current t
On Wed, May 1, 2013 at 8:38 AM, Francesco Pietra wrote:
> I was looking for some sort of i-device that could allow whifi, directed
> to reading-downloading literature and be capable of talking - via ssh/scp -
> with my workstations on a local network (not necessarily wireless).
You are probably
On Mi, 01 mai 13, 08:38:51, Francesco Pietra wrote:
> I was looking for some sort of i-device that could allow whifi, directed to
> reading-downloading literature and be capable of talking - via ssh/scp -
> with my workstations on a local network (not necessarily wireless).
Not sure what you mean
> From: go...@dobosevic.com [mailto:go...@dobosevic.com]
> Sent: Wednesday, August 19, 2009 4:40 PM
> >
> > FWIW, unetbootin did not work for me when I tried a few months ago
> with
> > Lenny Stable; the boot files for unetbootin had version issues with
> the
> > Lenny Stable release iso's I downlo
Ramy Mana wrote:
On your site it said that if we were using a usb disk that we should download
the small images. My USB disk can hold 2gb, so if I download the cd/dvd images
on my 2gb usb drive will it work?
Thank You
IT'S TIME TO PLAY THE GAME WITH THE KING OF KINGS! AND IF YOU'RE NOT DO
FWIW, unetbootin did not work for me when I tried a few months ago with
Lenny Stable; the boot files for unetbootin had version issues with the
Lenny Stable release iso's I downloaded.� The Debian Installation Manual
instructions, however, worked perfectly (I had posted an email thread
not
> Hi,
> you can use UNetbootin http://unetbootin.sourceforge.net/ and he will do
> everything for you. Just choose Debian-stable version and he will download
> and put on your USB.
>
> --
> Bye,
> Goran Dobosevic
> Hrvatski: www.dobosevic.com
> English: www.dobosevic.com/en/
FWIW, unetbootin d
Ramy Mana wrote:
On your site it said that if we were using a usb disk that we should
download the small images. My USB disk can hold 2gb, so if I download
the cd/dvd images on my 2gb usb drive will it work?
Thank You
IT'S TIME TO PLAY THE GAME WITH THE KING OF KINGS! AND IF YOU'RE NOT
DOWN
Ramy Mana wrote:
On your site it said that if we were using a usb disk that we should
download the small images. My USB disk can hold 2gb, so if I download
the cd/dvd images on my 2gb usb drive will it work?
Thank You
IT'S TIME TO PLAY THE GAME WITH THE KING OF KINGS! AND IF YOU'RE NOT
DOWN
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On 05/28/09 08:58, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 05:59:32PM +0100, Harry Rickards wrote:
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> Hash: SHA1
>>
>> On 05/27/09 17:57, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
>>> On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 10:19:17AM +0100, Ha
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 05:59:32PM +0100, Harry Rickards wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On 05/27/09 17:57, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> > On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 10:19:17AM +0100, Harry Rickards wrote:
> >
> >> I admit that instead of just doing 'man whatever', I pipe it t
Johannes Wiedersich writes:
> rand...@songshu.org wrote:
>> most new users don't now the existence of the automatically installed man
>> pages.
>> admittedly i also find it more readable in a browser.
>
> Konqueror will display the local man pages when you enter "man:rtfm" in
> the location bar
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On 05/27/09 17:57, Tzafrir Cohen wrote:
> On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 10:19:17AM +0100, Harry Rickards wrote:
>
>> I admit that instead of just doing 'man whatever', I pipe it through
>> less with 'man whatever|less', which lets me get rid of the annoying
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 04:30:30PM +0100, Muzer wrote:
> KDE can convert manpages to HTML on-the-fly (just browse to
> man:/[()]
> (where the <> denotes a required argument, [] an optional argument)
Try using w3mman as your man program.
--
Tzafrir Cohen | tzaf...@jabber.org | VIM is
h
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 10:19:17AM +0100, Harry Rickards wrote:
> I admit that instead of just doing 'man whatever', I pipe it through
> less with 'man whatever|less', which lets me get rid of the annoying
> text at the bottom, and replacing it with a ':' which I'm more used to
> from vi/vim.
Isn
Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
In <4a1d6a99.9040...@physik.blm.tu-muenchen.de>, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
Muzer wrote:
KDE can convert manpages to HTML on-the-fly (just browse to
man:/[()]
(where the <> denotes a required argument, [] an optional argument)
In <4a1d6a99.9040...@physik.blm.tu-muenchen.de>, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
>Barclay, Daniel wrote:
>> Muzer wrote:
>>> KDE can convert manpages to HTML on-the-fly (just browse to
>>> man:/[()]
>>> (where the <> denotes a required argument, [] an optional argument)
>> Which part of KDE is that? (W
Barclay, Daniel wrote:
> Muzer wrote:
>> KDE can convert manpages to HTML on-the-fly (just browse to
>> man:/[()]
>> (where the <> denotes a required argument, [] an optional argument)
>
> Which part of KDE is that? (What is KDE's file/etc. browser?)
konqueror
Johannes
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, em
Muzer wrote:
> KDE can convert manpages to HTML on-the-fly (just browse to
> man:/[()]
> (where the <> denotes a required argument, [] an optional argument)
Which part of KDE is that? (What is KDE's file/etc. browser?)
Daniel
--
(Plain text sometimes corrupted to HTML "courtesy" of Microsoft
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On 05/27/09 16:39, Harry Rickards wrote:
> On 05/27/09 11:54, Tony van der Hoff wrote:
>> Harry Rickards wrote:
>>> On 05/27/09 10:20, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
rand...@songshu.org wrote:
> most new users don't now the existence of the automa
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On 05/27/09 11:54, Tony van der Hoff wrote:
> Harry Rickards wrote:
>>
>> On 05/27/09 10:20, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
>>> rand...@songshu.org wrote:
most new users don't now the existence of the automatically
installed man pages.
admit
rand...@songshu.org wrote:
And easier to navigate when they have been converted to html, e.g.
http://manpages.courier-mta.org/mansection1.html
You should keep in mind that these are likely not current or in sync'
with your system.
http://manpages.debian.net/ is pretty much in sync i guess.
th
And easier to navigate when they have been converted to html, e.g.
http://manpages.courier-mta.org/mansection1.html
You should keep in mind that these are likely not current or in sync'
with your system.
http://manpages.debian.net/ is pretty much in sync i guess.
the only "problem with that s
On Wed, May 27, 2009 at 05:19:17AM EDT, Harry Rickards wrote:
[..]
> >> It seems that there are many new users who prefer to read their man
> >> pages with their web browser. That's why they are online (and can be
> >> found with google).
> > most new users don't now the existence of the automat
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
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On 05/27/09 10:20, Johannes Wiedersich wrote:
> rand...@songshu.org wrote:
>> most new users don't now the existence of the automatically installed man
>> pages.
>> admittedly i also find it more readable in a browser.
>
> Konqueror will display the
rand...@songshu.org wrote:
> most new users don't now the existence of the automatically installed man
> pages.
> admittedly i also find it more readable in a browser.
Konqueror will display the local man pages when you enter "man:rtfm" in
the location bar (provided you have funny-manpages insta
; Bern / Rome / Stockholm / Vienna
> Subject: Re: Debian Linux
>
> rand...@songshu.org wrote:
>> http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=man+rtfm&l=1
>>
>> love that one,
>>
>> but there seems to be another program already for this
>> http://manpages.songshu.org/manp
- Original Message -
From: "Johannes Wiedersich"
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2009 11:02:54 AM GMT +01:00 Amsterdam / Berlin / Bern
/ Rome / Stockholm / Vienna
Subject: Re: Debian Linux
rand...@songshu.org wrote:
> http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q
rand...@songshu.org wrote:
> http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=man+rtfm&l=1
>
> love that one,
>
> but there seems to be another program already for this
> http://manpages.songshu.org/manpages/lenny/en/man1/rtfm.1fun.html
In fact both are the same 'program'. You could install that man page
with 'aptitude
; Bern / Rome / Stockholm / Vienna
> Subject: Re: Debian Linux
>
> Harry Rickards wrote:
>> Someone definitely needs to make a rtfm.com version, that redirects you
>> to the appropriate manual page. :D
>
> Try that for a start
>
> http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=man+rtfm&
- Original Message -
From: "Johannes Wiedersich"
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Sent: Wednesday, May 27, 2009 10:28:24 AM GMT +01:00 Amsterdam / Berlin / Bern
/ Rome / Stockholm / Vienna
Subject: Re: Debian Linux
Harry Rickards wrote:
> Someone definitely needs to ma
Harry Rickards wrote:
> Someone definitely needs to make a rtfm.com version, that redirects you
> to the appropriate manual page. :D
Try that for a start
http://www.lmgtfy.com/?q=man+rtfm&l=1
8-)
Johannes
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "un
Daryl Styrk wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 12:05:51PM +0100, Martyn Dowling wrote:
> >
> > Please could you let me know if Debian Linix is compatible with a HP
> > Proliant DL360 G5 server?
>
>
> I can resist.
> http://tinyurl.com/ort4zu
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On 05/26/09 16:16, JoeHill wrote:
> Daryl Styrk wrote:
>
>> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
>> Hash: SHA1
>>
>> On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 12:05:51PM +0100, Martyn Dowling wrote:
>>> Please could you let me know if Debian Linix is compatible with a H
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Stackpole, Chris wrote:
>> From: Raffaele Morelli [mailto:raffaele.more...@gmail.com]
>> Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2009 6:37 AM
>> Subject: Re: Debian Linux
>
>>> 2009/5/26 Martyn Dowling
>>>
>>> Hi
>From: Raffaele Morelli [mailto:raffaele.more...@gmail.com]
>Sent: Tuesday, May 26, 2009 6:37 AM
>Subject: Re: Debian Linux
>>2009/5/26 Martyn Dowling
>>
>>Hi
>>
>>Please could you let me know if Debian Linix is compatible with a HP
Proliant DL360 G5 serv
2009/5/26 Martyn Dowling
> Hi
>
> Please could you let me know if Debian Linix is compatible with a HP
> Proliant DL360 G5 server?
>
> Kind Regards
>
> Martyn
>
Yes, I got this server up since debian etch was released along with the
official port for amd64.
cheers
-r
On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 6:30 AM, Daryl Styrk wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 12:05:51PM +0100, Martyn Dowling wrote:
>>
>> Please could you let me know if Debian Linix is compatible with a HP
>> Proliant DL360 G5 server?
>>
>
>
> I can resist.
2009/5/26 Martyn Dowling :
> Hi
>
> Please could you let me know if Debian Linix is compatible with a HP
> Proliant DL360 G5 server?
>
> Kind Regards
>
It should work well enough I'd of thought. They're Opteron or Xeon
based aren't they?
A couple of links that might be helpful:
http://wiki.debia
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On Tue, May 26, 2009 at 12:05:51PM +0100, Martyn Dowling wrote:
>
> Please could you let me know if Debian Linix is compatible with a HP Proliant
> DL360 G5 server?
>
I can resist.
http://tinyurl.com/ort4zu
- --
Daryl Styrk
Naples, FL USA
-
On Tue, Jul 31, 2007 at 02:31:07PM +0530, Masatran, R. Deepak wrote:
> I have two Linux installations in my hard drive, and I want to modify
> Linux-2 from Linux-1, using Chroot. Basically "dpkg-reconfigure" and similar
> stuff. How do I tell DPKG of Linux-2 to not disturb the daemons that are
> ru
On 7/31/07, Matthew K Poer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Wow, you seem to be really singing the praises of chroot.
>
> I have a spare 10gig partition on my hard drive. I originally considered
> simply dual-booting Etch and Lenny, or Etch and Feisty, or something similar.
> Perhaps instead I will mak
Am 2007-07-31 12:15:33, schrieb koffiejunkie:
> Say you are booted into Linux1, and linux 2 is mounted at /linux2, you
> need to do this (assuming they are both recent distrobutions):
>
> mount -t proc proc /linux2/proc
This should be
mount -t none /proc /linux2/proc -o bind
Thanks, Greetings
- Tong - wrote:
> Matthew K Poer wrote:
>
> > My understanding of chroot is extremely limited, right now. I have
> > searched around, but can anyone point me to anything specific that
> > they know to be a good tutorial/explanation or how chroot works
> > and what its capabilities are?
>
> Check
Wow, you seem to be really singing the praises of chroot.
I have a spare 10gig partition on my hard drive. I originally considered
simply dual-booting Etch and Lenny, or Etch and Feisty, or something similar.
Perhaps instead I will make it a chroot jail for Lenny.
Big question answered: you can
On 7/31/07, Matthew K Poer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> My understanding of chroot is extremely limited, right now. I have searched
> around, but can anyone point me to anything specific that they know to be a
> good tutorial/explanation or how chroot works and what its capabilities are?
chroot is
On Tue, 31 Jul 2007 08:04:10 -0400, Matthew K Poer wrote:
> My understanding of chroot is extremely limited, right now. I have searched
> around, but can anyone point me to anything specific that they know to be a
> good tutorial/explanation or how chroot works and what its capabilities are?
Ch
I have also thought heavily about doing this sort of thing, for developing and
testing and such. My understanding is that there would be very close to
having two differant GNU/Linux operating systems running at once, but using
only one kernel. Once inside the chroot, BASH would be using tools
f
Masatran, R. Deepak wrote:
I have two Linux installations in my hard drive, and I want to modify
Linux-2 from Linux-1, using Chroot. Basically "dpkg-reconfigure" and similar
stuff. How do I tell DPKG of Linux-2 to not disturb the daemons that are
running in Linux-1?
Say you are booted into Lin
On Wed, 2007-05-09 at 14:20 +0530, Vidyadhar Gadgil wrote:
> Ok, so that's why menu.lst looks the same. The time stamp was for the
> day I updated, so that means it has updated the kernel, right?
>
> The vmlinux file in /boot has date stamp of the day I installed etch,
> but the initrd.img file ha
> On Tue, May 08, 2007 at 06:53:23PM +0530, Vidyadhar Gadgil wrote:
> > Recently some kernel update for debian etch appeared, which I duly
> > installed. In Fedora, when this used to be done, the grub entry would
> > get automatically updated. But here it does not seem to have happened,
> > the en
On Tue, May 08, 2007 at 06:53:23PM +0530, Vidyadhar Gadgil wrote:
> Recently some kernel update for debian etch appeared, which I duly
> installed. In Fedora, when this used to be done, the grub entry would
> get automatically updated. But here it does not seem to have happened,
> the entry is the
On Thu, 2005-09-15 at 16:31 -0700, junk email wrote:
> By the way, since I can't boot it from the sda1, how
> do I reboot this minimal system as root user?
>
> --- junk email <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > I am trying to install a Debian Linux for Alpha v3.0
> > rel 4 on my AlphaPC 164LX, 21164
By the way, since I can't boot it from the sda1, how
do I reboot this minimal system as root user?
--- junk email <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I am trying to install a Debian Linux for Alpha v3.0
> rel 4 on my AlphaPC 164LX, 21164 600MHz processor,
> 256MB RAM, AlphaBIOS 5.70
>
> Here are the st
On Fri, Aug 20, 2004 at 01:04:46PM -0400, Derrick 'dman' Hudson wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 19, 2004 at 09:33:37PM -0400, S.D.A. wrote:
>
> | Not the original poster, so please excuse me jumping in here.
> |
> | I'm going to attempt installing Sarge on my brother's G3 beige (old
> | world), this weekend
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