Raf Czlonka wrote:
> Jari Fredriksson wrote:
> > Mark Panen kirjoitti:
> > > Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my Debian OS?
> >
> > uptime
>
> Have you read the question?
I am sure that was a joke. I laughed at it. It implied that you
install Debian and then it is g
Tomas Volka wrote:
>root@debian # passwd -S bin
>bin L 11/23/2010 0 9 7 -1
Excellent.
>root@debian ~ # dumpe2fs -h /dev/sda3 | grep -i creat
>dumpe2fs 1.41.12 (17-May-2010)
>Filesystem created: Tue Nov 23 21:11:56 2010
Please note that this will fail if the system was copied from one
Quoting Jari Fredriksson :
8.10.2011 4:09, Mark Panen kirjoitti:
Hi,
Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my Debian OS?
There are several fairly reliable methods to figure this out,
one of them is checking the last password change of certain system
user (daemon, sys,
> > 8.10.2011 4:09, Mark Panen kirjoitti:
> > > Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my Debian OS?
There are several fairly reliable methods to figure this out,
one of them is checking the last password change of certain system
user (daemon, sys, bin).
ie.
root@debian #
9.10.2011 18:19, Raf Czlonka kirjoitti:
> On Sat, Oct 08, 2011 at 11:39:26PM BST, Jari Fredriksson wrote:
>> 8.10.2011 4:09, Mark Panen kirjoitti:
>>> Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my Debian OS?
>>
>> uptime
>
> Have you read the question?
>
Yes. Why? Linux is said
On Sat, Oct 08, 2011 at 11:39:26PM BST, Jari Fredriksson wrote:
> 8.10.2011 4:09, Mark Panen kirjoitti:
> > Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my Debian OS?
>
> uptime
Have you read the question?
--
Raf
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8.10.2011 4:09, Mark Panen kirjoitti:
> Hi,
>
> Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my Debian OS?
>
uptime
--
Everything that you know is wrong, but you can be straightened out.
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My simplest bet would be this one:
head /var/log/dpkg.log
One of the very first lines would read:
[date] [time] install base-files [initialVersion]
I'm not sure if the log ever gets replaced or moved, but my system says that.
Tool used: head (showing the first lines of a file)
Related tool: tail
On Sat, 08 Oct 2011 03:09:42 +0200, Mark Panen wrote:
> Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my Debian
> OS?
That seems to be a recurrent question :-)
I remember a similar thread a year ago in this same list:
How To determine the date the system & packages were installed
On 08/10/11 15:18, Mark Panen wrote:
> On 08/10/2011 05:59, Joey Hess wrote:
>> Mark Panen wrote:
>>
>>> Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my
>>> Debian OS?
>>>
>> Take a look at /var/log/installer/ , the timestamps should give you a
>> good idea.
>>
>>
>
>
On 08/10/2011 05:59, Joey Hess wrote:
Mark Panen wrote:
Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my Debian OS?
Take a look at /var/log/installer/ , the timestamps should give you a
good idea.
On a rpm based distro i can run "rpm -qi k3b" and it shows me when
Mark Panen wrote:
> Which command do i run to find out on which date i installed my Debian OS?
Take a look at /var/log/installer/ , the timestamps should give you a
good idea.
--
see shy jo
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