On Sat, Feb 27, 2021, 3:09 PM Semih Ozlem
wrote:
> Hi everyone
>
> I am getting the following error after installing mariadb. Any ideas why
> this would be the case
> It asks for a root password. I previously installed and uninstalled mysql
> and mariadb twice because of errors.
>
> user@debian:/
Hi everyone
I am getting the following error after installing mariadb. Any ideas why
this would be the case
It asks for a root password. I previously installed and uninstalled mysql
and mariadb twice because of errors.
user@debian:/media/user/Windows/usercreatedfolders/debianrepos/mysql$ sudo
mys
On Fri, 26 Feb 2021 10:19:56 +0300
Semih Ozlem wrote:
> Sorry, stopping and restarting the service seems to have solved the
> problem.
Does it work after a cold system restart without restarting it manually?
If not, my guess is some clamav or clamav-daemon dependency is not
getting loaded. I'm
Sorry, stopping and restarting the service seems to have solved the problem.
Semih Ozlem , 26 Şub 2021 Cum, 10:18
tarihinde şunu yazdı:
> user@debian:~$ sudo systemctl status clamav-daemon.service
> ● clamav-daemon.service - Clam AntiVirus userspace daemon
>Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system
user@debian:~$ sudo systemctl status clamav-daemon.service
● clamav-daemon.service - Clam AntiVirus userspace daemon
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/clamav-daemon.service; enabled;
vendor preset: enabled)
Drop-In: /etc/systemd/system/clamav-daemon.service.d
└─extend.conf
Acti
On Fri, 26 Feb 2021 08:58:06 +0300
Semih Ozlem wrote:
> I am able to install clamav and clamav-daemon. It appears in dpkg -l
> results. The problem is it is not functioning properly. So I am
> wondering if anyone else had similar issues or not.
Can you be a bit more explicit? What did you get, a
On 2/26/2021 6:58 AM, Semih Ozlem wrote:
I am able to install clamav and clamav-daemon. It appears in dpkg -l
results. The problem is it is not functioning properly.
>
What do you mean by "not working properly"?
--
John Doe
I am able to install clamav and clamav-daemon. It appears in dpkg -l
results. The problem is it is not functioning properly. So I am wondering
if anyone else had similar issues or not.
Patrick Bartek , 26 Şub 2021 Cum, 00:34 tarihinde şunu
yazdı:
> On Thu, 25 Feb 2021 23:17:52 +0300
> Semih Ozlem
On Thu, 25 Feb 2021 23:17:52 +0300
Semih Ozlem wrote:
> Hi everyone
>
> When I try to install clamav I am getting errots
> When I try to follow installation instructions from debian's site
> instruction
>
> (i) clamav-data package is not available in the repository
> (ii) freshclam gives the er
Semih Ozlem wrote:
> When I try to install clamav I am getting errots
> When I try to follow installation instructions from debian's site
> instruction
>
> (i) clamav-data package is not available in the repository
> (ii) freshclam gives the error
> "!checkdbdir: Can't ope directory /var/lib/clam
Hi everyone
When I try to install clamav I am getting errots
When I try to follow installation instructions from debian's site
instruction
(i) clamav-data package is not available in the repository
(ii) freshclam gives the error
"!checkdbdir: Can't ope directory /var/lib/clamav/"
(iii) I can't be
Hello,
I also can recommend for you that, better if you reinstall your system from
zero. The installer is very easy. If you'll confuse in the questions, it can be
a good idea if you posting the question and the people will support you from
here.
Ciao, Imre
On 2020. 03. 22. 18:58, "Brian"
On Sun, Mar 22, 2020 at 11:27 AM Jakub Kuzmicki wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I recently installed Debian 10 on my Dell XPS 15 7590. I was able to get
>> through majority of the installation up until the network mirroring
>> portion. I skipped that part since I wasn't able to find a recognizable
>> mirror
If you have installed debian then you can setup a mirror in
/etc/apt/sources.list. But that assumes you are at a debian terminal and
not some grub terminal. if you can ping out look in /etc/apt/sources and
edit that file
#
# deb cdrom:[Debian GNU/Linux 10.0.0 _Buster_ - Official amd64 NETINST
2
On Sun 22 Mar 2020 at 11:08:53 -0500, Jakub Kuzmicki wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I recently installed Debian 10 on my Dell XPS 15 7590. I was able to get
> > through majority of the installation up until the network mirroring
> > portion. I skipped that part since I wasn't able to find a recognizable
> >
On Sun, 22 Mar 2020 11:08:53 -0500
Jakub Kuzmicki wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I recently installed Debian 10 on my Dell XPS 15 7590. I was able to
> get
> > through majority of the installation up until the network mirroring
> > portion. I skipped that part since I wasn't able to find a
> > recognizable
On Sun, Mar 22, 2020 at 11:08:53AM -0500, Jakub Kuzmicki wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I recently installed Debian 10 on my Dell XPS 15 7590. I was able to get
> > through majority of the installation up until the network mirroring
> > portion. I skipped that part since I wasn't able to find a recognizable
Hello,
I recently installed Debian 10 on my Dell XPS 15 7590. I was able to get
> through majority of the installation up until the network mirroring
> portion. I skipped that part since I wasn't able to find a recognizable
> mirror to use. So now, when I turn on my computer and boot Debian, I am
On Thu, Nov 16, 2017 at 04:57:28PM +, J.W. Foster wrote:
>Any tips are welcome, and no I have not researched this online.
I would say that if you want specific suggestions, posting the actual
error messages is a good start.
>I'm just seeking info from folks that have done this before.
On 16.11.2017 21:57, J.W. Foster wrote:
> I installed a new motherboard on a system that I run as as a server.
> Same system has 3 1tb disks with Debian stable installed, and 1 with
> Windows 10 installed, all booting at my discretion from grub. I was
> able to get all of the drives to operate, and
Thank you! I will try this procedure this week.
Tim
On 9/18/2015 5:04 PM, linuxthefish wrote:
Tim,
>From what I remember it's best to set it up when you installing the
system, then you can install the bootloader to /boot in RAID 1.
https://blog.sleeplessbeastie.eu/2013/10/04/how-to-configure-
Tim,
>From what I remember it's best to set it up when you installing the
system, then you can install the bootloader to /boot in RAID 1.
https://blog.sleeplessbeastie.eu/2013/10/04/how-to-configure-software-raid1-during-installation-process/
is what I followed.
Thanks,
Edmund
On 18 September 2
I've used Debian Linux for a number of years but up until now always
with a single hard drive.
I want to build a new system that will have a pair of 1TB drives
configured as a RAID-1 mirror. In reading the mdadm Wiki the discussion
begins with installing mdadm.
My goal is to have a system wh
Bonsoir,
On 08/08/13 20:15, François Patte wrote:
> Bonjour,
>
> I would like to make a fresh install of debian and I want to keep my
> previous /home partition ie. forbid the installer to reformat this
> partition.
>
> I am sure that it is possible,
Indeed, it is possible
Nevertheless, for saf
On Thu, 08 Aug 2013 11:15:44 -0700 François
Patte wrote
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> Bonjour,
>
> I would like to make a fresh install of debian and I want to keep my
> previous /home partition ie. forbid the installer to reformat this
> parti
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Bonjour,
I would like to make a fresh install of debian and I want to keep my
previous /home partition ie. forbid the installer to reformat this
partition.
I am sure that it is possible, but at the end of the partitionning step,
how cna I check which
On Wednesday 28 September 2011 12:10:05 Camaleón wrote:
> Sorry, Lisi but on a mailing list there are some rules you should try to
> follow, and I don't want to sound rude but you insisted too much in
> remarking something I was not talking about, dunno why.
Camaleón - this is absurd. You do soun
On Wed, 28 Sep 2011 18:34:23 +0200, Martin Steigerwald wrote:
> Am Mittwoch, 28. September 2011 schrieb Camaleón:
>> On Tue, 27 Sep 2011 18:50:05 +0100, Lisi wrote:
>> > On Tuesday 27 September 2011 12:53:34 Camaleón wrote:
>> >> Then, you have to start reading the "whole thing" (aka, the whole
>>
Am Mittwoch, 28. September 2011 schrieb Camaleón:
> On Tue, 27 Sep 2011 18:50:05 +0100, Lisi wrote:
> > On Tuesday 27 September 2011 12:53:34 Camaleón wrote:
> >> Then, you have to start reading the "whole thing" (aka, the whole
> >> thread) before making such statements on what you find "qualified
On Tue, 27 Sep 2011 18:50:05 +0100, Lisi wrote:
> On Tuesday 27 September 2011 12:53:34 Camaleón wrote:
>> Then, you have to start reading the "whole thing" (aka, the whole
>> thread) before making such statements on what you find "qualified" or
>> not because something can look unqualified only t
On Tuesday 27 September 2011 12:53:34 Camaleón wrote:
> Then, you have to start reading the "whole thing" (aka, the whole thread)
> before making such statements on what you find "qualified" or not because
> something can look unqualified only to unqualified eyes, so please, I
> understand that som
On Mon, 26 Sep 2011 23:06:06 +0100, Lisi wrote:
Gee... still with this? :-)
> On Monday 26 September 2011 19:07:17 Camaleón wrote:
>> Yes, you should have read the full thread
>
> I'm not the only one who has been known to transgress in that manner.
> And I'm sure that I won't be the last. Don
On Monday 26 September 2011 19:07:17 Camaleón wrote:
> Yes, you should have read the full thread
I'm not the only one who has been known to transgress in that manner. And I'm
sure that I won't be the last. Don't you think that this all getting a bit
OTT for what was, after all, not that seriou
On Mon, 26 Sep 2011 18:47:45 +0100, Lisi wrote:
> On Sunday 25 September 2011 18:29:10 Camaleón wrote:
>> It seems to me that you replied to more than that statement as we were
>> not talking about external hard disks at all.
>
> I _was_ replying solely to the statement.
And you expanded with
On Sunday 25 September 2011 18:29:10 Camaleón wrote:
> It seems to me that you replied to more than that statement as we were
> not talking about external hard disks at all.
I _was_ replying solely to the statement. I did not read thro' the thread and
make sure of the context, and you can and do
On Mon, Sep 26, 2011 at 11:17 AM, francis picabia wrote:
> On Sun, Sep 25, 2011 at 12:48 AM, Marc Shapiro wrote:
>> I'm feeling really dumb right now. Okay, I'm not dumb, I'm just lacking the
>> information that I need at this time.
>>
>> I just installed a new SATA 1TB Seagate Barracuda drive i
On Sun, Sep 25, 2011 at 12:48 AM, Marc Shapiro wrote:
> I'm feeling really dumb right now. Okay, I'm not dumb, I'm just lacking the
> information that I need at this time.
>
> I just installed a new SATA 1TB Seagate Barracuda drive in my Lenny box with
> FVWM as my window manager. This is the fi
On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 18:48:16 -0700, Marc Shapiro wrote:
> On 09/25/11 06:36, Camaleón wrote:
>> On Sat, 24 Sep 2011 22:34:12 -0700, Marc Shapiro wrote:
>>
>> No new modern hard disk will come partitioned, they come low-level
>> formatted from factory :-)
>
> That shows how long it's been since I
On 09/25/11 06:36, Camaleón wrote:
On Sat, 24 Sep 2011 22:34:12 -0700, Marc Shapiro wrote:
No new modern hard disk will come partitioned, they come low-level
formatted from factory :-)
That shows how long it's been since I installed a new drive. The last
time that I did so, it was the curren
On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 17:30:24 +0100, Lisi wrote:
> On Sunday 25 September 2011 17:25:16 Camaleón wrote:
>> On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 16:11:38 +, Curt wrote:
>> > On 2011-09-25, Camaleón wrote:
>> >> On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 16:24:30 +0100, Lisi wrote:
>> >>> On Sunday 25 September 2011 14:36:57 Camaleón
On Sunday 25 September 2011 17:25:16 Camaleón wrote:
> On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 16:11:38 +, Curt wrote:
> > On 2011-09-25, Camaleón wrote:
> >> On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 16:24:30 +0100, Lisi wrote:
> >>> On Sunday 25 September 2011 14:36:57 Camaleón wrote:
> No new modern hard disk will come partiti
On Sunday 25 September 2011 16:49:35 Camaleón wrote:
> I never buy those pre-boxed disks... I prefer to get an external USB/
> Firewire case and put an internal disk on it, they're far better and
> easily to upgrade than the others ;-)
After this battle, I think that I shall remember that! Thanks
On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 16:11:38 +, Curt wrote:
> On 2011-09-25, Camaleón wrote:
>> On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 16:24:30 +0100, Lisi wrote:
>>
>>> On Sunday 25 September 2011 14:36:57 Camaleón wrote:
No new modern hard disk will come partitioned, they come low-level
formatted from factory :-)
>
On 2011-09-25, Camaleón wrote:
> On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 16:24:30 +0100, Lisi wrote:
>
>> On Sunday 25 September 2011 14:36:57 Camaleón wrote:
>>> No new modern hard disk will come partitioned, they come low-level
>>> formatted from factory :-)
>>
>> Unless it's external.
>
> Barracuda disks are no
On Sun, 25 Sep 2011 16:24:30 +0100, Lisi wrote:
> On Sunday 25 September 2011 14:36:57 Camaleón wrote:
>> No new modern hard disk will come partitioned, they come low-level
>> formatted from factory :-)
>
> Unless it's external.
Barracuda disks are not usually external. Seagate uses fancy name
On Sunday 25 September 2011 14:36:57 Camaleón wrote:
> No new modern hard disk will come partitioned, they come low-level
> formatted from factory :-)
Unless it's external. Then it will be clogged up with Windows stuff that it
will relinquish only very, very reluctantly. I still haven't got my
On Sat, 24 Sep 2011 22:34:12 -0700, Marc Shapiro wrote:
> On 09/24/11 20:48, Marc Shapiro wrote:
(...)
>> Do I need to make changes in the BIOS to recognize SATA drives?
>
> Obviously, I needed to answer my own question. Yes! I did need to
> activate SATA in the BIOS.
(...)
It's not very
On 09/24/11 20:48, Marc Shapiro wrote:
I'm feeling really dumb right now. Okay, I'm not dumb, I'm just lacking
the information that I need at this time.
I just installed a new SATA 1TB Seagate Barracuda drive in my Lenny box
with FVWM as my window manager. This is the first time that I have
inst
I'm feeling really dumb right now. Okay, I'm not dumb, I'm just lacking
the information that I need at this time.
I just installed a new SATA 1TB Seagate Barracuda drive in my Lenny box
with FVWM as my window manager. This is the first time that I have
installed a SATA drive. How do I deter
On 03/26/2011 05:04 PM, Hans-J. Ullrich wrote:
Hi list,
just some simple questions: I am going to create a small installations cd from
an already installed system (with my own settings). As I want it small and
secure, I do not want any logfiles on this cd. I am using bootcdwrite. So my
questions
Hi list,
just some simple questions: I am going to create a small installations cd from
an already installed system (with my own settings). As I want it small and
secure, I do not want any logfiles on this cd. I am using bootcdwrite. So my
questions:
1.Can I use an empty /var/log/ or is it nec
Jim Pazarena wrote:
> (a) is it possible to avoid/cancel the initial request for a user name
>(other than root)?
Sure. Just don't create one. The debian-installer asks if you would
like to create a user but you can skip that step. It is optional.
And then as the others said it is possible
On Sun, Jul 11, 2010 at 01:32:26PM -0700, Jim Pazarena wrote:
> I'm new to Debian, and would like to give it serious consideration.
> I'm from a FreeBSD camp, so the differences are enough to
> challenge me.
>
> Two questions.
>
> (a) is it possible to avoid/cancel the initial request for a user na
Jim Pazarena:
>
> (a) is it possible to avoid/cancel the initial request for a user name
>(other than root)?
>My goal is to have an install routine which _after_ the base install
>creates all the users I need, possibly in non-default locations.
Debian-installer has the concept "pre-se
I'm new to Debian, and would like to give it serious consideration.
I'm from a FreeBSD camp, so the differences are enough to
challenge me.
Two questions.
(a) is it possible to avoid/cancel the initial request for a user name
(other than root)?
My goal is to have an install routine which _
On Sunday 03 February 2008, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > What happens to the original contents of /dev?
> >
> > 1. Still there--the tmpfs simply mounts over them (kind of wasteful since
> > a statis /dev had zillions of unused nodes).
> >
> > 2. Deleted. Want to go back ... well there is a make-dev
On Saturday 02 February 2008 14:00, David Baron wrote:
> What happens to the original contents of /dev?
>
> 1. Still there--the tmpfs simply mounts over them (kind of wasteful since a
> statis /dev had zillions of unused nodes).
>
> 2. Deleted. Want to go back ... well there is a make-devfs script
What happens to the original contents of /dev?
1. Still there--the tmpfs simply mounts over them (kind of wasteful since a
statis /dev had zillions of unused nodes).
2. Deleted. Want to go back ... well there is a make-devfs script somewhere to
create all the zillions of nodes that Knoppix uses
On Sun, Nov 04, 2007 at 01:53:57AM +, Steve Kemp wrote:
> On Sat Nov 03, 2007 at 19:49:40 -0600, Paul E Condon wrote:
>
> > > You must chmod +x this script:
> > > # chmod +x script_name
> > >
> >
> > Thanks, but I was forced to +x the script in order to run it manually.
> > Something else is
On Sat Nov 03, 2007 at 19:49:40 -0600, Paul E Condon wrote:
> > You must chmod +x this script:
> > # chmod +x script_name
> >
>
> Thanks, but I was forced to +x the script in order to run it manually.
> Something else is the problem.
Files in that directory are executed by 'run-parts'. That
On Sat, Nov 03, 2007 at 10:32:29PM +0100, Pál Csányi wrote:
> 2007/11/3, Paul E Condon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > I use Etch. I want to install a firewall script. I found one in
> > www.debian-administration.org that establishes a transparent proxy for
> > web browsing. It is a script that seems to d
2007/11/3, Paul E Condon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I use Etch. I want to install a firewall script. I found one in
> www.debian-administration.org that establishes a transparent proxy for
> web browsing. It is a script that seems to do what I want when I run
> it manually. debadmin article says to put
2007/11/3, Paul E Condon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I use Etch. I want to install a firewall script. I found one in
> www.debian-administration.org that establishes a transparent proxy for
> web browsing. It is a script that seems to do what I want when I run
> it manually. debadmin article says to put
I use Etch. I want to install a firewall script. I found one in
www.debian-administration.org that establishes a transparent proxy for
web browsing. It is a script that seems to do what I want when I run
it manually. debadmin article says to put it in /etc/network/if-up.d/
and it will be run automa
On Oct 10, 2007, at 6:57 AM, Douglas A. Tutty wrote:
On Tue, Oct 09, 2007 at 09:41:06PM -0700, jekillen wrote:
Is apt-cdrom add a command line program? I did not see it in
administration
menu, only Synaptic which when launched presented dialogs about
Debian site files being no existent. I am n
On Tue, Oct 09, 2007 at 02:35:50PM -0700, jekillen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> was
heard to say:
> Greetings:
> I am impatient and am having a problem with my installation of
> etch. I purchased a commercially available Debian cd package
> and installed the system without a problem. But I am tying to
> us
On Tue, Oct 09, 2007 at 09:41:06PM -0700, jekillen wrote:
> Is apt-cdrom add a command line program? I did not see it in
> administration
> menu, only Synaptic which when launched presented dialogs about
> Debian site files being no existent. I am not sitting at the machine at
> this moment so I c
jekillen wrote:
[...]
> I want to install KDE and noticed that among the 24 cds there
> is one labeled KDE install 1.
> Does that mean that that cd would install the system with KDE
> and not Gnome?
I think that this is a bootable installation disc. If you install from it, your
system will have K
jekillen wrote:
>
[...]
> Is apt-cdrom add a command line program? I did not see it in administration
> menu, only Synaptic which when launched presented dialogs about
> Debian site files being no existent. [...]
You can add CDROMs from within Synaptic - no need for the command line:
Edi
On 10/9/07, jekillen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Is apt-cdrom add a command line program? I did not see it in
> administration
Yes, it's run at the command line - you need to run it as root, so you should
either su to root or use sudo and do
$ sudo apt-cdrom add
It should then prompt you to pu
On Oct 9, 2007, at 9:15 PM, David Fox wrote:
On 10/9/07, jekillen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Greetings:
I am impatient and am having a problem with my installation of
etch. I purchased a commercially available Debian cd package
and installed the system without a problem. But I am tying to
We
On 10/9/07, jekillen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Greetings:
> I am impatient and am having a problem with my installation of
> etch. I purchased a commercially available Debian cd package
> and installed the system without a problem. But I am tying to
Well, if you have the CD's readily available,
Greetings:
I am impatient and am having a problem with my installation of
etch. I purchased a commercially available Debian cd package
and installed the system without a problem. But I am tying to
use the Synaptic package manager and am having a problem
with it connecting to the Debian site via a
On Wed, Nov 15, 2006 at 11:22:07AM +0200, Aladdin wrote:
>
> So if I'll not touch anything regarding selinux after my install - shall I
> have disabled selinux? Right?
>
> In selinux config file I have the following entries (I didn't touch anything):
>
> # This file controls the state of SELinu
So if I'll not touch anything regarding selinux after my install - shall I have
disabled selinux? Right?
In selinux config file I have the following entries (I didn't touch anything):
# This file controls the state of SELinux on the system.
# SELINUX= can take one of these three values:
# enfor
On Wed, Nov 15, 2006 at 09:32:02AM +0200, Debeselis wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just downloaded RC1 yesterday and tried to do clean installation. I
> noticed that this install tries to install some packages of Selinux by
> default. My question is - is there any way to disable these packages
> installations
On Wed, Nov 15, 2006 at 09:32:02AM +0200, Debeselis wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I just downloaded RC1 yesterday and tried to do clean installation. I noticed
> that this install tries to install some packages of
> Selinux by default. My question is - is there any way to disable these
> packages installatio
Hi,
I just downloaded RC1 yesterday and tried to do clean installation. I noticed
that this install tries to install some packages of
Selinux by default. My question is - is there any way to disable these packages
installations, will selinux be enabled on my machine
after istall is finished and
Do you get any message box reporting any problem? If you do, try to
send the error, if you do not, change to the fiirst virtual console
(Ctrl + Alt + F1). Surely you will read an eror message or warning
there.
Good luck!
As a followup to this problem I discovered in text mode that I was
getting a message on the screen when it beeped. It says found IRQ 5 for
device 00:0a.0
ETH0 setting half - duplex based on MII#1 local partner capabiltiy of
Anyone know why this is happening? Is my network card to old?
T
I am new to Debian and have set up one computer with debian 3.1 and when
it boots into the gnome login screen it beeps 3 times in a row but
displays the screen correctly. Then after logining in and going into
gnome after about 1 minute the screen goes blank and the computer beeps
3 times. If yo
Brian M. Godfrey wrote:
But I'd suggest installing Sarge instead of Woody.
(Let the flamefest begin . . . .)
I haven't seen any flames yet, Kent. Maybe it's a good idea. But I can
borrow the 3.0r2 disks which, I think, are Woody. I'm sure they'll be fine
for now. Feel free to correct m
> But I'd suggest installing Sarge instead of Woody.
> (Let the flamefest begin . . . .)
I haven't seen any flames yet, Kent. Maybe it's a good idea. But I can
borrow the 3.0r2 disks which, I think, are Woody. I'm sure they'll be fine
for now. Feel free to correct me if I'm wrong.
Than
> You can also install at this reboot the 'rescue' package
> apt-cache policy rescue
> ...
> There you'll find all info about your machine.
That sounds handy. I'll do it. Too bad I can't run it before the
install so I'd just have to do it once. (Well, one less time, anyway. :-)
Thanks,
Brian M. Godfrey wrote:
This included hotplug (if you use kernel 2.6)
and discover. discover is also part of Woody (the stable version), but
not part of the base system. You can however install it later.
So I could install the stable version (Woody) minimally
But I'd suggest installing Sarge
On Sat, 01 Jan 2005 23:03:42 +0100
Andreas Janssen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hello
>
>Brian M. Godfrey (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
>
>>> This included hotplug (if you use kernel 2.6)
>>> and discover. discover is also part of Woody (the stable version),
>>> but not part of the base system. You
Hello
Brian M. Godfrey (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
>> This included hotplug (if you use kernel 2.6)
>> and discover. discover is also part of Woody (the stable version),
>> but not part of the base system. You can however install it later.
>
> So I could install the stable version (Woody) minim
> This included hotplug (if you use kernel 2.6)
> and discover. discover is also part of Woody (the stable version), but
> not part of the base system. You can however install it later.
So I could install the stable version (Woody) minimally, just to get it
to boot up, then install discover...
Hello
Brian M. Godfrey (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> I am considering installation of Debian Linux on an older PC - a
> Compaq 4850. I want to refamiliarize myself with Unix, after being a
> Windows user since early 1993. I was a user of various versions of
> Unix for about 12 years prior to t
Hi,
I am considering installation of Debian Linux on an older PC - a Compaq
4850. I want to refamiliarize myself with Unix, after being a Windows user
since early 1993. I was a user of various versions of Unix for about 12
years prior to then, but I am so rusty and out of date that I am essent
Jin Zhao wrote:
Hi,
Recently I started converting my servers from Redhat to Debian. I was a
long time redhat user. and now find myself facing multiple ways of
automatic installation -- fai, replicator, systemimager, autoinstall.
Before deeply digging into these different beasts, I hope to hear
sugg
Hi,
Recently I started converting my servers from Redhat to Debian. I was a
long time redhat user. and now find myself facing multiple ways of
automatic installation -- fai, replicator, systemimager, autoinstall.
Before deeply digging into these different beasts, I hope to hear
suggestions from pe
On Sat, 2004-05-22 at 22:19, Tom Allison wrote:
> I'm doing a -testing installation of postgresql.
>
> I have the user postgres in the passwd file.
> I don't know what the password is.
>
> I'm wondering:
>
> Should I know it? I can always su posgres from root, but I don't always
> want to have
I'm doing a -testing installation of postgresql.
I have the user postgres in the passwd file.
I don't know what the password is.
I'm wondering:
Should I know it? I can always su posgres from root, but I don't always
want to have to go root first. Is there is any problems with having a
real pass
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
We are using Debian for a linux installation, .. yet there is
NO need to setup a Server and all that
jazz. The only instructions or "How to" guides we have instruct
building a server, networking, etc. [b:47e5d03b6f]All we want is a
Regular WORKSTATION setup.[/b:47e5d03
On (06/03/04 08:29), [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> We are using Debian for a linux installation, .. yet there is
> NO need to setup a Server and all that
> jazz. The only instructions or "How to" guides we have instruct
> building a server, networking, etc. [b:47e5d03b6f]All we want is a
> Regular WOR
We are using Debian for a linux installation, .. yet there is
NO need to setup a Server and all that
jazz. The only instructions or "How to" guides we have instruct
building a server, networking, etc. [b:47e5d03b6f]All we want is a
Regular WORKSTATION setup.[/b:47e5d03b6f] word processing,
grap
Hello
Haines Brown (<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>) wrote:
> I'm seeing to compile an inteface for the nVidia driver on a new
> basic installation of debian 3.0r1. The nVida installation dialog says
> the kernel headers are not found.
>
> So I install the headers. The first time that went well, and the
> s
> On Mon, 27 Oct 2003 10:52:02 -0500 (EST)
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Haines Brown) wrote:
>
> > I find that my /usr/src/kernel-headers-2.4.18-bf2.4 directory only
> > holds a .config file and an include directory. I assume that what I
> > should see here is a file with an .h extension if the header is
On Mon, 27 Oct 2003 10:52:02 -0500 (EST)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Haines Brown) wrote:
...
> I find that my /usr/src/kernel-headers-2.4.18-bf2.4 directory only
> holds a .config file and an include directory. I assume that what I
> should see here is a file with an .h extension if the header is
> actual
1 - 100 of 171 matches
Mail list logo