On Tue, May 20, 2025 at 04:24:46PM +0300, Roland Mueller wrote:
> At least for Ubuntu 22.04 android-sdk-platform-23 is in the list of
> available packages.
>
> $ apt list android-sdk\*
> ...
> android-sdk-platform-23/jammy,jammy 6.0.1+r72-6 all
> ...
For Debian, it seems to exist in buster, bulls
At least for Ubuntu 22.04 android-sdk-platform-23 is in the list of
available packages.
$ apt list android-sdk\*
...
android-sdk-platform-23/jammy,jammy 6.0.1+r72-6 all
...
ti 20.5.2025 klo 13.16 Csányi Pál (csanyi...@gmail.com) kirjoitti:
> Hi,
>
> on the Debian 12 Bookworm operating system I w
-right)
I wouldn’t have dared to install bookworm on such an old machine, but
I read a forum on very old machines (debian.users also has a thread on
this), and many specialists acknowledged that Bookworm was quite fit
for these antiquities, even when installing Gnome (which I did)
The other old
which enables and disables all-right)
I wouldn’t have dared to install bookworm on such an old machine, but I
read a forum on very old machines (debian.users also has a thread on
this), and many specialists acknowledged that Bookworm was quite fit for
these antiquities, even when installing Gnome
Hi,
keller.st...@gmx.de wrote:
> For comparison, some research and portability tests I'd like
> to install old releases of Debian, i.e. versions 8, 9, 10.
> Are there archives and old repositories to install from?
Old installation and Live ISOs are at
https://cdimage.debian.org/mirror/cdimage/a
пн, 31 мар. 2025 г. в 16:27, :
>
> For comparison, some research and portability tests I'd like
> to install old releases of Debian, i.e. versions 8, 9, 10.
> Are there archives and old repositories to install from?
https://archive.debian.org and
https://cdimage.debian.org/mirror/cdimage/archive/
For comparison, some research and portability tests I'd like
to install old releases of Debian, i.e. versions 8, 9, 10.
Are there archives and old repositories to install from?
Steve
Info can also be used for upgrading (much) older releases
(notably older ones beyond both main and LTS support)
On Mon, Mar 31, 2025 at 12:51 AM wrote:
> For comparison, some research and portability tests I'd like
> to install old releases of Debian, i.e. versions 8, 9, 10.
> Are there archives
On Mon, 31 Mar 2025, keller.st...@gmx.de wrote:
For comparison, some research and portability tests I'd like
to install old releases of Debian, i.e. versions 8, 9, 10.
Are there archives and old repositories to install from?
Steve
archive.debian.org for packages before bullseye.
Buster is t
Hello,
I have a laptop with integrated Intel i915 and nouveau, where the
external monitor is connected via HDMI.
Setup works and I have arranged the screens side-by-side. Xorg is using
modesetting driver (no xorg.conf).
I want to try GPU offloading and installed bumblebee and primus package
grep maria
# systemctl stop mariadb
Failed to stop mariadb.service: Unit mariadb.service not loaded.
** REBOOTED MACHINE **
# apt install mariadb-server
(It worked)
Michael
From: john doe
Sent: Monday, February 17, 2025 4:28 AM
To: debian-user@lists.debian.o
Michael Bonert wrote:
> invoke-rc.d: initscript mariadb, action "stop" failed.
> Failed to stop mysql.service: Unit mysql.service not loaded.
> invoke-rc.d: initscript mysql, action "stop" failed.
> Attempt to stop MariaDB/MySQL server returned exitcode 5
> There is a MariaDB/MySQL server running,
On 2/16/25 20:24, Michael Bonert wrote:
I get the following when trying to install mariadb:
# apt install mariadb-server-core
Reading package lists... Done
Building dependency tree... Done
Reading state information... Done
mariadb-server-core is already the newest version (1:10.11.6-0+deb12u1).
a thread from two years ago -
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2023/03/msg00774.html
https://linux.debian.user.narkive.com/S2sXMrNK/mariadb-server-is-not-installing-on-debian-12
~~
I am on Debian 12:
# lsb_release -a
No LSB modules are available.
Distributor ID: Debian
Description:Debian GN
pe su.
> so I wouldn't have to constantly be reminded that as a regular
> user, I can't do something, and I had been told that installing things as
> root will cause problems.
>
This is wrong, you need root privileges to install packages on Debian.
> I was told that i
't do something, and I had been told that installing things as
> root will cause problems.
I do 'sudo -i' to become root for a long series of things that require
root. It changes the prompt so I am reminded that I am root.
I have also put 'export TMOUT=900' in root
(debian-accessibil...@lists.debian.org is dropped from Cc:)
On 06/02/2025 06:29, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
With respect to other operating systems, like Solaris, root is a role,
not a user.
Jeffrey, it is interesting topic to discuss, but I am afraid, this stuff
and SELinux may confuse K0LNY even
On Wed, Feb 5, 2025 at 5:47 PM Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
>
> [Follow-up suggested to the mailing list at debian-user@lists.debian.org]
>
> On Wed, Feb 05, 2025 at 11:50:44AM -0600, K0LNY ?? wrote:
> > How is Debian different with regard to apparently there not being a problem
>
eminded that as a regular
> user, I can't do something, and I had been told that installing things as
> root will cause problems.
Hi Glenn,
sudo su is an anti-pattern, but it's one that's seen a great deal in
advice on the 'Net.
If you want to run several commands wi
ething, and I had been told that installing things as
> root will cause problems.
> I was told that if I install things as root, that another package may not
> have permissions to use something I installed as root.
Being root means having root privileges active; that can happen
told that installing things as
root will cause problems.
I was told that if I install things as root, that another package may not
have permissions to use something I installed as root.
Thanks.
Glenn
- Original Message -
From: "Andrew M.A. Cater"
To:
Cc:
Sent: Wednesday, Febr
[Follow-up suggested to the mailing list at debian-user@lists.debian.org]
On Wed, Feb 05, 2025 at 11:50:44AM -0600, K0LNY ?? wrote:
> Hi Andrew,
> How is Debian different with regard to apparently there not being a problem
> installing things as root?
> I know that there are is
ad of "amd64" as the arch.
> >
> > At this point, it would be a really good idea to *confirm* the name of
> > the package. "dpkg -l ente\*" or similar should suffice.
> >
> > Once you know the name of the package, then you can decide how to
>
gt; seriously messed around with expectations. Granted, we already saw
> that with the "x86_64" instead of "amd64" as the arch.
>
> At this point, it would be a really good idea to *confirm* the name of
> the package. "dpkg -l ente\*" or similar shoul
On Thu, Jan 30, 2025 at 04:42:02PM +, Michael wrote:
> The deb names may be unconventional but the executables worked (at least
> v4.2.8 worked).
They are IMHO wrong, since they quite probably will end up as *different
packages* instead of as *different versions of a package*.
If you just ins
uot;amd64" as the arch.
At this point, it would be a really good idea to *confirm* the name of
the package. "dpkg -l ente\*" or similar should suffice.
Once you know the name of the package, then you can decide how to
proceed.
* If the package name really is "enteauth&q
On Thu 30 Jan 2025 at 16:14:00 (+), Michael wrote:
> I ran, as root :-
>
> dpkg -i ente-auth-v4.2.8-x86_64.deb
Running apt install path-to/ente-auth-v4.2.8-x86_64.deb
will check for dependencies etc. (You must include the path.)
It will also log a record of what was installed or removed
On Thu, Jan 30, 2025 at 04:14:00PM +, Michael wrote:
> Thanks very much for your help and suggestions.
>
> I am running Debian 12 on a desktop.
>
> My aim is to set up and use a TOTP authenticator app called Ente Auth.
>
As far as I can see, this is a third party package from
https://github
The deb names may be unconventional but the executables worked (at least
v4.2.8 worked).
Can you please suggest suitable Debian package management commands to use
to investigate the current status of the v4.2.8 and v4.3.1 data in the
Debian system.
On Thu, Jan 30, 2025, 4:26 PM wrote:
> On Thu,
On Thu, Jan 30, 2025 at 04:14:00PM +, Michael wrote:
> Thanks very much for your help and suggestions.
>
> I am running Debian 12 on a desktop.
>
> My aim is to set up and use a TOTP authenticator app called Ente Auth.
>
> I ran, as root :-
>
> dpkg -i ente-auth-v4.2.8-x86_64.deb
[...]
Thanks very much for your help and suggestions.
I am running Debian 12 on a desktop.
My aim is to set up and use a TOTP authenticator app called Ente Auth.
I ran, as root :-
dpkg -i ente-auth-v4.2.8-x86_64.deb
to create an executable file enteauth, which runs the Ente Auth app.
The app wor
On Thu, Jan 30, 2025 at 02:22:44PM +, Michael wrote:
> I installed a debian file (db1'say) using dpkg -i and an executable file
> (ex1 say) was created.
>
Hi Michael,
Can we have some specifics? Version of Debian, name of executables,
whether one came from outside main Debian repository, ple
On Thu, Jan 30, 2025 at 02:22:44PM +, Michael wrote:
> I installed a debian file (db1'say) using dpkg -i and an executable file
> (ex1 say) was created.
>
> Later another debian file (db2) was installed, overwriting the executable
> ex1.
This shouldn't happen in a correctly built Debian packa
I installed a debian file (db1'say) using dpkg -i and an executable file
(ex1 say) was created.
Later another debian file (db2) was installed, overwriting the executable
ex1.
I now wish to overwrite ex1 with the data in db1, so I tried to install db1
again, but nothing seemed to happen.
Did noth
On Tue, Jan 21, 2025 at 5:12 PM John Hasler wrote:
>
> Do you understand what Sid is? If you want to run it install Stable and
> upgrade. That's the way to "Get it fucking running by all means and
> then when you can customize it further".
>
> CJE writes:
> > so i wonder what the hell you're tes
Do you understand what Sid is? If you want to run it install Stable and
upgrade. That's the way to "Get it fucking running by all means and
then when you can customize it further".
CJE writes:
> so i wonder what the hell youre testing crew is doing.
Testing "Testing", not "Unstable".
--
John
On Tue, Jan 21, 2025 at 12:20:44PM +0100, CJE wrote:
> Hi,
> This mail is addressing some system level debian comments from recent
> changes you've made in iso structure and in installation...
>
Hello Johan,
> and Ive been running unix for almost 40 years... and Linux since it came...
>
OK -
On Tue, 21 Jan 2025 12:20:44 +0100
CJE wrote:
>
> My most recent experience trying to install sid was: YOur fucking
> script did not work AT ALL... so I had to install LMDE6 FIRST to get
> a running and boootable system... then youre intsallation scripts
> FINALLY understood what was going on..
Hi,
This mail is addressing some system level debian comments from recent
changes you've made in iso structure and in installation...
Ok, right now I'm pretty angry... I will surely try to be sensible...
Who: Im from Sweden so... my english is not the best... If I'm too
blurry ask me... I can expl
On 11/29/24 10:58 AM, Roger Price wrote:
On Fri, 29 Nov 2024, Richard Owlett wrote:
As the OP's link explicitly referenced "debian" I used Synaptic's
search function. There were no packages with "Erling" in package name,
but several in description field.
I'm guessing Erling is a typo for Erla
On Fri, 29 Nov 2024, Richard Owlett wrote:
As the OP's link explicitly referenced "debian" I used Synaptic's search
function. There were no packages with "Erling" in package name, but several
in description field.
I'm guessing Erling is a typo for Erlang, an excellent concurrent, real time,
d
On 11/29/24 3:14 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Fri, Nov 29, 2024 at 09:36:35AM +0100, Matilda Sjöblom wrote:
Hi!
We've had issues for the last couple of days regarding installing Erling
via apt. I can run apt update with all of our other repos, but when I add
the file /etc/apt/sources.l
On 2024-11-29 17:49, Michael Kjörling wrote:
While Debian and Ubuntu are similar in some respects (for example by
using the same package management tools, modulo exact versions), it's
always better to ask people who are likely familiar with what you are
running.
I found debian 12 has much di
On 29 Nov 2024 09:36 +0100, from matilda.sjob...@recordedfuture.com (Matilda
Sjöblom):
> I have triple checked ownership of files, tried to run apt-get clean, etc
> etc, nothing works. The exact same setup (Ubuntu 20.04) worked on the 11th
> of November.
>
> Has something on your side changed sin
On Fri, Nov 29, 2024 at 09:36:35AM +0100, Matilda Sjöblom wrote:
> Hi!
>
> We've had issues for the last couple of days regarding installing Erling
> via apt. I can run apt update with all of our other repos, but when I add
> the file /etc/apt/sources.list.d/erlang_solutions
Hi!
We've had issues for the last couple of days regarding installing Erling
via apt. I can run apt update with all of our other repos, but when I add
the file /etc/apt/sources.list.d/erlang_solutions_repo.list , and the run
sudo apt update, I get this error:
Hit:6 https://packages.e
On Sun, 20 Oct 2024 23:09:40 +0200
paolo.dupu...@gmail.com wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am having difficulties installing Debian 12, specifically with the
> GRUB bootloader. After installation, my system is unable to boot
> properly, and I suspect there might be an issue with the GRUB
Hello,
I am having difficulties installing Debian 12, specifically with the GRUB
bootloader. After installation, my system is unable to boot properly, and I
suspect there might be an issue with the GRUB configuration. I have tried
reinstalling GRUB, but the problem persists.
Could someone
On Mon, 9 Sep 2024 15:32:19 +0200
wrote:
> On Mon, Sep 09, 2024 at 07:17:37AM -0600, Charles Curley wrote:
> > I concur with the netinst suggestions.
> >
> > On Mon, 09 Sep 2024 21:10:15 +1000
> > George at Clug wrote:
> >
> > > Sometimes I download the DVD because, over time, I will install
On Mon, Sep 09, 2024 at 07:17:37AM -0600, Charles Curley wrote:
> I concur with the netinst suggestions.
>
> On Mon, 09 Sep 2024 21:10:15 +1000
> George at Clug wrote:
>
> > Sometimes I download the DVD because, over time, I will install a
> > number of times [...]
> To solve this problem, I us
I concur with the netinst suggestions.
On Mon, 09 Sep 2024 21:10:15 +1000
George at Clug wrote:
> Sometimes I download the DVD because, over time, I will install a
> number of times (for example, install a number of VMs to compare the
> various GUIs), but I have found that by the time I get to u
On 09.09.24 13:10, George at Clug wrote:
Have I managed to confuse you with my own confusion? Sorry if I did,
but my gut feel is that the netinstall CD makes the most sense if you
have access to the Internet while doing the installation (unless your
will be doing 20 or more installations on the
On 9 Sep 2024 11:08 +0100, from recoverymail123...@gmail.com (Mick Ab):
> I think I have enough RAM and hard drive to accommodate bookworm, but I am
> not sure whether my laptop has the other hardware needed to run bookworm.
I'm not familiar with your particular laptop, but if it runs Windows
7, i
On Monday, 09-09-2024 at 20:08 Mick Ab wrote:
> I am interested in installing bookworm alongside the current Windows 7 on
> an old HP ProBook 6570b laptop.
>
> I am thinking of downloading the first two DVDs of bookworm from one of the
> Debian mirror sites, then copying th
On Mon, 9 Sep 2024 11:08:29 +0100
Mick Ab wrote:
> I am interested in installing bookworm alongside the current Windows
> 7 on an old HP ProBook 6570b laptop.
>
> I am thinking of downloading the first two DVDs of bookworm from one
> of the Debian mirror sites, then copying th
.
>
> Best regards
>
>
> On 09.09.24 12:08, Mick Ab wrote:
> > I am interested in installing bookworm alongside the current Windows 7
> > on an old HP ProBook 6570b laptop.
> >
> > I am thinking of downloading the first two DVDs of bookworm from one of
> &
Hello,
i would use debian netinstall: https://www.debian.org/CD/netinst/ rather
than download the whole DVD.
Best regards
On 09.09.24 12:08, Mick Ab wrote:
I am interested in installing bookworm alongside the current Windows 7
on an old HP ProBook 6570b laptop.
I am thinking of
I am interested in installing bookworm alongside the current Windows 7 on
an old HP ProBook 6570b laptop.
I am thinking of downloading the first two DVDs of bookworm from one of the
Debian mirror sites, then copying that to two DVD-R discs and installing
bookworm those two discs.
I think I have
On 8/2/24 09:11, DdB wrote:
If all you have is swap space or outdated crap, then back it up and do
whatever you like. GPT is no must, if the disk is below 2TB in size and
UEFI no option.
If you have >4 partitions, then except for booting and recalcitrant OS
installers, GPT is easier to deal wi
Am 02.08.2024 um 19:34 schrieb Łukasz Kalamłacki:
> If you need to boot initrd without iso you an try this:
Oops, i should read more carefully ...
idk, why complicate matters.
the boot files for i386 are located here:
http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/bookworm/main/installer-i386/20230607+de
Am 02.08.2024 um 19:34 schrieb Łukasz Kalamłacki:
> If you need to boot initrd without iso you an try this:
Oops, i should read more carefully ...
idk, why complicate matters.
the boot files for i386 are located here:
http://http.us.debian.org/debian/dists/bookworm/main/installer-i386/20230607+de
If you need to boot initrd without iso you an try this:
https://deb.debian.org/debian/dists/bookworm/main/installer-i386/current/images/netboot/debian-installer/i386/initrd.gz
https://deb.debian.org/debian/dists/bookworm/main/installer-i386/current/images/netboot/debian-installer/i386/linux
On
Am 02.08.2024 um 18:48 schrieb Anssi Saari:
> Richard Owlett writes:
>
>> I was hoping I could somehow tell grub to run an installer's ISO image.
>> I think the posted links will lead me adequately.
>
> I have actually tried that. The ISO image needs a little special support
> so that after the
Richard Owlett writes:
> I was hoping I could somehow tell grub to run an installer's ISO image.
> I think the posted links will lead me adequately.
I have actually tried that. The ISO image needs a little special support
so that after the kernel has booted and initrd loaded, it needs to be
able
Hi,
Could you give as more information about these systems on which you wish
to install Bookworm?
Newer distribution of Linux has a lot bigger resources consumption that
old one.
I would like to get:
RAM size, CPU type, HDD size.
Bookworm requirements are available here:
https://wiki.de
Am 02.08.2024 um 14:34 schrieb Richard Owlett:
> During initial installation of Debian Squeeze (or later) would I have
> been explicitly asked to choose between MBR and GPT?
I can't say, at that time, i was a stranger to debian. But ... i saw the
installer deciding on its own, if not explicitly put
On 08/01/2024 02:33 PM, DdB wrote:
Am 01.08.2024 um 21:11 schrieb Richard Owlett:
I've never had occasion to use Grub's command line. Good time to learn.
The existing install is so old it has Grub 1.??? rather than 2.??? .
Should that make any practical difference to manual install?
Not sure ab
On 08/01/2024 02:11 PM, Richard Owlett wrote:
On 08/01/2024 01:56 PM, DdB wrote:
Am 01.08.2024 um 17:33 schrieb Richard Owlett:
[SNIP]
I've never had occasion to use Grub's command line. Good time to learn.
The existing install is so old it has Grub 1.??? rather than 2.??? .
Should that make a
On 08/01/2024 02:33 PM, DdB wrote:
Am 01.08.2024 um 21:11 schrieb Richard Owlett:
I've never had occasion to use Grub's command line. Good time to learn.
The existing install is so old it has Grub 1.??? rather than 2.??? .
Should that make any practical difference to manual install?
Not sure ab
Am 01.08.2024 um 21:11 schrieb Richard Owlett:
> I've never had occasion to use Grub's command line. Good time to learn.
> The existing install is so old it has Grub 1.??? rather than 2.??? .
> Should that make any practical difference to manual install?
>
> Not sure about gpt vs mbr. I have whate
On 08/01/2024 01:56 PM, DdB wrote:
Am 01.08.2024 um 17:33 schrieb Richard Owlett:
In the phrase "to boot the installer using grub stanza (or manually)",
just what does "(or manually)" refer to?
I am using all of the options listed below depending on circumstances.
If you are clear about using
Hi,
This can be helpful :
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEkb-GXz3sY
Best,
Łukasz
On 1.08.2024 14:41, Richard Owlett wrote:
I have an elderly Sony laptop and a more ancient desktop with unknown
motherboard happily running i386 Debian 9.0. As far as I can tell the
BIOS of neither machine
Am 01.08.2024 um 17:33 schrieb Richard Owlett:
> In the phrase "to boot the installer using grub stanza (or manually)",
> just what does "(or manually)" refer to?
I am using all of the options listed below depending on circumstances.
If you are clear about using your hd to store an installer iso,
Hi,
on tftp server you need to unpack this:
https://deb.debian.org/debian/dists/bookworm/main/installer-i386/current/images/netboot/netboot.tar.gz
to install i386 bookworm via PXEBoot.
Best regards,
Łukasz
On 1.08.2024 14:41, Richard Owlett wrote:
I have an elderly Sony laptop and a more a
Hi,
15 years ago I had a laptop with broken CD drive but with integrated
working ethernet NIC and bios supported PXE boot, so I configured
isc-dhcp-server in my network which provides pxelinux.0 bootloader and
address of tftp server.
On tftp server I uploaded pxeboot images from Debian. All
On 08/01/2024 08:38 AM, Andy Smith wrote:
Hi,
On Thu, Aug 01, 2024 at 03:35:38PM +0200, DdB wrote:
i recommend installing from netinstall iso image using the
hd-media files to boot the installer using grub stanza (or
manually). Description in the manual is a bit short, but you can
ask me, if
Hi,
On Thu, Aug 01, 2024 at 10:22:13AM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 08/01/2024 07:41 AM, Richard Owlett wrote:
> > I have an elderly Sony laptop and a more ancient desktop with unknown
> > motherboard happily running i386 Debian 9.0. As far as I can tell the
> > BIOS of neither machine suppor
On 08/01/2024 07:41 AM, Richard Owlett wrote:
I have an elderly Sony laptop and a more ancient desktop with unknown
motherboard happily running i386 Debian 9.0. As far as I can tell the
BIOS of neither machine supports booting from a flash drive. Neither has
functional CD/DVD drive. Both hard d
Hi,
On Thu, Aug 01, 2024 at 03:35:38PM +0200, DdB wrote:
> i recommend installing from netinstall iso image using the
> hd-media files to boot the installer using grub stanza (or
> manually). Description in the manual is a bit short, but you can
> ask me, if you need.
Oh yes, great s
Richard Owlett writes:
> I have an elderly Sony laptop and a more ancient desktop with unknown
> motherboard happily running i386 Debian 9.0. As far as I can tell the
> BIOS of neither machine supports booting from a flash drive. Neither
> has functional CD/DVD drive. Both hard drives have copio
described in
> first paragraph?
>
> TIA
i fail to understand, what you want to do with the machine, that has no
space. Conserning the other one: i recommend installing from netinstall
iso image using the hd-media files to boot the installer using grub
stanza (or manually). Description in the
Richard,
Are both of your computers (laptop and desktop) 64 bit capable? Not
that this matters too much to my below suggestion.
This might help you if you can remove the drives from the laptop
and/or desktop.
I often take a drive out of a computer, then put the drive into a
computer that can
Hi,
On Thu, Aug 01, 2024 at 07:41:53AM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> I have an elderly Sony laptop and a more ancient desktop with unknown
> motherboard happily running i386 Debian 9.0. As far as I can tell the BIOS
> of neither machine supports booting from a flash drive. Neither has
> functiona
I have an elderly Sony laptop and a more ancient desktop with unknown
motherboard happily running i386 Debian 9.0. As far as I can tell the
BIOS of neither machine supports booting from a flash drive. Neither has
functional CD/DVD drive. Both hard drives have copious free space.
Both machines
Hello everyone,
Thank you so much for your assistance on this matter. The solution was
found.
Updating the sources list to include:
deb http://deb.debian.org/debian/ bookworm main non-free-firmware
deb-src http://deb.debian.org/debian/ bookworm main non-free-firmware
deb http://security.debian.or
Hi Demetrius.
See the embedded observations below.
On 7/15/24 05:42, Demetrius Stanton wrote:
Hi!
My name is Demetrius Stanton. It was suggested that I reach out for a problem
I'm experiencing trying to install gdb on my system. I'm willing to submit
whatever information is necessary to tr
On Mon, Jul 15, 2024 at 11:07 AM Demetrius Stanton wrote:
>
> Hi!
>
> My name is Demetrius Stanton. It was suggested that I reach out for a problem
> I'm experiencing trying to install gdb on my system. I'm willing to submit
> whatever information is necessary to try and get this issue resolved.
Hi Demetrius,
On 15/07/24 17:12, Demetrius Stanton wrote:
[...]
I recently encountered a weird error, and I can't seem to find a fix
online. When I run the command ` sudo apt update && sudo apt install
gdb -y `, I receive an 404 error stating failed to fetch
https://deb.debian.org/debian/pool
correct for your situation that you use them.)
Try adding
deb https://debug.mirrors.debian.org/debian-debug/ bookworm-debug main
contrib
(and/or similar for any other official Debian repositories you want to
get debug packages from), and repeating the suggested 'apt update'
command
Hi!
My name is Demetrius Stanton. It was suggested that I reach out for a
problem I'm experiencing trying to install gdb on my system. I'm willing to
submit whatever information is necessary to try and get this issue
resolved.
I recently encountered a weird error, and I can't seem to find a fix
o
On 7/3/2024 9:23 AM, Lucio Crusca wrote:
Il 03/07/24 13:48, Jeff Pang ha scritto:
maybe you can use rbenv to install the required ruby toolkit?
I'm afraid that's not the point. I assume that
# apt-get install gitlab
should just work out of the box, or there is a problem, either on my
pa
Il 03/07/24 16:46, Henning Follmann ha scritto:
The error message is very transparent about this: "...if you are using the
unstable ..."
You are absolutely right. But I never stopped by to read that message
and it's the first time in years of sid (mixed with testing and stable)
that this t
On Wed, 3 Jul 2024 12:24:16 +0200
Lucio Crusca wrote:
Hello Lucio,
>Am I doing anything wrong or should I file a bug report?
Look at the package page, then developer page for gitlab and then for
its dependencies.
You'll find that ruby-sidekiq has yet to hit sid - it's still in
experimental. N
On Wed, Jul 03, 2024 at 04:23:55PM +0200, Lucio Crusca wrote:
> Il 03/07/24 13:48, Jeff Pang ha scritto:
> >
> > maybe you can use rbenv to install the required ruby toolkit?
> >
>
> I'm afraid that's not the point. I assume that
>
> # apt-get install gitlab
>
> should just work out of the box
Lucio Crusca wrote:
> Il 03/07/24 13:48, Jeff Pang ha scritto:
> >
> > maybe you can use rbenv to install the required ruby toolkit?
> >
>
> I'm afraid that's not the point. I assume that
>
> # apt-get install gitlab
>
> should just work out of the box, or there is a problem, either on my par
Il 03/07/24 13:48, Jeff Pang ha scritto:
maybe you can use rbenv to install the required ruby toolkit?
I'm afraid that's not the point. I assume that
# apt-get install gitlab
should just work out of the box, or there is a problem, either on my
part, or in the gitlab package itself.
As of
maybe you can use rbenv to install the required ruby toolkit?
I'm trying to install gitlab from sid, but it requires ruby-sidekiq>=7~,
which is not available in sid (there's only 6.5.12 available).
--
Jeff Pang
j...@simplemail.co.in
I'm trying to install gitlab from sid, but it requires ruby-sidekiq>=7~,
which is not available in sid (there's only 6.5.12 available).
Am I doing anything wrong or should I file a bug report?
If it where an issue with pip or pipx, yes. But as you pointed out
yourself, it's also happening on OpenSuse, so the issue can't be pip or
pipx, but rather either what you are trying to install or your
understanding of it.
Am So., 2. Juni 2024 um 14:20 Uhr schrieb Richmond :
> I am not complaini
Richard writes:
> python3 -m venv venv
> source venv/bin/activate
> pip install musicpy
OK thanks. And apparently to get idle working I do:
python -m idlelib.idle
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