On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 01:13:10PM -0700, Gary L. Roach wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> System: Debian Buster host
>
> qemu/kvm virtual machine
>
> CAELinux Guest
>
> I load the software from an .iso file in my Download directory. The
> guest files seem to be loading and workin
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 02:47:55AM -0400, moelmoel2714 wrote:
[...]
No idea who or what Q4OS is (and not sure I want to know).
> Q4OS puts everything in /etc/apt/sources.list.d/; always makes me a
> tad nervous. anyway, one of the files there, '20_debian.list' has
> non-free on all the active li
On Thu, May 14, 2020 at 01:28:19PM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
Dan Ritter (12020-05-14):
find . -name "*foo" -print
I have not not noticed where Albretch told us that the millions of files
where all together and could be selected by a simplistic pattern on
their name.
The question was not ho
Jonathan Dowland (12020-05-15):
> The ultimate answer that Dan provided was to use find with xargs, which
> is fine. And if you are going to use -print0, it is often a good idea to
> trial that you've got the pattern right (especially if you are more used
> to expressing file patterns in shell glob
Hi,
Gary L. Roach wrote:
> I load the software from an .iso file in my Download directory.
I wonder what this means in detail.
The normal procedure with an .iso image file and a qemu VM is
to start qemu with the .iso file as -cdrom and the (empty) virtual
hard disk image file as -hda.
Then one w
On 5/14/20, Nicolas George wrote:
> The question was not how to find the files, the formulation of the
> question indicates that Albretch has that covered.
Yeah, my problem is not finding the files per se. I have them or
could have them easily listed.
The thing is that when you work on copora
Hello,
I had recently a general protection fault on a Debian 8 server with
Xen (debian pacakge: 4.4.4lts4-0+deb8u1) on the vif50.1-q1-guest
kernel proces. I have copied the kernel log below in this mail for
reference. After this GPF the system was still responding but one domU
lost network connect
What documentation, books, videos, ... would you suggest for me to
read up if I were to investigate what exactly is "find" 's magic to
hook other processes and keep a running instance for multiple "found"
files?
lbrtchx
On Vi, 15 mai 20, 12:41:07, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> What documentation, books, videos, ... would you suggest for me to
> read up if I were to investigate what exactly is "find" 's magic to
> hook other processes and keep a running instance for multiple "found"
> files?
The man page is a good st
On Vi, 15 mai 20, 12:38:12, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> On 5/14/20, Nicolas George wrote:
>
> > The question was not how to find the files, the formulation of the
> > question indicates that Albretch has that covered.
>
> Yeah, my problem is not finding the files per se. I have them or
> could ha
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 12:41:07PM +0200, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> What documentation, books, videos, ... would you suggest for me to
> read up if I were to investigate what exactly is "find" 's magic to
> hook other processes and keep a running instance for multiple "found"
> files?
You're over
On 5/15/20 7:48 AM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Unix is not taught in "videos". This isn't freaking Microsoft here.
Unix and its toolset are built around TEXT.
You seriously aren't aware of the thousands of videos that
"teach Unix"? Or you are just a purist who refused to
admit they have any value?
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 11:39:08AM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> Jonathan Dowland (12020-05-15):
> > The ultimate answer that Dan provided was to use find with xargs, which
> > is fine. And if you are going to use -print0, it is often a good idea to
> > trial that you've got the pattern right (esp
On Vi, 15 mai 20, 07:48:54, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>
> Compare and contrast these commands:
>
> find . -type f -exec ls -l {} \;
>
> find . -type f -exec ls -l {} +
>
> How do they differ?
>
> The first one issues one "ls -l" command for each file found.
>
> The second one gathers up multiple
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 05:48:23PM +0300, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> I just stumbled upon an interesting case:
>
> $ find po -name ro.po -exec msgfmt --statistics {} \;
> 66 translated messages.
> 705 translated messages, 14 fuzzy translations.
> 52 translated messages.
> 485 translated messages.
> 5
On Fri, 15 May 2020 01:41:21 -0400 (EDT)
moelmoel2714 wrote:
> On Fri, 15 May 2020, Celejar wrote:
>
> > On Thu, 14 May 2020 22:05:41 -0400 (EDT)
> > moelmoel2714 wrote:
> >
> >> Greets!
> >>
> >> not sure how I got into this bind but I seem to have lost the 'access
> >> modules' that allow vlc
Hi,
I've installed Debian Buster on a desktop system I use as a server. I also
occasionally use this as a regular desktop system so it has a monitor,
keyboard, and GUI. During installation I selected the ssh server in
tasksel (so during installation there was some indication this was a
server).
Chris Rhodin wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've installed Debian Buster on a desktop system I use as a server. I also
> occasionally use this as a regular desktop system so it has a monitor,
> keyboard, and GUI. During installation I selected the ssh server in
> tasksel (so during installation there was som
I have several fit-PC 1s.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fit-PC#fit-PC_1.0 I have done fresh
installs of Buster on two, so it should work. But recently the net
install ISO (debian-10.0.0-i386-netinst.iso) did not find the two
Ethernet adapters.
root@chaffee:~# lspci -vs 00:0d.0
00:0d.0 Ethernet con
On 2020-05-14 03:47, Albretch Mueller wrote:
The thing is that I have to call, say sha256sum, on millions of files
Probably debian admin people dealing with packaging have to deal with
the same kinds of issues.
lbrtchx
The need to checksum files is common; it is a good test case for tr
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 03:34:53PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
> Another consideration is concurrency. If you have a multi-core processor
> and implement a solution that puts two or more cores to work at the same
> time, a concurrent program should finish sooner than a sequential program.
> Ag
On 5/15/20 3:19 AM, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Hi,
Gary L. Roach wrote:
I load the software from an .iso file in my Download directory.
I wonder what this means in detail.
The normal procedure with an .iso image file and a qemu VM is
to start qemu with the .iso file as -cdrom and the (empty) virt
On Fri 15 May 2020 at 16:03:12 (-0600), Charles Curley wrote:
> I have several fit-PC 1s.
> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fit-PC#fit-PC_1.0 I have done fresh
> installs of Buster on two, so it should work. But recently the net
> install ISO (debian-10.0.0-i386-netinst.iso) did not find the two
> Et
On 2020-05-15 15:58, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Fri, May 15, 2020 at 03:34:53PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
Another consideration is concurrency. If you have a multi-core processor
and implement a solution that puts two or more cores to work at the same
time, a concurrent program should finish
Hi, there.
I had posted the last article. I found a way how I do.
let g:UltiSnipsUsePythonVersion = 3
let g:UltiSnipsExpandTrigger=""
let g:UltiSnipsJumpForwardTrigger=""
let g:UltiSnipsJumpBackwardTrigger=""
let g:UltiSnipsSnippetDirectories=[$HOME.'/myUltiSnips/']
These snippets that I made ma
On Fri, 15 May 2020, Celejar wrote:
On Fri, 15 May 2020 01:41:21 -0400 (EDT)
moelmoel2714 wrote:
[...]
vlc worked fine before I did something I know not what. and it works
fine on the other computer. but, to repeat, the working system has a
ton of modules listed but this one has four or so.
On 2020年5月16日 4:20:50 JST, Dan Ritter wrote:
>Chris Rhodin wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> I've installed Debian Buster on a desktop system I use as a server.
>I also
>> occasionally use this as a regular desktop system so it has a
>monitor,
>> keyboard, and GUI. During installation I selected the ssh ser
Hi,
Gary L. Roach wrote:
> I burned a CD off of the .iso file and used it to install the
> system.
I wonder why you need to burn a real CD (or DVD ?) for a virtual machine.
Virtualization can work with the .iso file directly and make it appear
in the guest as CD-ROM drive with medium.
> Dummy m
On Vi, 15 mai 20, 11:27:40, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>
> As the programmer, you need to know which commands can be invoked in
> which way(s). Usually a quick glance at the man page will suffice.
>
> Now, in the case of msgfmt(1), I don't actually know the right answer
> for you -- it's not a tool I'
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