On 18/08/2021 21:16, Harald Dunkel wrote:
...sid becomes the next release in 2 years
Sid is always sid.
Testing (now Bookworm) will become stable in ~2 years.
--
John
On 16/12/2021 01:53, Tim Woodall wrote:
I run the following command to switch my caps-lock to escape:
xmodmap -e 'clear Lock' -e 'keycode 0x42 = Escape'
However, if I disconnect and reconnect my keyboard (I have a KVM switch
box so this happens quite a lot) the setting is lost.
Before I start w
On 06/01/2022 03:26, Charles Curley wrote:
On Wed, 5 Jan 2022 09:44:24 -0500
"Paul M. Foster" wrote:
Can anyone recommend another MUA which uses mbox format and is
relatively easy to configure?
Claws-mail and mutt for two.
Or, if you want to stick with your investment in Thunderbird, use
do
On 08/01/2022 12:00, David Wright wrote:
On Fri 07 Jan 2022 at 14:46:04 (-0500), Lee wrote:
right - another unknown. There's a /usr/bin/xfce4-terminal.wrapper
that starts off with
#! /usr/bin/perl -w
#
# Terminal.wrapper - Debian terminal wrapper script
which I don't know who calls or even wh
On 20/01/2022 04:46, Richard Hector wrote:
On 19/01/22 04:08, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
So - the Cooperative Society - is at https://www.coop.co.uk
Oddly, when I searched for "Co-operative Group Limited" (which I got from
whois), I found a different site: https://co-operative.coop
It seems t
On 09/04/2021 08:38, Charles Curley wrote:
The programs exo-csource and exo-preferred-applications seem to be
absent from the package exo-utils, in spite of being advertised as
still being there. This is version 4.16.0-1 of the package, on Bullseye.
exo-preferred-applications has been moved fro
On 10/04/2021 00:26, Charles Curley wrote:
On Fri, 9 Apr 2021 15:03:24 +0900
As near as I can tell, exo-preferred-applications has gone away
entirely.
That does seem to be the case.
https://gitlab.xfce.org/xfce/xfce4-settings/-/commit/c955a4806f92eb25d341ad71714f558800efa55c#b0e6c4c10d3fff48da
On 04/07/2021 23:43, Siard wrote:
On Sun, 04 Jul 2021 17:03 +0800, loushanguan2...@sina.com wrote:
i've found many books at archive.org in pdf formatbut reading them in
acrobat for linux is painful, it's slow
it's fast in acrobat for androidand i think it's fast in Windows
adobe has stopped upgr
On 16/02/2022 05:26, Nitebirdz wrote:
On Sat, Feb 12, 2022 at 09:36:45AM +1100, David wrote:
I'm not really paying attention to the latest capabilites that the
installer might have, or to what any other distros are doing, but when
I have attempted this in the past it appeared to me that the Debi
On 22/02/2022 23:12, Celejar wrote:
Hello,
I'm running Xfce4 on a recent install of Sid. I have configured Xfce4
to "Lock screen before sleep" (in Session and Startup / General), but
when I use xscreensaver, when resuming from suspend the screen is often
visible for a brief period before xscreen
On 23/02/2022 11:50, John Crawley wrote:
On 22/02/2022 23:12, Celejar wrote:
Hello,
I'm running Xfce4 on a recent install of Sid. I have configured Xfce4
to "Lock screen before sleep" (in Session and Startup / General), but
when I use xscreensaver, when resuming from suspen
On 2020-09-01 23:11, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Tue, Sep 01, 2020 at 10:03:27AM -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tuesday, September 01, 2020 04:29:55 AM to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
[1] Why people keep insisting in calling those things "folders" is
beyond me. They don't "fold" anything, do th
On 20/10/2020 04:57, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
From: Bob McGowan
Date: Sat, 17 Oct 2020 18:18:18 -0700
As for exiting, so long as Zoom considers it a normal exit, it will
give an exit status of zero and you will simply see the next prompt.
That is as expected.
At least one earlier reply had ou
On 02/11/2020 12:31, Victor Sudakov wrote:
David Wright wrote:
On Mon 02 Nov 2020 at 09:52:53 (+0700), Victor Sudakov wrote:
Dan Ritter wrote:
When I want to figure out what package has installed package "foo" as a
dependency, is there a less barbaric method than
apt-get -s remove foo
In a
On 09/02/2021 21:40, Matthijs wrote:
Following the Debian Live manual on using a predefined
configuration(https://live-team.pages.debian.net/live-manual/html/live-manual/managing-a-configuration.en.html#333):
$ mkdir live-images && cd live-images
$ lb config --config https://salsa.debian.org/liv
On 12/02/2021 17:16, Matthijs wrote:
On 12-02-2021 03:12, John Crawley wrote:
On 09/02/2021 21:40, Matthijs wrote:
Following the Debian Live manual on using a predefined
configuration(https://live-team.pages.debian.net/live-manual/html/live-manual/managing-a-configuration.en.html#333
On 2019-06-06 01:24, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
On 05.06.2019 19:52, Vipul wrote:
I had a dual booted PC ( Windows and Debian in HP notebook with 1 TB hard-disk) and from few months Windows cannot starts ( because one day I was in hurry change size of two of partitions using "gparted' and to f
On 2019-07-10 01:52, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Jul 09, 2019 at 06:48:22PM +0200, mjonsson1...@gmail.com wrote:
http://schemas.microsoft.com/office/2004/12/omml"; xmlns="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40";>
On 2019-07-10 15:31, Reco wrote:
On Wed, Jul 10, 2019 at 10:35:33AM +0900, John Crawley wrote:
On 2019-07-10 01:52, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Jul 09, 2019 at 06:48:22PM +0200, mjonsson1...@gmail.com wrote:
Please post only text, not HTML. If your email agent *cannot* do plain
text alone
On 2019-07-11 15:25, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Jo, 11 iul 19, 12:31:07, John Crawley wrote:
...user agents that could deal with html in some sane way, and without
exposing the recipient to attacks. Simply not following any web links would
be enough I'd have thought? Or are there some more s
On 2019-07-11 16:10, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Jo, 11 iul 19, 15:52:56, John Crawley wrote:
On 2019-07-11 15:25, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Jo, 11 iul 19, 12:31:07, John Crawley wrote:
...user agents that could deal with html in some sane way, and without
exposing the recipient to attacks
On 2019-07-12 04:44, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Thu, Jul 11, 2019 at 03:40:17PM -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
both ckermit and dosemu are in stretch and unstable but not in stable --
I assume they failed to build or had a similar critical bug.
https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/ckermit
https://tracker.deb
On 2019-07-13 06:39, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
...some developers wrongly thought that recommends was same as
suggests and therefore used depends far more than really needed.
This. Installing with Recommends used to pull in a whole slew of things
that should have been Suggests, so users got into
The behaviour of exec seems to have changed from Stretch to Buster -
whether using bash or "sh" (dash here).
Simple test, in default bash shell on terminal:
sh
# now with dash
exec x-terminal-emulator
# close new window
In Stretch, the launching dash shell is held until the new one is
close
Hi tomas and Thomas, thanks for your input.
I think I have a basic idea of what exec does.
However, try running in a terminal:
echo $$
exec
#Then, in the new terminal:
echo $$
The two PIDs are different! (or were here)
On 2019-07-17 17:37, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
John Crawley wrote:
In Buster
On 2019-07-18 10:29, John Crawley wrote:
Hi tomas and Thomas, thanks for your input.
I think I have a basic idea of what exec does.
However, try running in a terminal:
echo $$
exec
#Then, in the new terminal:
echo $$
The two PIDs are different! (or were here)
On 2019-07-17 17:37, Thomas
On 2019-07-18 14:53, Richard Hector wrote:
On 18/07/19 1:29 PM, John Crawley wrote:
However, try running in a terminal:
echo $$
exec
#Then, in the new terminal:
echo $$
The two PIDs are different! (or were here)
Yes. You exec'd a terminal, which then started a shell. You'll probab
On 2019-08-25 11:55, John Hasler wrote:
It can be plausibly argued that ELIZA passed the Turing test.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turing_test#ELIZA_and_PARRY
Followed a link there to read about the Chinese Room thought experiment
by John Searle:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chinese_room
Fas
On 2020-07-14 21:52, Albretch Mueller wrote:
I have a string delimited by two characters: "\|"
_S=" 34 + 45 \| abc \| 1 2 3 \| c\|123abc "
which then I need to turn into a array looking like:
_S_AR=(
" 34 + 45"
" abc"
" 1 2 3"
" c"
"123abc"
)
Is it possible to do such things in ba
On 2020-08-05 22:06, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Wed, Aug 05, 2020 at 03:04:32PM +0900, John Crawley wrote:
This method cuts off the first part of the string, up to the delimiter, and
adds it to the array, then continues with what's left of the string until
there's none left:
Yes, that
On 2020-08-06 20:33, Greg Wooledge wrote:
For short strings, doing this sort of parsing in bash is fine. But as
you can see, on large inputs, it does not scale well. The fact that each
iteration makes a *copy* of nearly the entire remaining input doesn't
help matters, either -- right off the ba
On 2018-06-24 03:18, Richard Owlett wrote:
For the past couple of weeks I've had problems connecting to
https://manpages.debian.org/ .
Usually these days (last couple of months?) when I click a link in
Firefox pointing to an online Debian manpage it takes a very long time
to load, and someti
On 2018-06-24 09:49, Fred wrote:
On 06/23/2018 05:23 PM, John Crawley wrote:
On 2018-06-24 03:18, Richard Owlett wrote:
For the past couple of weeks I've had problems connecting to
https://manpages.debian.org/ .
Usually these days (last couple of months?) when I click a link in
Fi
On 2018-06-26 16:30, John Crawley wrote:
On 2018-06-24 09:49, Fred wrote:
On 06/23/2018 05:23 PM, John Crawley wrote:
On 2018-06-24 03:18, Richard Owlett wrote:
For the past couple of weeks I've had problems connecting to
https://manpages.debian.org/ .
Usually these days (last coup
On 2018-07-02 02:31, David Wright wrote:
What seems to be lost on people who feel a pressing need for
/etc/debian_version to contain a number to satisfy some script that
they have written (which seems to be the usual reason) is that
/etc/debian_version is a configuration file.
I don't know of
On 2018-07-05 09:58, Richard Hector wrote:
On 05/07/18 03:53, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 04 Jul 2018 at 13:18:14 (+1200), Richard Hector wrote:
On 02/07/18 05:31, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 01 Jul 2018 at 22:44:17 (+1200), Richard Hector wrote:
On 28/06/18 16:40, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 2
On 2018-07-07 11:02, David Christensen wrote:
On 07/06/18 09:17, Richard Owlett wrote:
Subject line is poorly phrased.
While working on a problem {solved by a different approach} I had:
ls -l /dev/disk/by-label/ | cut -f 10,12 -d ' ' data.txt
I would then manually edit data.txt by replacing
On 2018-07-08 04:35, David Christensen wrote:
On 07/07/18 01:51, John Crawley wrote:
On 2018-07-07 11:02, David Christensen wrote:
On 07/06/18 09:17, Richard Owlett wrote:
While working on a problem {solved by a different approach} I had:
ls -l /dev/disk/by-label/ | cut -f 10,12 -d
On 2018-07-16 04:33, Richard Owlett wrote:
Can I a Debian user opt to not install "LSB" without ill effects?
Some ...er, many Debian packages depend on lsb-base.
'apt-cache rdepends lsb-base' for a long list.
--
John
On 2018-07-27 03:21, Markus Grunwald wrote:
A few programs that I use, in turn use xdg-open. With web-pages, it gets
it completely wrong, no matter what I do:
What can I do ...?
file $(which xdg-open)
/usr/bin/xdg-open: POSIX shell script, ASCII text executable
OK it's a shell script. Try th
On 02/10/2018 16.37, Brad Rogers wrote:
On Tue, 2 Oct 2018 09:17:52 +0200
Per Dalgas Jakobsen wrote:
Hello Per,
Until a few days ago, Firefox played videos on Facebook without issues,
v52 is too old. IDK whether it's being blocked, or sites are using
features not available in v52. This is
On 03/10/2018 16.14, Brad Rogers wrote:
On Wed, 3 Oct 2018 11:49:31 +0900
John Crawley wrote:
Hello John,
The extended support firefox-esr is available in Debian Stretch (not
Buster atm) at version 60.2.1, so enabling sid is not necessary:
I assumed, perhaps wrongly, that Per uses testing
On 14/10/2018 12.17, bw wrote:
On Thu, 11 Oct 2018, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 10 Oct 2018 at 21:04:58 (-0400), bw wrote:
I agree with this opinion, and also what Dan Ritter replied. Firefox is
now unreliable on stretch and should be avoided. Security updates to a
browser that crashes with
On 18/10/2018 18.16, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
What the world needs (badly) is more browser alternatives. I'm
seeing everything converging towards the dystopia where one huge
corporation controls the server and the client. We had that, and
it wasn't pretty; nowadays with smartphones, always-on, IoT
On 20/10/2018 19.28, Richard Owlett wrote:
...I would have expected to use an
explicit pipe command between 'find' and 'grep'.
In fact, depending on the exact conditions of your search, you might not
need to use find at all. 'grep -r' will do a recursive search, starting
at whatever directory
On 21/10/2018 22.48, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 21 Oct 2018 at 05:25:05 (-0500), Richard Owlett wrote:
On 10/20/2018 08:16 PM, John Crawley wrote:
On 20/10/2018 19.28, Richard Owlett wrote:
...I would have expected to use an explicit pipe command
between 'find' and 'g
On 27/10/2018 05.20, Dennis Wicks wrote:
Anybody know the secret command to get the source in
some usable format?
I always use 'git ' directly. Install it from the Debian repos if necessary.
On GitLab there's usually a box with the git url, but it's probably just
https://gitlab.com/username/re
On 06/11/2018 04.24, David Parker wrote:
Thanks for the information. I guess I'm just surprised that the
dependencies are limited to firefox/firefox-esr/chromium. Seems like
other browsers like Iceweasel are just arbitrarily left out.
https://www.debian.org/releases/stretch/amd64/release-note
On 08/11/2018 00.47, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
On Tue, Nov 06, 2018 at 05:50:02PM +0300, Reco wrote:
So it kind of makes sense for gnome-core to depend on gnome-www-browser,
isn't it? Or there's a reason why using gnome-www-browser is unsuitable
for GNOME DE?
Yeah that makes perfect sense in tha
On 09/11/2018 00.59, Reco wrote:
On Thu, Nov 08, 2018 at 03:53:54PM +, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
On Thu, Nov 08, 2018 at 10:53:01AM +0900, John Crawley wrote:
www-browser and x-www-browser being different things, this would be a bug in
the LXDE metapackage?
It is indeed, yes,* but what
On 09/11/2018 20.40, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
On Thu, Nov 08, 2018 at 06:59:48PM +0300, Reco wrote:
lxde-core depends on www-browser already (Suggests, actually, but that's
irrelevant). So it might as well depend on this to-be-done
x-www-browser.
Yes. That's exactly what I am advocating in the
Hello people,
with the Bookworm soft freeze already under way, the time left for fixing
packages is running low, and there's a specific case where I'd appreciate
advice.
The package is terminator[1], a python based extension (I think) of Gnome
terminal. I don't use it myself, but the current
Hi Jonathan, thank you for your advice.
On 24/02/2023 07:15, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
[ honouring Reply-To as set ]
Thanks, I'll drop that header in future.
Debian Python Team maintain a huge number of packages (>2,000). Things
can very easily slip through the cracks.
Indeed, and everyone's
On 27/02/2023 19:58, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
I see the maintainer has
uploaded a new version with a fix for your issue (--execute), but
they have pointed out that the original bug was complaining about
something different (-c): I hadn't noticed the difference, and it
seems only the former is a po
On 28/02/2023 09:00, John Crawley wrote:
On 27/02/2023 19:58, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
I see the maintainer has
uploaded a new version with a fix for your issue (--execute), but
they have pointed out that the original bug was complaining about
something different (-c): I hadn't notice
On 27/02/2023 19:58, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
I see the maintainer has
uploaded a new version with a fix for your issue (--execute), but
they have pointed out that the original bug was complaining about
something different (-c): I hadn't noticed the difference, and it
seems only the former is a po
On 11/03/2023 00:29, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
On 2023-03-10 09:58:55 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Fri, Mar 10, 2023 at 04:55:03PM +0200, Anssi Saari wrote:
Nicolas George writes:
Anssi Saari (12023-03-09):
After=network.target
# /usr/lib/systemd/system/rc-local.service.d/debian.conf
[Unit]
On 06/01/2019 00.26, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
On Friday, January 04, 2019 08:21:30 PM David Wright wrote:
On Fri 04 Jan 2019 at 14:02:27 (-0500), Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
Having babbled for the last two paragraphs, I'll close buy saying that
I will revert to the entire installation on the sa
On 13/01/2019 12.46, Celejar wrote:
On Fri, 11 Jan 2019 21:45:57 +
I believe that the most commonly used software for file level
encryption is EncFS. I haven't really used it much, and can't speak to
its long term stablity.
EncFS should not be used for any new file encryption project, IMHO
On 28/01/2019 18.18, Paul Sutton wrote:
On 1/27/19 12:11 PM, BELAHCENE Abdelkader wrote:
Sometimes (maybe often) when I leave the system for a times without
touching it, when I come back, the system is frozen , juste the
pointer of
mouse can move, but nothing else, keyboard doesn't respond, ev
On 06/02/2019 03.17, ghe wrote:
On 2/5/19 9:19 AM, Jude DaShiell wrote:
Have you tried replacing "-" with \45 yet? That's the ascii equivalent
for "-'.
Excellent idea. But:
root@sbox:~# systemctl unmask \45.mount
Unit 45.mount does not exist, proceeding anyway.
(Same with quotes.)
You mi
On 16/02/2019 08.54, David Wright wrote:
On Fri 15 Feb 2019 at 22:04:42 (+), Darac Marjal wrote:
If you're going to recommend parsing `ip`, the -j option may be more
amenable to scripting. (JSON output)
On 15/02/2019 15:52, David Wright wrote:
On Fri 15 Feb 2019 at 12:02:20 (+0100), Markus
On 16/02/2019 14.28, David Wright wrote:
On Sat 16 Feb 2019 at 11:10:32 (+0900), John Crawley wrote:
On 16/02/2019 08.54, David Wright wrote:
On Fri 15 Feb 2019 at 22:04:42 (+), Darac Marjal wrote:
If you're going to recommend parsing `ip`, the -j option may be more
amenable to scri
On 2019-10-19 11:24, Dan Hitt wrote:
There's a piece of software, lazpaint, that i would like to install on
my debian system.
The project dates from 2011, so i think it's pretty well established.
https://sourceforge.net/projects/lazpaint/
So i'm wondering if there's some way to invoke dpkg to ge
A (bash) script wants to put up a GUI (yad) if it can, or otherwise try
to interact with the user on the terminal.
Previously I was using loginctl:
loginctl show-session -p Type $XDG_SESSION_ID
and looking for 'Type=x11' or 'Type=wayland'
However, if a user logs in on a tty and then runs 'star
On 2019-10-29 22:38, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
On 2019-10-29 14:32:39 +0900, John Crawley wrote:
A (bash) script wants to put up a GUI (yad) if it can, or otherwise try to
interact with the user on the terminal.
>> ---
loginctl show-session -p Type $XDG_SESSION_ID
and looking for 'T
On 2018-05-15 22:24, Richard Owlett wrote:
On 05/15/2018 12:48 AM, John Crawley (johnraff) wrote:
Policykit brings its own complications, but I think it should be
possible to create a .pkla file in /var/lib/polkit-1/localauthority to
allow a certain user, or group member, to perform an
Hi folks,
I've just about run out of ideas here, so appealing for suggestions.
I don't know if this is a change in the behaviour of apt or bash, or both,
between Debian 11 and 12.
I have a script which is supposed to smooth out some apt actions, while still
keeping user interactions, but with
On 24/09/2023 21:36, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Sep 24, 2023 at 12:03:12PM +0200, Michel Verdier wrote:
#!/bin/bash
errors=$(sudo apt-get install unknown 2>&1 1>/dev/tty)
echo "output: $errors"
errors=$(sudo apt-get install mirage 2>&1 1>/dev/tty)
echo "output: $errors"
[...]
It waits until I
Thanks for the ideas!
On 25/09/2023 09:36, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Sep 25, 2023 at 09:10:28AM +0900, John Crawley wrote:
I just tried, and yes it runs OK when the commands are in a script.
But type directly into the terminal:
errors=$(sudo apt-get install mirage 2>&1 1>/dev/tt
On 25/09/2023 11:58, John Crawley wrote:
So the 32bit system is different??
Doesn't semm to be that.
amd64 Bookworm VM behaves the same way.
--
John
On 25/09/2023 12:42, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Sep 25, 2023 at 11:58:13AM +0900, John Crawley wrote:
adduser tmp
adduser tmp sudo
Log in to tmp (no graphical session set up), and the results are the same:
behaviour in a bash shell is wrong, everything else works.
I simply can't repr
Many thanks to Michael for finding the change in sudo behaviour!
For historical accuracy:
On 25/09/2023 20:24, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Sep 25, 2023 at 01:35:38PM +0900, John Crawley wrote:
4) In a bash shell as root (e.g. "su" or "sudo -s"), do:
errors=$(apt-get
On 25/09/2023 20:21, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Sep 25, 2023 at 11:14:24AM +0200, Michael wrote:
so i looked into /etc/sudoers and all /etc/sudoers.d/* and found two
suspicous flags:
/etc/sudoers:
Defaults use_pty
/etc/sudoers.d/0pwfeedback:
Defaults pwfeedback
then consulting the sud
On 26/09/2023 12:06, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Sep 26, 2023 at 11:52:09AM +0900, John Crawley wrote:
On 25/09/2023 20:21, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Given the presence of an /etc/sudoers.dpkg-dist file on my system,
which does in fact contain this:
# This fixes CVE-2005-4890 and possibly breaks
On 05/10/2023 13:15, David Wright wrote:
On Tue 03 Oct 2023 at 19:58:57 (-0700), Mike Castle wrote:
(apt-mark showauto ; apt-mark showmanual) > apt-thinks-you-installed.txt
dpkg-query --show --showformat='${Package}\n' | grep -v -F -f
apt-thinks-you-installed.txt > rest.txt
(I've added the omit
On 13/12/2023 15:24, Geert Stappers wrote:
An attempt to get beyond FUD
|Debian Bug report logs - #1057967
|linux-image-6.1.0-15-amd64 renders my physical bookworm/gnome computer largely
unusable version graph
|Package: src:linux; Maintainer for src:linux is Debian Kernel Team
;
|Affects: src:
On 15/12/2023 02:48, Kevin Price wrote:
"The bug" (Bug#1057967 & Bug#1057969) occurs only in kernel version
6.1.66-1 (package -6.1.0-15, released with bookworm 12.4). No other
debian kernel version has this bug. It might not affect you, and it can
be remedied/worked around. If it does affect you
On 15/12/2023 13:39, John Crawley wrote:
If you don't want to wait for 6.1.67-1 to arrive in Bookworm stable, it is
available in bookworm-proposed-updates [1][2], so one workaround would be to
temporarily add that repository [3] to apt sources before upgrading. Debian
point release 12.
On 26/09/2023 11:52, John Crawley wrote:
On 25/09/2023 20:21, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Sep 25, 2023 at 11:14:24AM +0200, Michael wrote:
so i looked into /etc/sudoers and all /etc/sudoers.d/* and found two
suspicous flags:
/etc/sudoers:
Defaults use_pty
/etc/sudoers.d/0pwfeedback
On 19/01/2024 16:10, fxkl4...@protonmail.com wrote:
why doesn't grep count 2 commas
echo 'Kích thước máy xay cỏ, giá máy thế nào , phụ tùng máy mua ở đâu' | grep
-c ,
1
echo 'Kích thước máy xay cỏ, giá máy thế nào , phụ tùng máy mua ở đâu' | cut
-d, -f1
Kích thước máy xay cỏ
echo 'Kích thướ
On 04/03/2024 10:07, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 03 Mar 2024 at 17:58:53 (-0600), Albretch Mueller wrote:
bash doesn't seem to like dots too close to brackets:
echo "${_VAR//[^0-9a-zA-Z.,_-]/}"
works fine.
On 3/3/24, Albretch Mueller wrote:
_VAR="admissions.piedmont.edu_files?trackid=w
On 05/03/2024 05:27, David Wright wrote:
Pattern matching in the shell is not the same as in grep: the
rules are different, but similar enough to confuse.
Grep uses regular expressions, while the shell is usually globs. (I have no
experience of shells other than dash and bash though.)
Bash can
On 05/03/2024 11:02, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Mar 05, 2024 at 10:49:34AM +0900, John Crawley wrote:
On 05/03/2024 05:27, David Wright wrote:
Which shell also matters. The OP appears to be using ^ to negate,
but ! has the advantage that it will be understood in bash and dash.
I think
On 05/03/2024 11:36, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 05/03/2024 09:02, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Mar 05, 2024 at 10:49:34AM +0900, John Crawley wrote:
I think ^ has been deprecated recently. I failed to find a reference on the web
just now though.
So, ^ isn't "deprecated". It'
On 07/03/2024 21:04, Andy Smith wrote:
Hi,
On Thu, Mar 07, 2024 at 09:44:51AM +0100, Hans wrote:
--- sninp ---
Authentication-Results: mail35c50.megamailservers.eu; spf=none
smtp.mailfrom=lists.debian.org
Authentication-Results: mail35c50.megamailservers.eu;
dkim=fail reason="signature
On 16/04/2024 03:52, Curt wrote:
On 2024-04-15, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 14 Apr 2024 at 14:24:29 (-), Curt wrote:
On 2024-04-04, Max Nikulin wrote:
If you do not trust Gmail as a web application, use a mail application
that supports IMAP.
Gmail supports IMAP since more or less fore
On 21/04/2024 08:40, Mike Castle wrote:
One thing Linux-Fan mentioned was `config-package-dev`. In my OP, I
commented about ``slightly old to really old tools'', and that was one
I was thinking of. It looks like it hasn't been touched in seven
years, and I wasn't sure if it still worked. But t
On 24/04/2024 22:37, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 24 Apr 2024 at 14:50:36 (+0200), Richard wrote:
upon gathering my thoughts for answering to you I found the solution to
this: update-initramfs can't handle the case that crypttab ends in the line
of the last entry and not in a new line character. I
On 26/04/2024 12:56, David Wright wrote:
On Fri 26 Apr 2024 at 11:27:24 (+0900), John Crawley wrote:
Innocent question: what difference does the comment make vs just ending the
file with an empty line?
Nothing for the computer, but visibility for me.
Say you print the file on paper. All you
On 28/06/2024 14:00, Erwan DAVID wrote:
Le 28 juin 2024 13:12:03 David Wright a écrit :
On Wed 26 Jun 2024 at 12:50:32 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Wed, Jun 26, 2024 at 11:25:38 -0500, John Hasler wrote:
I wrote:
12 Noon and 12 Midnight works.
David Wright wrote:
Except that The Wan
On 28/06/2024 18:42, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 28/6/24 16:13, John Crawley wrote:
Except that midnight is also 0:00, so you still have the am/pm confusion.
They should have kept 0:00 just for midnight really.
That's the first time I've seen anything to justify calling m
On 30/06/2024 12:19, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sat, Jun 29, 2024 at 20:12:36 -0700, Will Mengarini wrote:
All we still need to know is whether the OP cares
about packages that aren't installed, or whether some
other aspect of Greg's solution isn't sufficient.
If there's interest in new versions
On 17/10/2024 02:58, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Wed, Oct 16, 2024 at 19:03:27 +0200, Hans wrote:
But I wondered, why this file is not modified during my updates. As people
told, /etc/profile is
part of the package base-files and is copied from /usr/share/base-files/profile.
It's not actually par
On 21/11/2024 15:10, gene heskett wrote:
That doesn't affect the dozens of miss-configured email agents here that violate
those SOP's for text emails.
My mail filter for debian-user seems to be working OK, everything sent to the
right place. Maybe it's because I have fewer filters than you (3
On 21/11/2024 05:31, gene heskett wrote:
Which is what I am sending from latest t-bird in what I think is plain text, as
below, and it works, my too long comment is not greyed out in the incoming echo
from the listserver. You should see it incoming but not in a reply you make
that quotes my ms
On 18/01/2025 23:01, Andy Smith wrote:
After a stable release of Debian is made, future package updates will
come from the stable-updates suite (e.g. bookworm-updates in the case
of Debian 12). These updates will in most cases contain the same version
of the software from stable suite but with a
On 2018-03-28 02:50, Jean-Baptiste Thomas wrote:
After apt-get update, attempting to install ntp tries to
download version 1:4.2.8p10+dfsg-3+deb9u1 and fails. It tries
to download +deb9u1 because
$ aptitude show ntp
Package: ntp
Version: 1:4.2.8p10+dfsg-3+deb9u1
State: not installed
On 2018-03-29 03:40, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Wed, Mar 28, 2018 at 08:18:24PM +0200, Mikhail Morfikov wrote:
On 2018-03-28 20:12, Sven Joachim wrote:
I really thought there's some easy way to include user's scripts when you want
to make some additional changes to the upgraded packages, but it
On 2018-03-29 03:40, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
I really thought there's some easy way to include user's scripts when you want
to make some additional changes to the upgraded packages, but it looks like the
apt mechanism is a little bit limited. But I will try to do something with the
trigger and se
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