On 9/17/2020 10:14 AM, Hans wrote:
Am Donnerstag, 17. September 2020, 17:01:29 CEST schrieb Joe:
Hi Joe,
yes I know, this is normal for unstable. I am using debian/testing, which is
close to unstable.
The point of my message was not the deinstallation of packages at all, but the
deinstallation
On 9/17/2020 10:29 AM, Joe wrote:
On Thu, 17 Sep 2020 17:14:30 +0200
Hans wrote:
Am Donnerstag, 17. September 2020, 17:01:29 CEST schrieb Joe:
Hi Joe,
No offence. :)
And none taken. Yes, I've lost one or two applications over the years
which I was actively using. But it is rare for this t
On 9/19/2020 6:12 AM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Vi, 18 sep 20, 11:00:11, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
In my experience (own as well as assisting other newcomers), users
coming from Windows or Mac will be surprised by the mere existence of
different options here.
Most Windows users are comple
On 10/8/2020 8:09 AM, Michael Stone wrote:
On Thu, Oct 08, 2020 at 11:53:16AM +0200, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Michael Stone wrote:
> I'd assume it's confusion between bits and bytes. [...]
> just write out bit or byte
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
SI prefixes can also help... if you use them consistent
On 10/8/2020 2:17 PM, Michael Stone wrote:
On Thu, Oct 08, 2020 at 01:27:15PM -0500, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
Well, what, really, is wrong with pedantry?
It makes conversation with humans harder
Can you provide any data to back that up? I find it often to be quite
the opposite
On 10/8/2020 5:13 PM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
a container nears being full. If one has 1 MB of storage available
(allowing for file system overhead and block alignment), then 1 MB
of data will fit, but 1 MiB will not.
In which way is the KB-vs-KiB discrepancy different
On 10/8/2020 7:10 PM, Michael Stone wrote:
Can you provide any data to back that up? I find it often to be
quite the opposite. Sloppy use of language very frequently leads to
miscommunication, sometimes of a very serious nature.
And yet correcting people in contexts where there's no r
On 10/15/2020 5:05 PM, Pierre-Elliott B�cue wrote:
Le mercredi 14 octobre 2020 � 02:12:45-0700, Weaver a �crit�:
On 14-10-2020 18:30, Christoph K. wrote:
On Tue, 13 Oct 2020 23:06:55 -0700
Weaver wrote :
"as I learnt to read years ago,"
It's appropriate sarcasm.
Disagreed.
It's sim
On 10/16/2020 4:57 AM, Pierre-Elliott B�cue wrote:
The point - or my point anyway - is rather than seeking to tack on a
whole
bunch of poorly considered features to a poorly considered fundamental
utility, well considered, powerful, highly configurable solutions such as
"find" shoul
On 10/15/2020 9:20 AM, Felmon Davis wrote:
On Thu, 15 Oct 2020, gru...@mailfence.com wrote:
Reading this thread reinforces just how old I am
The whole world seems to be wearing their feelings on the sleeve
I doubt it's age-related; many feel under threat for various reasons
though maybe we d
On 10/17/2020 12:05 AM, Michael uplawski wrote:
Leslie Rhorer:
Until someone does earn respect, there is no reason anyone
should afford it them. It is utterly ridiculous to think everyone
deserves respect.
This is where you are excluding yourself from the human community.
'Not at
On 10/17/2020 12:39 AM, Weaver wrote:
On 17-10-2020 15:05, Michael uplawski wrote:
Leslie Rhorer:
Until someone does earn respect, there is no reason anyone
should afford it them. It is utterly ridiculous to think everyone
deserves respect.
This is where you are excluding yourself from the
On 10/17/2020 1:59 AM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Vi, 16 oct 20, 16:46:42, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
On 10/16/2020 4:57 AM, Pierre-Elliott B�cue wrote:
Feel free to ignore """lazy""" people from now on, but don't be
irrespectful to them.
You have no
On 10/17/2020 3:09 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Fri, Oct 16, 2020 at 04:46:42PM -0500, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
On 10/16/2020 4:57 AM, Pierre-Elliott B�cue wrote:
[...]
This is nonsense. Whenever I forced to do something, or worse
yet, prevented from doing something by a
On 10/18/2020 5:23 AM, Michael uplawski wrote:
Weaver:
And I stand mine: respect is a quality that needs to be earned.
All living thing, and maybe more merit respect as a matter of fact.
That is total horse crap. As I pointed out before, anything given
without discrimination to everyone
On 10/18/2020 6:39 AM, Christoph K. wrote:
We're on a Debian mailing list here. Being respectful is part of the
Debian Code of Conduct
Being polite is not, nor is offering respect. I submit you may need to
lean the difference between being polite, being respectful, and holding
respect.
On 10/18/2020 6:52 AM, Long Wind wrote:
it's foolish to argue with foolish people
if i receive unpleasant message, i just ignore it (keep quiet)
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to
do nothing.”― Edmund Burke
In my opinion, the *LAST* thing one sho
On 10/18/2020 7:12 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Sun, Oct 18, 2020 at 11:52:20AM +, Long Wind wrote:
it's foolish to argue with foolish peopleif i receive unpleasant message, i
just ignore it (keep quiet)
In general, this is a good strategy.
In general, I disagree.
Still
On 10/18/2020 7:39 AM, Pierre-Elliott B�cue wrote:
In your perception.
Looking at the number of people who replied to tell you your attitude is
not welcome, I think it is a bit more than just my perception.
It would be rather remarkable if it were only yours. A singular
perception limite
On 10/24/2020 8:59 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
it's foolish to argue with foolish peopleif i receive unpleasant message, i
just ignore it (keep quiet)
In general, this is a good strategy.
In general, I disagree.
Leslie, I stopped discussing with you for a long while. I'm not
inte
On 10/24/2020 3:11 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Sat, Oct 24, 2020 at 02:52:41AM -0500, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
[...]
A couple of decades ago I had to have spinal surgery [...]
What he thought of me as a person was completely irrelevant.
Nice example. If you now try to abstract
On 10/24/2020 11:46 AM, Dan Ritter wrote:
Leslie Rhorer wrote: a bunch of words that indicate that they
aren't interested in politeness as a tool for lubricating social
interactions, even when a minimal attempt at such is the
recognized currency of the community.
Why would I want to
On 10/24/2020 11:46 AM, Pierre-Elliott B�cue wrote:
Le samedi 24 octobre 2020 � 10:39:56-0500, Leslie Rhorer a �crit�:
[snip]
Honestly, I don't care about your opinion. If you don't want to follow
So let me get this straight. I want very much to hear your opinion.
On 10/24/2020 12:01 PM, Doug McGarrett wrote:
These messages are very unrespectful.
There is no such word as "unrespectful".
In what way are any of my messages disrespectful? (Answer: they are
not.) I have not called anyone a name. I have not made any derogatory
comments about an
On 10/24/2020 6:04 PM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
Hi! All,
Looking for recommendations for a lightweight email client that will
handle HTML as well as plain text
I want to know that, myself.
deal with GNOME-systemd, etc. dependencies. (I don't run GNOME anyway,
only a window manager Open
This might be better handled on linux-r...@vger.kernel.org
On 10/26/2020 10:35 AM, Dan Ritter wrote:
Bill wrote:
So we're setting up a small server with a pair of 1 TB hard disks sectioned
into 5x100GB Raid 1 partition pairs for data, with 400GB+ reserved for
future uses on each disk.
On 10/26/2020 7:55 AM, Bill wrote:
Hi folks,
So we're setting up a small server with a pair of 1 TB hard disks
sectioned into 5x100GB Raid 1 partition pairs for data, with 400GB+
reserved for future uses on each disk.
Oh, also, why are you leaving so much unused space on the drives? On
On 10/26/2020 8:50 AM, Joe wrote:
It's all a bit subjective. As I understand things, a stranger deserves
It is entirely subjective. Whatever is or is not polite is not only a
matter of perspective, it is also a matter of the situation and the
relationships of the people involved. When I s
On 10/26/2020 7:59 AM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
I'm quite certain at least part of this huge discussion is caused by
misunderstandings.
That is fairly clear.
This is my attempt to clarify at least some of it.
Apparently I failed.
Well, in my case I don't think I failed to underst
On 10/24/2020 3:11 PM, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
Leslie,
You clearly have a great deal to say about your personal morals and ethics
Not really, no. Certainly not by comparison to the volume of my daily
work. "A great deal to say" would encompass volumes. I tyed a fe lines.
and you do no
On 10/26/2020 6:15 PM, Long Wind wrote:
On Saturday, October 24, 2020, 6:35:17 AM EDT, Leslie Rhorer
wrote:
“The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to
do nothing.”― Edmund Burke
In my opinion, the *LAST* thing one should do is keep quiet.
rude user
ᅵᅵᅵ I tried backula, but it really did not suit my needs.ᅵ I am using
DAR, instead.ᅵ The idea of DAR is similar to TAR, except it is designed
to be used with random access media, rather than streaming media.ᅵ I
highly recommend it.ᅵ One unique feature of DAR is it can not only add
I tried bacula, but it really did not suit my needs. I am using
DAR, instead. The idea of DAR is similar to TAR, except it is designed
to be used with random access media, rather than streaming media. I
highly recommend it. One unique feature of DAR is it can not only add
and update fil
I agree, absolutely.
On 4/4/2020 9:56 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Sat, Apr 04, 2020 at 01:12:33PM -, Curt wrote:
[...]
The problem arises when you "choose" to delete the wrong file by
inadvertence; if you're only thinking "syncing," your sunk, but if
you've backed up as well (and you a
As already mentioned, this simply will not work. Why are you wanting
to employ USB Ethernet / TCPIP is the way to go. Make the external
drive a NAS, and you are good to go. Many NAS systems support printer
sharing, or you can roll your own.
On 6/4/2020 1:46 PM, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
Well, OK, yeah. It is not entirely impossible. Few things are.
On 6/5/2020 10:13 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Fri, Jun 05, 2020 at 09:52:34AM -0500, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
As already mentioned, this simply will not work.
As already mentioned in this thread, this isn
Put more simply, every formal proof must contain at least one
assumption and at least one undefined term. In practice, three
undefined terms and three postulates is a fairly tight, well contained
logical construct.
"This statement is false" isn't really anything profound. It does
illustra
Your English is excellent. I think Debian is a very good choice for a
small enterprise server. With a very limited set of servers as you
mention here, I would not expect many issues, and stability is a
hallmark of Debian. Personally, I would go with a quality HBA from
Areca or LSI in JBOD m
Not necessarily, and in particular not given his needs, if I recall
them correctly. LVM is fine for many purposes, but it is not required,
nor is a network file system. My servers at home have no partitions and
no LVM, and I have the RAID system for the data volume formatted as XFS.
I use s
I run a pair of Debian servers. One is essentially a NAS, and the
other is a backup system. Both have 30TB (soon to be 48TB) arrays. I
am running XFS, rather than ZFS on the RAID arrays. ZFS is definitely
nice, but is not supported directly under Debian. I don't find the
comparative defic
This is one reason, among several others, why I am a big proponent of
having a separate boot drive - or better yet, a boot array - from my
data array. I can quickly and easily build a very plain Jane boot
system using the Debian distro DVD without having to worry about
inconsistencies with GR
I don't think SyncThing is what you want, per your stated requirements.
SyncThing synchronizes data among multiple hosts. You said you wanted
a NAS, which implies a solitary host.
On 7/30/2020 4:28 PM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
On Thu, 30 Jul 2020 09:40:29 -0700
Peter Ehlert wrote:
This whol
On 7/29/2020 11:38 AM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
As for partition sizing, I set up my machines with three partitions:
/, /home, and swap.
I don't implement a separate partition for /home. Instead, I place it
on my data array where it gets backed up nightly, then a create a
symlink to /RAID/home
On 8/1/2020 10:43 PM, Dan Ritter wrote:
Leslie Rhorer wrote:
On 7/29/2020 11:38 AM, Charlie Gibbs wrote:
As for partition sizing, I set up my machines with three partitions:
/, /home, and swap.
I don't implement a separate partition for /home. Instead, I place it
on
my data
On 8/1/2020 11:05 PM, David Christensen wrote:
On 2020-08-01 19:30, Keith Bainbridge wrote:
On 2/8/20 11:06 am, David Christensen wrote:
On 2020-08-01 16:30, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
I am a big proponent of having a separate boot drive
+1
+1 more
For players-around like me, it is also
On 8/1/2020 8:06 PM, David Christensen wrote:
On 2020-08-01 16:30, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
I am a big proponent of having a separate boot drive
+1
no matter what the file system, I would definitely up the memory to
the 16GB max,
1. I try very hard not to spend money on obsolete technology
On 8/2/2020 2:54 PM, David Wright wrote:
I never said it does. It does take up a little space, but not a
significant amount. What does take up space is /home, which can get
to be huge. Even on a laptop, making /home a part of the largest
partition is a good idea.
What it sharing t
On 8/2/2020 3:32 PM, Erwan David wrote:
I used the buster installer about 1 year ago,with a fully encrypted
disk, thus
a /boot/efi partition, a /boot partition then an encrypted lvm.
/boot is now not large enough to even have 2 kernels on it,
initramfs-tools cannot create the images.
I see thi
On 8/2/2020 4:45 PM, Doug McGarrett wrote:
On 8/2/20 4:32 PM, Erwan David wrote:
I used the buster installer about 1 year ago,with a fully encrypted
disk, thus
a /boot/efi partition, a /boot partition then an encrypted lvm.
/boot is now not large enough to even have 2 kernels on it,
initramfs-
On 8/3/2020 12:00 PM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Mon, Aug 03, 2020 at 12:36:43PM -0400, Stefan Monnier wrote:
Work. Part of the problem is one person's NAS is another person's media
server, with radically different requirements.
And here I am, with my home server used as jukebox (running MPD)
On 8/3/2020 11:18 AM, D. R. Evans wrote:
Tom Dial wrote on 8/1/20 9:31 PM:
My experience, now on eight machines, indicates that it should be if the
installed, configured, and used versions of grub components is
2.02+dfsg1-20+deb10u2.
I could be wrong, but here it has been the case for bot
On 8/3/2020 10:14 AM, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
On Wed, Jul 29, 2020 at 12:40:03PM -0700, Patrick Bartek wrote:
Anyone currently using OpenMediaVault, or have recommendations for
another package, or advice, in general, on homebuilt NAS?
My advice is to keep it boring and mundane, and avoid th
On 8/3/2020 2:49 AM, Andrew Cater wrote:
If you have room for two kernels and you are booting from the newest
one: potentially, you can remove the older one to gain some space. If
apt update installs another kernel of the same version so you have two
4.19 - reboot when the apt run finishes, mak
On 8/2/2020 11:07 PM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
I absolutely agree, no matter what the file system, I would
definitely up the memory to the 16GB max, especially if this is to
be a media server.
Unless you're serving some quite demanding clients, I'd expect 16GB in
an NAS to
On 8/3/2020 4:45 PM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
A BPi can stand as a media server, but I don't recommend it in
general. A media server to a very limited number of clients does
not need much I/O power, but if it needs to recode a video on the
fly, a BPi is going
On 8/3/2020 6:17 PM, deloptes wrote:
Leslie Rhorer wrote:
My main server's data is backed up every morning by a
nearly identical backup server using rsync, which in turn is backed up
in its entirety on a multi-volume offline, off-site hard drive set using
DAR every few months. All the
On 8/4/2020 8:52 AM, Celejar wrote:
On Tue, 4 Aug 2020 10:26:32 +0100
Jonathan Dowland wrote:
On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 01:32:24AM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
jdupes looks interesting, and should work on any file system that
supports hard links. I expect BorgBackup either calls jdupes or
i
On 8/4/2020 10:18 AM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Ma, 04 aug 20, 01:17:13, deloptes wrote:
I don't backup music and video - too big and not changing. The raid is
enough for that.
I'm guessing it depends on the music and videos.
If you made them yourself they are basically irreplaceable and RAID
On 8/5/2020 2:16 AM, deloptes wrote:
Leslie Rhorer wrote:
DAR allows for not only incremental backups, but also incremental
deletions. ??I find it extremely useful, and allows for as much space
saving on the live system as one likes. ??I suggest you check it out.
someone should ask them to
On 8/5/2020 5:25 PM, deloptes wrote:
Jonathan Dowland wrote:
For the majority of use-cases, I really disagree that RAID is ever more
essential than backup. I can cook up some scenarios where this isn't
true, but they are not common ones.
And I disagree with you,
So do I. Both are essentia
On 8/5/2020 1:51 PM, deloptes wrote:
Imagine you have classical backup: daily incrementals, full weekly and full
monthly.
This is not required with DAR. One full backup is all that is
required. Anything else is a waste of time and space. One can employ
either differential or decrement
- RAID would require extra hardware in my machines, for some of them
that would be a non-trivial constraint (e.g. my BananaPi servers and
my laptops).
How do you figure? Adding an external USB drive enclosure to a laptop
or a Banana Pi is pretty trivial. RAID does not require any hardw
On 8/5/2020 11:13 PM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
- RAID would require extra hardware in my machines, for some of them
that would be a non-trivial constraint (e.g. my BananaPi servers and
my laptops).
How do you figure? Adding an external USB drive enclosure to
a laptop or a B
On 8/6/2020 12:06 AM, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
For better performance, more space, and higher throughput, I would
probably create a RAID 4 or RAID 6 array from the external enclosure and
use it as the data repository.
Sorry, that was a typo. That should be RAID 5 or RAID 6.
On 8/5/2020 9:11 AM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
I prefer DAR for several reasons. First of all, as I mentioned
before, DAR is the only backup solution of which I am aware that can
restore not only deleted or corrupted files, but which can also
restore deletions. This m
On 8/6/2020 9:07 AM, Celejar wrote:
On Thu, 6 Aug 2020 05:02:17 -0500
Leslie Rhorer wrote:
* Incremental and differential backups are backups of the delta between
the last full backup and the current system state (either individually
[differential] or collectively [incremental])
* I have no
On 8/6/2020 11:25 AM, deloptes wrote:
Stefan Monnier wrote:
And you suggest I put a 4-drive enclosure in my backpack next to my
laptop? Seriously?
Why not?
Stefan, I have the same situation - on the Laptop only backup works :D
Basically you can forget RAID in USB2 context. I have n
On 8/6/2020 11:15 AM, deloptes wrote:
Leslie Rhorer wrote:
A few copies of what size? ??The backup server is an exact mirror of the
main server, plus several T of additional files I don't need on the main
server.
The question is how much back in time you can go. If you have just a
m
On 8/6/2020 8:12 PM, deloptes wrote:
I don't know from which universe you came here, honestly :D, sorry, I don't
mean to hurt you ...
You would find that quite impossible. I would never be upset over a
simple disagreement. Or a complex one, for that matter. Any forum
without disagreement
On 8/6/2020 11:09 AM, deloptes wrote:
Leslie Rhorer wrote:
And how useful is that? There are very few duplicate files on my
systems, because I use applications to eliminate duplicates.
Eliminating duplicates in a live data repository is far more important
than doing it on backup media
On 8/6/2020 10:36 PM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
If I were one to use a laptop - which I most certainly do not -
I think that's why you don't consider it unthinkable to carry around
such a thing along with your laptop.
I carried around a 90 lb tool case everywhere for nearly 20 years.
I'
On 8/6/2020 11:08 AM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
For better performance, more space, and higher throughput, I would
probably create a RAID 4 or RAID 6 array from the external enclosure
and use it as the data repository.
And you suggest I put a 4-drive enclosure in my backpack
On 8/7/2020 10:48 AM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
Extra space taken, extra power used 24/7 (which in turn requires an
extra plug because the poor BananaPi can't provide all that power),
Now it is my turn to ask, "Seriously?"
[ See, our use cases *are* very different. ]
Yes, in my experience
g.
On 2020-08-06 18:58, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
> The servers have 10G optical links between them.?? A full backup to the
> RAID 6 array takes several days.
One 10 Gbps network connection per server?
Yes. I don't have slots for additional NIC boards, and my boards only
have one
On 8/7/2020 9:48 PM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
No, I am talking about "Extra space taken, extra power used 24/7".
An external device just does not use that much power
It can easily end up consuming about as much power as my BananaPi, so it
risks doubling the power consumption.
Oh
On 8/9/2020 5:26 PM, David Christensen wrote:
On 2020-08-09 13:38, David Christensen wrote:
Then again, many small drives have higher performance than fewer large
drives of the same total capacity.
And a higher probability of failure.
Not necessarily. If the smaller drives have a greater
I recently upgraded two of my servers from Debian Jessie to Debian
Buster, and now the two "new" servers no longer send status messages
during the monthly mdadm resynch check. Ordinarily, as mdadm does a
redundancy check of each array on a system, it sends a status message as
the check com
"Leslie Rhorer" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote in message
news:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>I have installed Sarge on an e-machines desktop system, and it's working
>very well, but I am having two problems with LAN access. I'll detail the
>first here, and hopefully some
I'm running KDE under Debian Sarge, and it won't allow me to log in as root.
I need to be able to do this, and a root login works fine on the machine
running Woody. How can I configure this newer version of KDE to allow root
logins? Also, when I use XDMCP to log in to the old machine running
I have a little Intel NUC running Debian Jessie whose purpose is to control a
multimedia show using DMX for lighting and BLueTooth A2DP for audio. It's a
wireless, headless box that sits in a corner and does its job. Well, it should
be. The problem is the BlueTooth audio is far from automatic
I purchased a couple of Asus PEB-10G/57811-1S 10G LAN adapters. I am not
finding any pre-built binaries nor a .deb reporitory for these cards, so I am
attempting t o compile from scratch, but I get the following error during the
make operation:
Backup/Server-Main/Temp/netxtreme2-7.10.42/bnx2-2
Well, that's good to know, but it's not coming up. I've never added an
Ethernet adapter post-install, so I suspect I need to do something, but I am
not sure what. I did an lsmod, and the bnx2x module is loaded, but not being
used. I loaded the firmware, but I get this error during boot:
[
It's still not working, but the card is in the udev file, and ifconfig -a shows
the interface. When I try to bring it up, however, it gives me an error:
Backup:/# ifconfig -a
eth0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 0
Backup:/# ip link
1: lo: mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN mode
DEFAULT group default
link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
2: eth2: mtu 1500 qdisc pfifo_fast state UP
mode DEFAULT group default qlen 1000
link/ether 50:46:5d:65:15:9c brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
3: eth0:
The motherboard has a built-in Ethernet port.
It is a stock kernel from the current Debian repository. The firmware was
loaded using `apt-get install firmware-bnx2`.
Well, this seems odd. I don't see any candidate which looks likely, to me, in
/lib/firmware/bnx2:
Backup:/lib/firmware/bnx2# la
total 636
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root 4096 Feb 19 15:20 .
drwxr-xr-x 7 root root 4096 Feb 19 15:20 ..
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 93172 Jun 15 2014 bnx2-mips-06-5.0.0.j3.fw
I found the issue. The firmware I needed was bnx2x, not bnx2.
I need a little (or maybe more than a little) advice and guidance on setting up
a High Availablity cluster on some Debian machines. I've read through the man
pages and the config files, but I'm falling short of understanding everything I
need to do. I am still in the process of obtaining all t
On Sunday, August 2, 2015 at 5:00:04 PM UTC-5, Gilles Mocellin wrote:
> Le 02/08/2015 23:18, Leslie Rhorer a écrit :
> > [...]
> >
> > ha.cf:
> > logfile /var/log/ha-log
> > logfacility local0
> > keepalive 2
> > deadtime 30
> > warntime 10
&g
I've seen lots of posts concerning turning off WiFi on a laptop or using a
button on the laptop to turn on wireless, but nothing that covers this
situation. There are a number of bookshelf PCs, including the Intel NUC line
of computers that use the same mini PCI cards as laptop computers such a
Ever since upgrading to Debian Jessie, I have been having a heck of a time with
getting the RAID array up and keeping it up. I believe it to be a problem with
the controllers. I have an identical system still running Squeeze. I can't
upgrade it because the controller doesn't work under Jessie
I am having a persistent problem. I have an array system that is having
problems. Obviously, that needs to get fixed, but it is taking quite some time
to find the root cause. In the meantime, the array is not bootable, so it is
not needed during the initrd phase of the startup. Previously, t
Ah! Excellent. 'Sounds like 'nofail' it is. So I change 'defaults' to
'defaults, nofail' for the RAID array entry and run `update-initramfs -u`,
correct?
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On Sunday, May 3, 2015 at 10:30:03 PM UTC-5, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> On Sun, 3 May 2015, Leslie Rhorer wrote:
>
> > Many specifically list SuSe and Red Hat, but very
> > few list Debian [...]
>
> And you have your answer: send money to RH. They used
I don't
On Monday, May 18, 2015 at 10:00:04 PM UTC-5, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> On Mon, 18 May 2015, Petter Adsen wrote:
> >>Just as an aside, this is a Debian user forum.
> >> Frankly, it strikes me as a bit strange to advise
> >> someone asking a question concerning an ordinary
> >> use of Debian to
On Monday, May 18, 2015 at 5:40:05 AM UTC-5, Petter Adsen wrote:
> >I don't have money to send to Red Hat. First of all, one reason
> > (although not the only one, by far) I am using Linux is it is free of
> > commercial restraints. Secondly, these are not commercial systems.
> > These are a
On Monday, May 18, 2015 at 5:40:05 AM UTC-5, Petter Adsen wrote:
> On Sat, 16 May 2015 05:38:30 -0700 (PDT)
> I am sorry if this is a dumb question,
Not at all.
> but if this is a home system,
> why can you not go for more commodity hardware? While I do recognize
> there are differences betwee
On Tuesday, May 19, 2015 at 9:50:06 AM UTC-5, Winfried Boxleitner wrote:
> I'm using an Adaptec 7805H
Hmm. That is SFF-8643. 'Not ideal. I would really rather SFF-8088, or at
least SFF-8087, for which I have some adapters.
>(PCIe) which is supported by standard kernel
> (currently I'm ru
On Monday, May 18, 2015 at 3:10:05 PM UTC-5, Don Armstrong wrote:
> I personally am using an LSI SAS2008-based HBA with two HP MSA60
> enclosures; I then run standard mdraid on top of that:
And there are ports for the management software in Jessie?
> If you have smaller numbers of drives, the
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