>
>Take a look at the configuration below /etc/needrestart.
Thanks! I've now added
$nrconf{restart} = 'a';
and expect that to help.
--
Jesper Dybdal, Denmark.
http://www.dybdal.dk (in Danish).
2 -k start
I can find nothing in the logs about problems at that time (2016-06-08
04:36).
Can someone tell me what I've done wrong?
--
Jesper Dybdal, Denmark.
http://www.dybdal.dk (in Danish).
I use pure-ftpd on my Jessie 8.6 (soon to be 8.7).
The Debian way of configuring pure-ftpd is a mechanism with a file for
each parameter to the executable.
I do not use that mechanism, primarily because I want to run multiple
instances of pure-ftpd with different parameters, listening on
and probably
for quite a few others.
How do I see which version is available in, e.g., unstable when unstable
is not in my sources.list because I do not want to risk installing
anything from unstable in my stable system?
Thanks.
--
Jesper Dybdal
http://www.dybdal.dk
On 2020-10-16 11:45, Yoann LE BARS wrote:
On 2020/10/16 at 11:23 am, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
Can I simply move the files and then make /home a symlink to /disk2/home?
You can, but I think a better way is to simply mount the partition as
/home.
Thanks for your response. That would
isk of files under /home being needed before
/disk2 is mounted (it is in fstab)?
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
http://www.dybdal.dk
- is
there a risk that AppArmor will block that?
Is there a simple way to disable AppArmor completely until I've had time
to figure out what to do with it long-term?
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
?
(If so, that would be really nice, since I can then postpone the move to
native nftables.)
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
appreciate that warning. I'll
have a bootable rescue disk ready.
Thanks a lot for not only this, but also your responses to my other
questions.
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
, and
then mount --bind /data/some/path/to/homes /home.
Thanks! I hadn't thought of that interesting alternative to a symlink.
Also many thanks to everybody else who answered.
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
quot; on the Stretch systems *before* the
upgrade to Buster to avoid problems during the upgrade?
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2020-10-16 16:39, Tixy wrote:
Or do what I did, just uninstall the apparmor package which is pulled
in as a 'recommends' of the Linux kernel. Or pin it to priority -1 for
extra paranoia.
Thanks. But will it not be reinstalled the next time there is a kernel
update?
--
Jesper Dybdal
should switch to a supported webmailsolution, but I
haven't got around to doing it yet...)
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
itself.
Thanks to Clive and Sven for the responses. I'll see what the upgrade
attempt brings, and at a later time look at alternatives to Squirrelmail
- Roundcube seems to be a popular choice, so I'll lok into that.
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2020-12-22 15:34, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 20 Dec 2020 at 17:01:31 (+0100), Jesper Dybdal wrote:
On 2020-12-19 21:05, Kushal Kumaran wrote:
Jesper Dybdal wrote:
I run Buster with unattended updates configured to allow reboots.
Sometimes after an update, the log contains:
Service
?
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2020-12-19 17:14, Dan Ritter wrote:
Jesper Dybdal wrote:
I run Buster with unattended updates configured to allow reboots.
Sometimes after an update, the log contains:
Service restarts being deferred:
??systemctl restart systemd-logind.service
??systemctl restart unattended
On 2020-12-19 21:05, Kushal Kumaran wrote:
Jesper Dybdal wrote:
I run Buster with unattended updates configured to allow reboots.
Sometimes after an update, the log contains:
Service restarts being deferred:
??systemctl restart systemd-logind.service
??systemctl restart unattended
a bit of
native nft with the nft command after all the iptables(-nft) commands.
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2020-11-06 11:43, Sven Hartge wrote:
Jesper Dybdal wrote:
* The CT target, to add the ftp helper. I fixed that by adding a bit of
native nft with the nft command after all the iptables(-nft) commands.
For the sake of the archive and people looking at this thread hoping for
some insight
eta l4proto tcp tcp dport 22 accept
else
meta l4proto tcp tcp dport 22 drop
endif
?
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
that a
temporary absence of one disk which later comes back unmodified, will
not destroy data.
Is that how it works?
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
machine?
(My knowledge of UEFI is almost non-existent, and my knowledge of grub
is very limited.)
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
-128-cbc
>backup.cpio.gz.aes
Thanks to you and everybody else who answered my question.
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
d to buster, that openssl command gives the warning:
*** WARNING : deprecated key derivation used.
Using -iter or -pbkdf2 would be better.
I have not yet studied what that means in detail and precisely what
other parameters are better to use.
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
see how it can work.
On the other hand, the timestamp value is updated "all the time".
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2023-10-08 11:25, Marco M. wrote:
Am 08.10.2023 um 11:09:53 Uhr schrieb Jesper Dybdal:
It seems to have a problem with "grub-pc". But I thought that
grub-pc was only for BIOS boot, and that by installing the UEFI
version grub-pc would disappear or at least be disabled.
Unin
ed package is kept back or due to
local apt_preferences(5).
Package grub2-common is kept back because a related package is kept back or due
to local apt_preferences(5).
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2023-10-08 12:07, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
On 2023-10-08 11:25, Marco M. wrote:
Am 08.10.2023 um 11:09:53 Uhr schrieb Jesper Dybdal:
It seems to have a problem with "grub-pc". But I thought that
grub-pc was only for BIOS boot, and that by installing the UEFI
version grub-pc would
On 2023-10-08 11:25, Marco M. wrote:
Am 08.10.2023 um 11:09:53 Uhr schrieb Jesper Dybdal:
It seems to have a problem with "grub-pc". But I thought that
grub-pc was only for BIOS boot, and that by installing the UEFI
version grub-pc would disappear or at least be disabled.
Uninsta
enabled)
Active: failed (Result: exit-code) since Sun 2023-01-15 15:42:14
CET; 18h ago
Docs: man:named(8)
Process: 1412 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/named -f $OPTIONS (code=exited,
status=1/FAILURE)
Main PID: 1412 (code=exited, status=1/FAILURE)
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2023-01-16 13:36, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Jan 16, 2023 at 10:42:35AM +0100, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
28969163 4 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 255 Jun 2 2016
/etc/systemd/system/bind9.service
I suspect that the bind9 service ought to be removed. Is that correct?
It looks
On 2023-01-16 13:36, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Jan 16, 2023 at 10:42:35AM +0100, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
28969163 4 -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 255 Jun 2 2016
/etc/systemd/system/bind9.service
I suspect that the bind9 service ought to be removed. Is that correct
On 2023-01-18 13:39, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Wed, Jan 18, 2023 at 6:25 AM Jesper Dybdal wrote:
That leaves one file in the system with the name "bind9.service":
/var/lib/systemd/deb-systemd-helper-enabled/multi-user.target.wants/bind9.service
Can I safely delete that one (I
On 2023-01-18 13:55, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Wed, Jan 18, 2023 at 12:25:03PM +0100, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
That leaves one file in the system with the name "bind9.service":
/var/lib/systemd/deb-systemd-helper-enabled/multi-user.target.wants/bind9.service
Can I safely delete that one (I
uineIntel
cpu family : 6
model : 23
model name : Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Duo CPU E8400 @ 3.00GHz
Do I need to worry about those microcode bugs?
Thanks,
Jesper Dybdal
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2023-03-19 19:30, Linux-Fan wrote:
Jesper Dybdal writes:
I have no idea whether my old processor is a "CoffeeLake" or a
"Skylake" or something else. It is a pc that I bought in 2008, I
think (and still working just fine).
model name : Intel(R) Core(TM
cess that key at all when I have just
asked it to clean up my own files in my own Maildir? Is there a way to
make it not try to access that key and do its job anyway? Or another
way to delete old mail?
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
below.
On 2023-03-26 13:17, davidson wrote:
On Sun, 26 Mar 2023 Jesper Dybdal wrote:
Yesterday, I upgraded Buster => Bullseye.
Release notes for Debian 11 (bullseye)
Upgrades from Debian 10 (buster) :: section 4.8 Obsolete Packages
https://www.debian.org/releases/bullseye/amd64/release-notes
w3m/stable 0.5.3+git20210102-6 amd64 [upgradable from: 0.5.3-37]
w3m/now 0.5.3-37 amd64 [installed,upgradable to: 0.5.3+git20210102-6]
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2023-03-26 17:37, Cindy Sue Causey wrote:
On 3/26/23, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
Packages with upgradable origin but kept back:
Debian stable:
guile-2.2-libs w3m
DISCLAIMER: The subject line indicates a distribution upgrade, but it
looks like your sources.list is only Bullseye. My
On 2023-03-26 20:15, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 26 Mar 2023 at 11:16:21 (+0200), Jesper Dybdal wrote:
Yesterday, I upgraded Buster => Bullseye.
This morning, I got a mail from unattended-upgrades, which said:
Packages with upgradable origin but kept back:
Debian stable:
guile-2.2-l
On 2023-03-26 23:12, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Sun, Mar 26, 2023 at 5:16 AM Jesper Dybdal wrote:
Yesterday, I upgraded Buster => Bullseye.
For completeness, here is the Debian procedure for a release upgrade:
https://wiki.debian.org/DebianUpgrade .
Thanks. Interesting that the W
, then that could be
the problem. However:
Is it secured with
wpa2?
Yes. The password is not easy to guess, and the neighbors do not know
it. I think (but I may remember that incorrectly) that I checked the
log file in the access point and found nothing suspicious.
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper
the Windows machine from scratch - or
perhaps restore a really old backup (I have one from July 2022, one from
2020, and one taken shortly after the original install in 2016).
Many thanks to everybody who answered!
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
Bash as interactive
shell, with:
HISTTIMEFORMAT=: %Y%m%d_%H%M%S ;
That provides a couple of benefits:
...
Thanks to David, David, Tomas, and debian-u...@howorth.org.uk for the
suggestion of using time stamps on the history lines. I intend to do
that in the future.
--
Jesper Dybdal
https
On 2023-04-18 21:35, David Christensen wrote:
On 4/18/23 06:43, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
On 2023-04-16 14:19, I wrote:
...
And there in the bash history were 4 lines that I had not written :-(
To summarize:
* Greg has convincingly argued that there is no way for the running
shell to get
On 2023-04-16 17:57, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Apr 16, 2023 at 04:30:51PM +0200, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
My .bashrc has:
export HISTCONTROL=ignoreboth
and that's all. And your description of the default behaviour matches what
I experience with bash.
There is simply no scenario where all
On 2023-04-16 14:40, Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
On 16/04/2023 09:19, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
And there in the bash history were 4 lines that I had not written :-(
I am certain that nobody had been in my apartment while I was gone.
And even if they had, nobody with a key to my apartment would
On 2023-04-16 16:33, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 16 Apr 2023 at 14:19:34 (+0200), Jesper Dybdal wrote:
The 4 lines were:
md5users
sp md5users
sp /x/md5users
ps /x/md5users
Just FTR and clarity's sake, are the "> " characters (which my MUA has
unhelpfully doubled by quoting)
On 2023-04-16 14:59, Michel Verdier wrote:
Le 16 avril 2023 Jesper Dybdal a écrit :
I have scanned the Windows machine with two antivirus tools (Windows defender
and Malwarebytes).
Can you use clamav on windows ?
I hadn't thought of that. I'll check.
modules.dep
modules.devname
On 2023-04-16 15:08, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Apr 16, 2023 at 02:19:34PM +0200, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
And there in the bash history were 4 lines that I had not written :-(
I would initially ask "who else lives with you"
So would I - if I didn't know that the few people wit
d checksums?
Any suggestions will be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2023-04-16 19:35, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Hi,
to make this mail on-topic:
Jesper Dybdal, do you see the riddling lines in file ~/.bash_history
of the superuser ?
Yes.
If so: Do you see other strange lines there ? (Do they give more clue ?)
No. I stupidly did not save the rest
interesting. Have a good week.
Thanks!
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
-a
Listing... Done
guile-2.2-libs/stable,now 2.2.7+1-6 amd64 [installed,automatic]
w3m/stable,now 0.5.3+git20210102-6 amd64 [installed]
So now I suspect everything is ok.
Again: thanks! to all the many helpful participants in this thread.
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2023-03-28 11:16, Sven Hartge wrote:
Jesper Dybdal wrote:
I have a cron job that cleans up all old mail from the mailbox that I
use for my mobile phone by running "doveadm expunge" every night.
[snip]
Solution is to move the contents of /etc/dovecot/conf.d/10-ssl.conf to
an
On 2023-03-28 10:56, davidson wrote:
On Mon, 27 Mar 2023 Jesper Dybdal wrote:
On 2023-03-27 10:59, davidson wrote:
It baffles me that the number of packages suggested for autoremoval is
different, between guile-2.2-libs and w3m.
Me too.
The two packages depend on different collections
the RAM
- and run memtest.
* Otherwise, I'll have to run fsck and see what happens.
kernel version:
root@nuser:~# uname -a
Linux nuser 5.10.0-28-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 5.10.209-2 (2024-01-31) x86_64
GNU/Linux
The partition in question is a RAID 1 controlled by md.
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
[Sorry for the accidental Danish-language subject line :-( ]
On 2024-03-19 21:47, Franco Martelli wrote:
On 19/03/24 at 15:43, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
My plan is to boot a rescue disk and mount that partition read-only.
Then:
* If the file looks ok after reboot, then I'll strongly suspect
+ run overnight one of the coming nights.
Unless it is simply a RAM error, then it is a bit scary...
Regards,
Jesper
On 2024-03-19 21:47, Franco Martelli wrote:
On 19/03/24 at 15:43, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
My plan is to boot a rescue disk and mount that partition read-only.
Then:
* If the file
On 2024-03-28 15:02, Hans wrote:
Am Donnerstag, 28. März 2024, 14:49:37 CET schrieb Jesper Dybdal:
Hello,
memtest86+ is for testing RAM, but do you not want to test ext4 filesystem?
Sorry - I should have left more of the previous mails quoted. I have
previously tested the RAID1 consistency
[Sorry - I accidentally sent this too quickly in an incomplete state.
Second try here:]
On Wed, Mar 20, 2024, 11:28 AM Jesper Dybdal
wrote:
I think I'll let memtest86+ run overnight one of the coming nights.
Unless it is simply a RAM error, then it is a bit scary...
I've now
On 2024-03-20 22:58, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
On Wed, Mar 20, 2024, 11:28 AM Jesper Dybdal
wrote:
I have now done the following:
* Checked the RAID array - no problems found.
* Run fsck. It found three cases of the block count being
incorrect. I
don't know which
stable,now 14.9.22-1 amd64 [installed]
* In Bookworm:
mailcap/stable,now 3.70+nmu1 all [installed,automatic]
j-nail/stable,now 14.9.24-2 amd64 [installed]
Has anyone else seen this?
Thanks,
Jesper
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
On 2024-05-06 15:27, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 02:53:10PM +0200, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
I use s-nail as my mailx command (selected using the Debian "alternatives"
mechanism).
Since I upgraded from Bullseye to Bookworm, s-nail now shows a bunch of
error messages in
On 2024-05-06 16:24, Max Nikulin wrote:
On 06/05/2024 20:27, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, May 06, 2024 at 02:53:10PM +0200, Jesper Dybdal wrote:
s-nail: $MAILCAPS: /etc/mailcap: text/english: ignored unknown
string/command: then exec emacsclient --alternate-editor =
--display=\\"\\$DI
server box, shoving emacs frames on an X server running under Windows.)
--
Jesper Dybdal
https://www.dybdal.dk
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