Public bug reported:
After enabling precise-updates for universe, krb5-user is not
installable. It depends on libkrb5-3 = 1.10+dfsg~beta1-2ubuntu0.3 but
there is no such version in the repositories.
precise# apt-cache policy krb5-user
krb5-user:
Installed: (none)
Candidate:
I imagine this may be a duplicate of bug #1100177 but it was rather
messy so I opted to create a new bug report.
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1100177
Title:
Turns out the problem was that I lacked the precise-updates repo for
main.
** Changed in: krb5 (Ubuntu)
Status: New = Invalid
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Is this a duplicate of bug #1100177?
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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1039598
Title:
dependency problems - leaving unconfigured
To manage notifications about this bug
Additionally, the message from the old server is misleading.
precise$ whois devunt.kr | less
...
ECU+0083U+0081湲B0 ECA0U+0095蹂대U+008AU+0094 UTF-8 EC
U+009D몄BDU+0094EBU+0094⑸U+0090U+0098ECU+0096B4
ECU+0084U+009C鍮U+0084ECU+008AㅻU+0090U+0098怨A0
ECU+009EU+0088EC
U+008A듬U+008BU+0088EBU+008BA4.
(iconv tells me it cannot convert from EUC-KR to UTF-8 from the old
input so I'm not sure if that's actually true, but the domain should be
set up to use the new, well-defined server anyway.)
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Upstream 5.0.23 fixed this issue. There is no separate upstream bug
report.
http://ftp-
master.metadata.debian.org/changelogs/main/w/whois/unstable_changelog
** Changed in: whois (Ubuntu)
Status: Confirmed = Fix Committed
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Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: samba-common
The directory /etc/samba contains a spurious file gdbcommands which does
not appear to be documented. To the extent that I am able to guess what
it's for, it should probably simply be removed, or else documented e.g.
in the
I'm taking the liberty to set this to Incomplete as the question from
2007 about whether this is still a problem has gone unanswered.
** Changed in: samba (Ubuntu)
Status: Triaged = Incomplete
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Printing does not work: PID 23402 (/usr/lib/cups/backend/smb) crashed on signal
6
** Changed in: samba (Ubuntu)
Status: Incomplete = New
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Incorrect hyperlink in samba-docs
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/260424
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I spent a lot of time investigating this, and would have avoided that if
it had been documented. I'd still like to request the addition of a
small snippet to README.Debian but since I'm an Ubuntu user I didn't
want to take this directly upstream. If I submit this upstream, with a
small patch,
Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: whois
I'm speculating the Connection refused means the server name in whois
is wrong. There is a whois server at whois.aeda.net.ae which appears
authoritative. They offer a web lookup at http://whois.aeda.net.ae/ as
well.
ubu...@ubuntu$ whois
In xscreensaver, this bug has existed like forever. I used to see it a
lot when my laptop's CMOS battery was failing and I had to tweak the
time by hand every time I rebooted. This was like a year ago, then on a
Woody installation (thankfully now also running Dapper, still on
xscreensaver).
--
Like I wrote in the initial comment, I cannot come up with a case where
it would be useful for install to actually remove some (often,
apparently unrelated) packages.
For upgrade, I can somehow see how at least sometimes this would not
be surprising (if you have an auto-installed package which
I don't reboot that often (-: so I didn't notice until now, but
actually, /dev/toshiba is (of course) recreated each time you load the
toshiba module, and removed when it is rmmodded. Every time, you have to
go chmod or chgrp it in order for e.g. wmtuxtime to work. I plan to set
up a local
Just for clarification, this is with the Script-Fu Alpha to Logo
Alien Glow thingy. I noticed there is another copy of it with slightly
different parameters in Xtns Script-Fu Logos which seems to
work just fine. It asks you to input the text and font to create the
logo from, and creates an
Since the sample at laku19 is intermittently unavailable, and I found a
way to create a correct example, I'm uploading new samples.
This one is correct, and was created by typing in fnord and selecting
128-pixel Sans Bold in the Xtns Script-Fu Logos Alien Glow ...
dialog
** Attachment added:
This one was created by opening a 454x214 pixel new document, typing in
fnord with the text tool in 128-pixel Sans Bold, and running the
Script-Fu Alpha to Logo Alien Glow ... thingy.
You'll notice it was cropped down to 390x150 and that the nice glow
effect is thus gnawed from the edges.
Oh,
Ahem, sorry, here's another attempt. Edited to have absolute paths to
the first two attachments.
** Attachment added: Corrected fnord.html
http://librarian.launchpad.net/4201902/fnord.html
--
Alien Glow effect crops too tightly
https://launchpad.net/bugs/41759
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To complete the picture, here is a HTML file to display them both at the
same time. See how the lower image is cropped from the edges.
** Attachment added: Hope this works in Launchpad directly ...
http://librarian.launchpad.net/4201863/fnord.html
--
Alien Glow effect crops too tightly
Do you still need something from me?
I looked at url.c and I think I would expect the code to not fall
through all the way to line 500 -- I was wondering why the https stuff
wasn't handled higher up, where there was code for https, but I didn't
pursue that further.
--
segfault for https+unknown
I'm seeing this on a Dapper amd64 box too. For what it's worth, the
workaround is to not close the pop-up window; just minimize it and
continue to browse in another tab/window. Or, alternatively, find the
offending tab and reload the offending page, but this can often result
in yet another pop-up,
Is this fixed already? On my copy the line numbers are way different but
here's the only match on /var/lib/locales:
vnix$ egrep -nC2 /var/lib/locales /usr/bin/firefox /dev/null
/usr/bin/firefox-63-if [ x${MOZ_DISABLE_PANGO} = x ]; then
/usr/bin/firefox-64-if egrep
Oh, that's with a reboot before starting X, just to make sure the kernel
and X were indeed the newest version.
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On Dapper you mean? I haven't seen any upgrades to libc6 or xscreensaver
so why should it have gone away? OK, maybe the recent kernel or X
upgrades would have been compiled with the new glibc ...?
Okay, I grabbed a VMware Dapper image which I made when I installed this
system, installed all
Public bug reported:
I have two different installations from the Ubuntu 6.06 i386 Live CD.
Both of them suffered from the same problem: the swap space was too
small for the hibernate function to work properly.
Case #1: IBM ThinkPad 600E with 6.5Gb drive, with all old partitions
removed before
Public bug reported:
This is a wishlist item: Would it be possible to turn off the spiffy
graphical zoom effect in the timezone picker if it's clear after a few
frames that completing the effect will take several seconds and not look
spiffy at all?
Ref: #60512
** Affects: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
Public bug reported:
Installing on an IBM ThinkPad 600E (pretty old hardware, 266MHz??), I
got the timezone picker to crash by double-clicking on Helsinki while it
wasn't yet zoomed. It started zooming, frightfully slowly, and then
crashed when the second click actually arrived.
This is my off
Oh, forgot to mention: I went over all the installer crashed bugs in
Ubiquity looking for a duplicate of this one, but it's hard to tell from
all the raw Python backtraces if any of them are actually a report of
this same bug.
--
Timezone picker crash on double-click on slow system
Ubuntu 6.06 i386 Live CD installer, for the record.
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https://launchpad.net/bugs/60514
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This was the 6.06 Live CD i386 installer, by the way; sorry for failing
to mention that.
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https://launchpad.net/bugs/60512
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Public bug reported:
I ran the Ubuntu 6.06 i386 Live CD on a system with a 6.5GB hard drive
which had previously been in use on another system. I don't know if the
disk was physically bad or what, but I got insane amounts of errors from
/dev/hda6 for about half an hour, until I simply stopped
Just to make this a little more specific: I find it a bit surprising
that the supposedly autonomous Live CD should care one bit what's on the
hard drive of the host system, at least during initial bootstrapping.
Argh, this is probably not an Ubiquity bug, sorry about that. Could you
please refile
Sorry, I don't have the means to try to repro this any longer; as a
workaround, I removed the partitions which caused this. The hard disk
now has a regular Dapper installation which does not thrash.
The hard disk had been in use on a different computer, I guess probably
with different hard disk
Language English, location (as indicated) Europe/Helsinki, i.e. Finland.
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Time zone locale should also affect Gnome time applet 12/24 preference
https://launchpad.net/bugs/60516
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Public bug reported:
When you select use entire disk, it would be useful if at the end, the
installer would tell you the sizes of the partitions it is going to
create. Several times I have found myself going back to change what the
installer did (see e.g. #60511) and it would have been
Here's /var/log/installer/syslog -- the first run is very short and ends
with a traceback; then, you get the whole log from a successful install.
** Attachment added: /var/log/installer/syslog as requested
http://librarian.launchpad.net/4303811/syslog
--
Timezone picker crash on double-click
Here's the current dmesg from the Thinkpad (case #1). I have resized
partitions and installed linux-686 and a few user packages (sawfish,
emacs, subversion, dlocate, ssh, apt-file, cvs; some of them obviously
from universe) but other than that, this is still by and large freshly
installed.
**
Here's the log from the original partitioning. I have since resized the
swap to around 1 Gb (just to be on the safe side ...) and hibernating
now works, at least roughtly. (Just tested for the first time. The fan
kept on running until I gave up on waiting and rebooted -- but I
digress.)
**
Small correction to the original report: As is obvious from the log, the
created swap was even smaller than I remembered; just roughly equal to
the amount of RAM in the system (223MB RAM [sic], about 290MB swap)
--
Creates too small swap for hibernate
https://launchpad.net/bugs/60511
--
And here is the installation-time syslog. There is also a file
/var/log/installer/version but it only contains ubiquity 1.0.12 so I
won't bother to upload that separately.
** Attachment added: /var/log/installer/syslog
http://librarian.launchpad.net/4303859/syslog
--
Creates too small swap
For the record, the system is actually a 400MHz Pentium II
--
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https://launchpad.net/bugs/60512
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Oh yes, there's also this bozotic locale bug from 6.06 which ends up
selecting no particular locale but if you have to have one, let's just
say Australia. So /etc/apt/sources.list had the .au mirror (changed by
hand now that I noticed) and /etc/environment contains this:
It's a workaround, but I would still consider this a bug. I was in fact
toying with the idea of changing the code so it doesn't crop. I'm not a
seasoned Scheme hacker but it doesn't seem too hard at all.
(a) change the core function so it accepts an additional parameter
nocrop. For backward
Public bug reported:
It seems the magic string for Bio-Rad .PIC is a tad too relaxed. I
received a number of email messages which happened to have an IP number
containing the octet 90 in a suitable position to produce a false
detection.
Those messages were private, but I managed to pare down one
Here is a sample to repro this with:
vnix$ file file-bug.msg
file-bug.msg: Bio-Rad .PIC Image File 25938 x 25955, 30313 images in file
The message was obviously heavily edited. The important factor seems to
be that the string 90 (little-endian 0x3039, decimal 12345) occurs at
offset 54.
**
Just for fun, I constructed a simple text file with the same problem.
vnix$ file file-bug.txt
file-bug.txt: Bio-Rad .PIC Image File 28483 x 27765, 8292 images in file
** Attachment added: Simple text file containing the number 90
http://librarian.launchpad.net/4319989/file-bug.txt
--
Email
The workaround turned out to be a textbook example of the modprobe
install directive. Including here just in case I need to remember what
I did ...
The solution hinges on the assumption that a particular group (in this
case, admin) corresponds to the users who are granted privilege to run
Public bug reported:
Gnus has optional International Domain Name support, but it requires the
idn package to be installed. In today's day and age, at least mentioning
this in README.Debian.gz or the package description or something would
be helpful.
vnix$ dlocate -S
Public bug reported:
I am running Gnus against several SSL IMAP servers here without w3m-
el-e21 without problems. I guess the package description is out of date.
vnix$ dlocate -s gnus | tail -5
A note for people using the nnimap backend: SSL support requires w3-el-e2X;
and even otherwise
Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: ubuntu-live
Steps to repro:
1. Boot the Dapper i386 Live CD
2. Select the Install icon on the desktop
Bug description:
In the third dialog box, where you select your keboard language, pressing an
alphabetic key doesn't seem to have any effect.
Desired
(Carthik's comment was after I started typing in mine above. OK, fine,
Ubiquity it is then.)
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https://launchpad.net/bugs/56306
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Like 47499, this might belong in ubuntu-express. Again, sorry if I'm
reporting this against the wroing package -- it's not obvious to me
which package the Dapper LiveCD installer belongs in
--
Installer: No quick keys in Choose keyboard dialog
https://launchpad.net/bugs/56306
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ubuntu-bugs
Public bug reported:
I'm afraid I find the semantics of --without-recommends rather
unintuitive, if not even useless.
Pretty please could you provide an option which means I don't want to
install the Recommends: packages but if they are already on my system,
don't remove them?
For example, just
Actually, for completeness, merely installing those packages had no
effect; the actual workaround for me was aptitude install --without-
recommends miscfiles openssl postfix resolvconf ssl-cert wamerican xli
language-pack-en (yeah, I let go of libjpeg-progs)
--
aptitude: install
Public bug reported:
Running wmtuxtime as myself produces the helpful error message about the
kernel not having the necessary module, even though the toshiba module
is shown by lsmod. (The documentation is also somewhat lacking here, as
it only talks about the kernel module a lot, without
Public bug reported:
Unless you know the historical connection to a once-popular screensaver
called After Dark, it is basically impossible to figure out what this
package is.
** Affects: beforelight (Ubuntu)
Importance: Untriaged
Status: Unconfirmed
--
Uninformative package
I created a VMware image so I could repro this ... good thing I took
notes while installing that machine (-:
I believe a minimal repro scenario for this would be to set up a plain
server install, then install anacron, which pulls in postfix and other
useful packages, and then install
Public bug reported:
w3m https://nonesvch.example.com
= Segmentation fault
With plain http, there is simply an error message w3m: Can't load
http://nonesvch.example.com.;
The segmentation fault also happens if you start up w3m -B and then
press U to enter a https URL to a nonexistent site.
Public bug reported:
Through trial and error I have found this to be the apparent right place
for bug reports about installation problems in Dapper. However, there
are various other places where people are reporting bugs against the
installer, including ubuntu-express, debian-installer, and
--
segfault for https+unknown domain
https://launchpad.net/bugs/57188
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The backtrace looked rather uninformative to me, so here's a strace dump
as well. It looks like it's desperately looking for libnss_mdns and
failing just before it gags.
FWIW I noticed that the strace included some stuff from my bookmarks
etc. so I moved away ~/.w3m and reran:
vnix$ mv ~/.w3m
Haven't touched nsswitch.conf, attaching it anyway.
vnix$ dlocate -S /etc/nsswitch.conf
base-files: /etc/nsswitch.conf
vnix$ dpkg -s libnss-mdns
Package `libnss-mdns' is not installed and no info is available.
Use dpkg --info (= dpkg-deb --info) to examine archive files,
and dpkg --contents (=
I think it's a red herring, it's not directly related to mdns, just that
the crash happens after it tries mdns, but before /etc/services (which
is what happens next in the strace if I run with http instead of https).
... Indeed, if I remove mdns from nsswitch.conf, it crashes just the
same, only
Sorry, my skis got crossed while I was writing that. It's probably
obvious but just to make it explicit, what I was going to write was that
when I run with http instead of https, the SIGSEGV is still there, but
...
--
segfault for https+unknown domain
https://launchpad.net/bugs/57188
--
Public bug reported:
The pbuilder-distribution.sh script contains a shell scripting error
which just coincidentally happens to work anyway. I know, if it ain't
broke, don't fix it, but it's kind of embarrassing, or amusing,
depending on how you look at it.
PROCEED=true
...
if ( $PROCEED == true
The diff would probably be bigger than the script itself so I'm simply
attaching my updated version which changes the flow of the script,
rather than just making the minimal fix.
--
examples/pbuilder-distribution.sh: Funny shell error
https://launchpad.net/bugs/57284
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... or ubiquity?
--
/etc/apt/sources.list defaults to .au.
https://launchpad.net/bugs/55042
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Sorry for the delay, I decided to figure out how to do it with pbuilder
while I was at it. (Note for posterity: add 'export
DEB_BUILD_OPTIONS=debug nostrip noopt' to ~/.pbuilderrc and ignore the
similar-sounding DEBBUILDOPTS which is unrelated.)
--
segfault for https+unknown domain
** Summary changed:
- /dev/toshiba created cmod 660 root:root
+ /dev/toshiba created chmod 660 root:root
** Description changed:
Running wmtuxtime as myself produces the helpful error message about the
kernel not having the necessary module, even though the toshiba module
is shown by
Excellent progress; the audience cheers!
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Unobvious where to report Ubuntu installation problems
https://launchpad.net/bugs/57189
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Might want to go over the ubuntu-meta bugs also, there's a number there
which would seem to belong somewhere else, and maybe think about adding
a hint or a description to the ubuntu-meta package like you did for the
ubuntu-installer team, if possible.
--
Unobvious where to report Ubuntu
** Also affects: ubiquity (Ubuntu)
Importance: Untriaged
Status: Unconfirmed
--
/etc/apt/sources.list defaults to .au.
https://launchpad.net/bugs/55042
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The dominating problem is making sure that reporting a bug is not so
frustrating that it doesn't happen in the first place. The threshold is
already rather high among users (look in the forums for examples, every
day; ubuntuforums.org is a good place to start) and the problem is
exacerbated if
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 40107 ***
Yes, definitely, as you can see it was posted before 6.06.1 was out and
I have only ever downloaded the original 6.06 CD for AMD64
--
/etc/apt/sources.list defaults to .au.
https://launchpad.net/bugs/55042
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*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 56352 ***
Public bug reported:
Unlike (ahem) xscreensaver, gnome-screensaver loses any keystrokes you
press before the password dialog comes up. If the screen is switched
off, I usually press shift, pause a moment (probably on the order of
half a second or
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 56352 ***
Sorry, I honestly tried to look for an existing report of this problem,
but somehow missed #56352
--
Keystrokes lost in unlock dialog
https://launchpad.net/bugs/57562
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** Bug 57562 has been marked a duplicate of this bug
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Unlock dialog no longer pays attention to keypresses before it appears
https://launchpad.net/bugs/56352
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Public bug reported:
The manual page suggests you read info grub instead, but unless the
package grub-doc is installed, the result is no different (and in
fact, the footer of the info page suggest you should read the info page
instead).
An easy fix might be to add an explanation of the situation
Sorry, dunno why I originally reported this against apt instead of
aptitude, could you please move the Confirmed tag and remove (or
somehow invalidate) the apt package?
** Also affects: aptitude (Ubuntu)
Importance: Undecided
Status: Unconfirmed
** Bug watch added: Debian Bug tracker
I think I got something which looks sort of like an upstream
confirmation in http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-
bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=143532;msg=68;att=0
--
aptitude: install --without-recommends removes packages
https://launchpad.net/bugs/56742
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ubuntu-bugs mailing list
I can confirm this here as well. I do hope this is the correct bug
report for following up on this. Because nobody here posted very exact
symptoms, I take the liberty to elaborate on that topic.
This is a clean install of Gutsy on a Toshiba Libretto U105 laptop,
Intel X driver, absolutely no
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 88152 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/88152
This is marked as a duplicate of #88152, but their descriptions look
fairly disparate. I do not have any problems switching between virtual
terminals, nor do I have the nvidia driver.
I wrote a comment in
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 88152 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/88152
... And I guess I should mention for those who don't follow the link to
my other comment that disabling Compiz solved the problem for me as a
workaround, but it would of course be nice to have the option of
On closer examination, maybe I should go to bug #96240 instead. I
haven't managed to find anybody who is not reporting this for Nvidia,
which I'm not on, though. Should I issue a separate bug report, even?
--
Gutsy: Suspend doesn't work on a ASUS A6K
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/136774
You
And now finally I came across bug #133118 which sounds like mine. We
now return you to your regularly scheduled program. Sorry for the
intrusion.
--
Gutsy: Suspend doesn't work on a ASUS A6K
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/136774
You received this bug notification because you are a member of
So am I correct in assuming that for me, with Toshiba Libretto U105,
intel driver (lspci sez 82852/855GM), I should be able to turn Compiz
back on when/if xserver-xorg-video-intel is upgraded, without breaking
suspend/hibernate (assuming this goes in)?
--
very corrupt X after suspend/resume
This is pretty severe. On a fresh Gutsy install, opening Applications -
Accessories - Tracker Search Tool and typing in a random search phrase
displays this error dialog.
There is no way a new user would know not to panic at this, and there is
certainly no useful information for a non-technical
Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: tracker
System - Preferences - Indexing preferences - General tab - Stemming has
a short list of languages ... but you have to pick one. This is not a
realistic scenario in many locales; for example, I routinely handle
stuff in three languages (English;
*** This bug is a duplicate of bug 23768 ***
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/23768
If I understand the situation correctly, there are actually two bugs
here:
1. CPU frequency selection requires root or suid privileges (this is bug
#23768)
2. The documentation fails to mention that the menu
No NFS here. Like I wrote above, pretty much out of the box Gutsy fresh
install.
--
tracker searches sometimes don't work, reporting Process /usr/bin/trackerd
exited with status 0
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/148118
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs,
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ ls -l .local/share/tracker/
total 8
drwxr-xr-x 2 era era 4096 2007-10-25 22:16 data
-rw--- 1 era era0 2007-10-24 08:33 era_tracker_lock
-rw--- 1 era era 780 2007-10-25 20:57 tracker.log
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ sudo ps wallx | fgrep tracker
[sudo] password for era:
0
I don't imagine the log will be useful, but attaching it just in case.
** Attachment added: /home/era/.local/share/tracker/tracker.log
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/10171893/tracker.log
--
tracker searches sometimes don't work, reporting Process /usr/bin/trackerd
exited with status 0
https
Just a quick note that bug #25830 is very similar. I don't think they
should be merged, but half the time, I end up picking the wrong one from
my subscribed bugs, so having a link here that one can click to be taken
to the other one seems useful.
--
firefox should render unrecognized text/* as
See also bug #39136
--
Option to display file in browser, treat as text/plain
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/25830
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
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Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: tracker
Like I alluded in
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/tracker/+bug/148118/comments/14,
the error message when you type in a search but trackerd can't be
started probably violates a good olde imperial tonne of Human Interface
Guidelines.
I
FWIW, I posted a separate bug about making the error message a little
less intimidating. Bug #157525
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tracker searches sometimes don't work, reporting Process /usr/bin/trackerd
exited with status 0
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/148118
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Public bug reported:
On Gutsy 2008-03-02 Live CD beta, when I open Preferences - Keyboard
Shortcuts, I see lots of weird hex codes instead of key names. How am I
supposed to know which key corresponds to 0xa0, 0xae, 0xb0 etc?
Some keys have sensible or at least marginally understandable names,
** Attachment added: Screen shot of Keyboard Shortcuts dialog
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/13549159/Screenshot-Keyboard%20Shortcuts.png
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Obscure hex key names in Preferences - Keyboard shortcuts
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/219133
You received this bug notification because you are a
Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: subversion-tools
Our local admins have installed a version of svnmerge which is newer
than the one which ships in Ubuntu. The changes are minor, but it would
be nice if it was synced with upstream every once in a while; the one
currently installed
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