On Thu, Aug 16, 2018 at 3:47 AM, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> Another correction below:
>
>> BTRFS also makes it extremely easy to expand an array if you add more
>> disks, WITHOUT mucking around with LVM and md-raid. Just a simple
>> command (something that ZFS cannot easily do at this time)
>>
>>
Dyker inte upp idag, är för trött kom hem från Norge inatt, men ni får ha
det bra
//Luna -- bittin
On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 02:30:01PM +, Glenn English wrote:
> Buster, RME Hammerfall, Supermicro box
>
> I can't get my RME Hammerfall sound card to make noise in the
> headphones. It did a few weeks ago with pretty much the same hardware
> and pretty much the same OS.
>
> I replaced the DDR3
Another correction below:
On Tue, Aug 14, 2018 at 11:50:03AM +, Matthew Crews wrote:
> On 8/14/18 3:26 AM, Stefan K wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > I'm just just curious.
> > In the beginning of btrfs, most blogs, websites, magazins said btrfs will
> > be THE next standard linux filesystem, so
On 08/15/2018 10:19 AM, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
On 08/11/2018 04:50 PM, David Christensen wrote:
I recommend:
1. Get a small, fast, high-quality SSD to use as the system drive.
Connect it to motherboard port SATA6G_1.
2. Connect the optical drive to SATA6G_2.
3. Do a fresh install of
On 16/08/18 05:52, Miguel A. Vallejo wrote:
So, I'm also looking for a Linux friendly 802.11ac USB dongle.
And I should have mentioned that the TL-WN722N is a single band (2.4
GHz) b/g/n dongle, *not* dual band.
--
Ben Caradoc-Davies
Director
Transient Software Limited
I have a list of IP addresses I want to ban and I put them in
/etc/fail2ban/action.d/iptables-multiport.conf as so:
cat /etc/fail2ban/ip.blacklist.perm | while read IP; do iptables -I
fail2ban- 1 -s $IP -j DROP; done
(that was supposed to be all on one line, of course)
So, I have read that
On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 02:50:18PM +, Matthew Crews wrote:
> On 8/15/18 2:25 AM, Stefan K wrote:
> > Did you think that "only" the RAID5/6 problem is the reason why
> > btrfs is not so common? what is with the performance? and some
> > (important) featrures (not futures ;) ) are missing to
On 08/15/2018 12:27 AM, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Le 15/08/2018 à 05:36, David Christensen a écrit :
On 08/12/2018 11:01 AM, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Mind to explain why should /boot be on a separate partition ?
Primarily because I often use dm-crypt on swap and root;
Plain dm-crypt or LUKS ?
I have an Intel NUC8i7HNK which does not boot Debian Stretch, testing
alpha3, or the latest testing nightly. I have gathered some pertinent
triage information which I won't bore everyone with here. My real
question is: How do I report this bug?
Thanks,
Tabor
Statement of Confidentiality
The
On Wed 15 Aug 2018 at 21:08:50 (+0200), john doe wrote:
> On 8/15/2018 7:19 PM, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> >
> >
> >On 08/11/2018 04:50 PM, David Christensen wrote:
> >>On 08/11/2018 08:19 AM, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> >>>I am running Debian Stretch on my 64bit Linux platform.
> >>>
> >>>I am
I've been totally unsystematic about this problem in my machines
(granted with wheezy and jessie), but what I've found is that simply
starting the alsamixer app and re-raising the volume "fixes" the
issue. Until it happens again, for reasons which I could never
determine. Now if you don't have
On 8/15/2018 7:19 PM, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
On 08/11/2018 04:50 PM, David Christensen wrote:
On 08/11/2018 08:19 AM, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
I am running Debian Stretch on my 64bit Linux platform.
I am planning on installing a 500B SSD as the boot HD and have a
question about the SATA
My experience is similar.
Currently I'm using Linksys WUSB600N v2 USB dongles based on Ralink
RT3572 and they work just fine. They can handle my 100 MBit conection
using 2x2 N mode in 5 GHz band without too much problems.
But I have also a Linksys WUSB6300 802.11ac dongle, based on
RTL8812AU.
On 08/11/2018 04:50 PM, David Christensen wrote:
On 08/11/2018 08:19 AM, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
I am running Debian Stretch on my 64bit Linux platform.
I am planning on installing a 500B SSD as the boot HD and have a
question about the SATA connectors on the ASUS M5A97 R2.0 MB.
I have
On Tue, 14 Aug 2018 22:43:03 +0200
Johann Spies wrote:
> On Tue, 14 Aug 2018 at 17:18, Patrick Bartek
> wrote:
>
> > I'm curious. Did you just do a distribution upgrade on this laptop?
> > From what to what? Or was it a clean install? Or is it an old
> > install with everything working fine
Hi.
On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 04:46:13PM +0200, Martin wrote:
> Hi ML members,
>
> I have a bunch of machines, all virtual, where I have to swap the NIC type.
> Three or four NIC's per host, e1000 to vmxnet3 for those who may care about.
vmxnet3 is what's important here.
> With
Retour sur ce fil abandonné depuis 15 jours.
Rappel du problème
- Chromium ne lisait plus certaines vidéos depuis quelques semaines, par
exemple celle-ci
https://www.publico.es/publico-tv/en-la-frontera/programa/682365/entrevista-a-joan-tarda-en-la-frontera-4-de-julio-de-2018
;
- La page de
On 8/15/18 2:25 AM, Stefan K wrote:
> Did you think that "only" the RAID5/6 problem is the reason why btrfs is not
> so common? what is with the performance? and some (important) featrures (not
> futures ;) ) are missing to catch up ZFS.
>
> best regards
> Stefan
> (sorry for my bad english)
>
Hi ML members,
I have a bunch of machines, all virtual, where I have to swap the NIC type.
Three or four NIC's per host, e1000 to vmxnet3 for those who may care about.
With Predictable Network Interface Names enabled, it should be possible, to do
this automated. Not being lazy, I've read the
Buster, RME Hammerfall, Supermicro box
I can't get my RME Hammerfall sound card to make noise in the
headphones. It did a few weeks ago with pretty much the same hardware
and pretty much the same OS.
I replaced the DDR3 1066 RAM with DDR3 1333, and I updated Buster.
I've tried to do what I did
Zenaan Harkness writes ("wishlist script: “hegemon”: set up bare git mirror
farm for all debian sources"):
> git at alioth is coming along very nicely and was a great step
> forward for Debian (thank you Ian).
Why are you CCing me ? I had nothing to do with alioth or salsa.
(Maybe your proposed
On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 02:34:54PM +0200, Ulf Volmer wrote:
> On 15.08.2018 14:02, Reco wrote:
> > On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 08:33:37AM -0300, Marcelo Lacerda wrote:
>
> >> but I imagine that a
> >> security update to it doesn't actually change anything to libc source code,
> >> so why do the two
On 15.08.2018 14:02, Reco wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 08:33:37AM -0300, Marcelo Lacerda wrote:
>> but I imagine that a
>> security update to it doesn't actually change anything to libc source code,
>> so why do the two of them always upgrade together?
>
> Today's stable kernel update
Hi.
On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 08:33:37AM -0300, Marcelo Lacerda wrote:
> I know that the kernel and libc are deeply integrated
On the contrary, libc merely states a minimal supported kernel version,
and you're free to use more-or-less recent kernel with it.
You'll miss all new system
Le 13/08/2018 à 11:43, C. Mourad Jaber a écrit :
Bonjour,
J'ai des soucis inquiétant depuis quelques jours sur mon laptop...
Plusieurs fichiers sont corrompu contenant des données binaires plutôt que du
texte (fichiers .list d'apt en particulier)...
J'ai également plusieurs scripts corrompu
I know that the kernel and libc are deeply integrated but I imagine that a
security update to it doesn't actually change anything to libc source code,
so why do the two of them always upgrade together?
On Tue, Aug 14, 2018 at 01:47:25PM -0400, Cindy-Sue Causey wrote:
> On 8/13/18, Brian wrote:
> > On Mon 13 Aug 2018 at 17:49:08 +0200, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> >
> >> On Mon, Aug 13, 2018 at 08:35:50AM -0700, Patrick Bartek wrote:
> >> > On Mon, 13 Aug 2018 06:47:02 -0500
> >> > Richard Owlett
Did you think that "only" the RAID5/6 problem is the reason why btrfs is not so
common? what is with the performance? and some (important) featrures (not
futures ;) ) are missing to catch up ZFS.
best regards
Stefan
(sorry for my bad english)
> Gesendet: Dienstag, 14. August 2018 um 21:09 Uhr
oohh sh**,
sorry for that, but I guess your know what I mean ;)
> Gesendet: Dienstag, 14. August 2018 um 15:54 Uhr
> Von: "Anders Andersson"
> An: "Debian users mailing list"
> Betreff: Re: does btrfs have a feature?
>
> On Tue, Aug 14, 2018 at 12:26 PM, Stefan K wrote:
> > In the beginning of
Le 13/08/2018 à 21:11, Jérémy Prego a écrit :
Aujourd'hui j'ai demandé à quelqu'un ce qui est affiché et j'en ai
profité pour faire prendre une photo:
https://www.dropbox.com/s/z27wt3ruseb4snm/linux-kernel-panic-poweroff.jpg
Note : le flash, ça ne sert à rien pour photographier un écran qui
Aug 14, 2018, 2:30 PM by delop...@gmail.com:
> > but why you don't run it in VM or VBox or extract, or use unetbootin?
>
Yes, eventually I installed unetbootin and got it working with it. Thanks to
everyone who responded.
Hi,
For the ones planning to attend the Debian Day tomorrow at Ericsson, I was
able to get a better place with much more space.
I updated info on https://wiki.debian.org/DebianDay/2018/Sweden/Stockcholm
But it is basically this building: https://foursquare.com/
On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 01:26:48AM -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
[0;30m[0;37m This brings up a question: If I am Installing something outside of the Packaging Infrastructure (usually, via a TarBall), I
[0;37m usually install inside of my Home Directory (for example, using $PATH for
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 04:13:32PM +0900, Byung-Hee HWANG (황병희, 黃炳熙) wrote:
> When i type command by email as follows:
>
> send-unmatched old|-2
> send-unmatched [old|-2]
>
> Then BTS server tell me "Unknown command or malformed arguments to
>
Le 14/08/2018 à 15:31, local10 a écrit :
The goal here is to create an sd card containg a bootable windows 7 image, I
need to test something quick in windows. The iso file is a windows 7 image.
What kind of Windows 7 image ? An installation DVD image ? AFAIK these
ISO images are not
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 01:26:48AM -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
> This brings up a question: If I am Installing something outside of the
> Packaging Infrastructure (usually, via a TarBall), I usually install inside
> of my Home Directory (for
Le 12/08/2018 à 21:27, Dan Ritter a écrit :
On Sun, Aug 12, 2018 at 08:01:08PM +0200, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Le 11/08/2018 à 22:50, David Christensen a écrit :
3. Do a fresh install of Debian onto the SSD. Partition manually,
creating three primary partitions: /boot (1 GB), swap (1 GB), and
Le 12/08/2018 à 21:38, Michael Wagner a écrit :
On Aug 12, 2018 at 20:01:08, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Mind to explain why should /boot be on a separate partition ?
when you have /boot on a seperate partition, you can mount it read-only
and only when kernel updates arrives, you mount it
Le 15/08/2018 à 05:36, David Christensen a écrit :
On 08/12/2018 11:01 AM, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
Mind to explain why should /boot be on a separate partition ?
Primarily because I often use dm-crypt on swap and root;
Plain dm-crypt or LUKS ?
boot must be unencrypted.
Only if using
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Tue, Aug 14, 2018 at 08:36:47PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
> On 08/12/2018 11:01 AM, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> >Le 11/08/2018 à 22:50, David Christensen a écrit :
> >>
> >>3. Do a fresh install of Debian onto the SSD. Partition
> >>manually,
When i type command by email as follows:
send-unmatched old|-2
send-unmatched [old|-2]
Then BTS server tell me "Unknown command or malformed arguments to
command." with both above commands.
Yes, i'm now translating /Bugs/server-request
[https://www.debian.org/Bugs/server-request.en.html].
Is
And BTW, the question that prompted this Gentoo discussion is here:
https://lwn.net/Articles/759539/
and includes this snippet:
2. git seems to be more efficient for frequent syncing, while
rsync seems to be more efficient for infrequest syncing. I'd
guess the crossover is somewhere
Rough stats for “hegemon emerge” now available courtesy Gentoo, see
the bottom of the following article, last section titled "Git versus
rsync":
https://lwn.net/Articles/759467/
and here's the money quote:
Matt Turner said that he has set aside a 1GB partition for the
tree, which works fine
On 2018-08-14 09:08, Remigio wrote:
Hi there,
recently I installed Debian 9 Stretch and I noticed that the network
configuration management method was substantially changed.
Infact the file /etc/network/interfaces is almost empty despite I've
inserted the network parameters during the
On Wed, Aug 15, 2018 at 02:59:17PM +1000, Erik Christiansen wrote:
> On 14.08.18 06:44, Richard Owlett wrote:
> > On 08/14/2018 01:43 AM, Erik Christiansen wrote:
> > > The whole thing is just a plain text file, edited and read with Vim,
> > > using multi-level folding, so it all presents as a
46 matches
Mail list logo