On Sat, May 20, 2017 at 02:20:15PM +0100, Michael Fothergill wrote:
> If this is true and it is a doddle to convert an ordinary debian install
> with systemd running on it to the old sysvinit format then why is there all
> this sturm und drang and spam on this subject...??
Fanaticism. For
On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 09:34:41PM -0700, Rick Thomas wrote:
On Aug 30, 2015, at 9:12 PM, CaT c...@zip.com.au wrote:
On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 08:21:26PM -0700, Rick Thomas wrote:
Am I missing a driver for the USB3 card?
Are some USB3 chipsets not supported?
Am I missing something
On Sun, Aug 30, 2015 at 08:21:26PM -0700, Rick Thomas wrote:
Am I missing a driver for the USB3 card?
Are some USB3 chipsets not supported?
Am I missing something important?
Does 'dmesg' show that the drive is seen and a /dev device is allocated
to it when you plug it into the USB3 card?
On Mon, Aug 17, 2015 at 07:10:34PM -0700, bri...@aracnet.com wrote:
I was just wondering if I _really_ needed it.
You don't -really- need it. I haven't seen it bring anything of worth
to me yet other than bluetooth audio. If it wasn't for that I'd ditch
it as it just adds complexity.
Since
On Sat, Jul 25, 2015 at 11:32:53PM -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
It is, once ntpdate has slammed the correct time into the system at boot
time, then ntp takes over.
Unless I misremember, you don't even need ntpdate. Starting ntp with
-g will do just fine (and it's the default config - I add -N).
No tengo acceso a la documentacion pero creo recuerdar que en la
configuracion del equipo puedes definir el directorio del que se va a hacer
la copia, excluir directorios y creo que hasta ficheros...
Saludos!
El 22/08/2014 17:52, Juan jawif...@gmail.com escribió:
Buenas tardes, de nuevo con una
I saw this thread and thought I would throw this in.
When you want to check your VPN is working correctly, this tool comes in
handy...
https://www.dnsleaktest.com/
It checks to see if your DNS traffic is leaked to your ISP or if it goes
through your VPN.
On Sun, Jul 13, 2014 at 11:24 AM,
At the end of last April, I decided to operate a Debian torrent seedbox
server.
This is a picture of my RuTorrent screen ranking the downloads by upload
ratio since then.
https://debian.srv.sn/seedbox.png
I am currently operating two servers, both of which are located in Europe
because these
I use PuTTY to connect to my Debian boxes.
I was concerned about whether PuTTY is susceptible to the Heartbleed bug,
etc. as I noticed that the program has not had any updates in quite some
time.
http://www.chiark.greenend.org.uk/~sgtatham/putty/
Is this software still considered to be secure?
I have two questions:
1. Would anyone be willing to give me a link to a simple USB keyboard that
you
think would work with this machine at boot time? Perhaps on Amazon.com or
Newegg.com, etc.?
2. Do you know of a Debian CD of some type that will load a kernel without
the
need of a key press
is not
working during boot.
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 11:11 PM, Kitty Cat realizar.la@gmail.com
wrote:
Yes. I have previously searched and found such things like this:
http://www.intel.com/support/motherboards/desktop/sb/CS-023466.htm
It says...
Check for and enable USB Legacy Support
My USB keyboard is connected directly to the computer. I have also tried it
in every USB port on the computer.
The keyboard doesn't even work at the Windows bootloader menu or the Grub
menu or the menu I get when I boot the Debian DVD.
I did manage to get Debian installed as I said in my other
not power up the USB ports at
boot. But then that doesn't really make any sense either.
This is the strangest computer that I have worked with.
On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 1:56 AM, Tom Furie t...@furie.org.uk wrote:
On Sat, Jun 28, 2014 at 01:39:45AM -0600, Kitty Cat wrote:
I'm thinking
I can't install Debian. The USB keyboard doesn't turn on until Windows
loads.
I bought a used MPC computer that only has USB ports -- No PS/2 ports.
The machine currently has Windows installed.
When installing Debian, it is required to press a button during the boot
sequence in order to load a
keyboard will work. However, if the keyboard doesn't start working after
the kernel loads, then I'm stuck and won't be able to do anything with the
computer.
On Fri, Jun 27, 2014 at 8:32 PM, B lazyvi...@gmx.com wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jun 2014 20:12:11 -0600
Kitty Cat realizar.la@gmail.com wrote
El 16/04/2014 22:49, Eduardo Rios eduri...@yahoo.es escribió:
Hace un momento me ha llegado un correo que dice:
De: listascor...@msjs.co
Asunto: https://lists.debian.org/debian-user-spanish
Texto:
Hola
No puedo ni enviar mensajes, ni recibo los mensajes (estoy suscrito) de
la lista.
I think you miss accept input traffic from port 81.
You can add logging messages or run tcpdump to see what traffic are dropped.
Regards. Fernando.
El 14/02/2014 14:44, Aleksander Kurczyk akurc...@outlook.com escribió:
Hello,
This is my firewall script:
sudo iptables -F
sudo iptables -A
Ese error es debido a que el puerto esta ocupado, bien porque otro
freeradius esta en ejecucion o porque otro servicio lo esta usando.
El 31/10/2013 22:46, co...@esid.gecgr.co.cu escribió:
Hola
Alguien que haya implementado freeradius en Debian 7 que me pueda dar una
mano e intentado un
On Tue, May 28, 2013 at 05:30:09PM -0400, To Ro wrote:
What would be the best course of action to switch my system to lvm? This is
what I have:
Filesystem Size Used Avail
Use% Mounted on
rootfs
On Sun, May 05, 2013 at 07:11:40PM -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
On Sun, May 05, 2013 at 03:44:35PM -0400, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
It's very easy to install XFCE. Drill down in the graphical installer
to other desktops and make your selection
Or:
sudo apt-get install xfce4
On Fri, Jan 18, 2013 at 12:26:17PM +0200, Andrei Hristow wrote:
Hi, I have 8 GB RAM Which version will be better for my i381 or amd64
amd64. Go native and get full access to your ram at full speed.
If you need i386 for anything you can go multiarch (you may aswell install
wheezy at this stage
On Fri, Jan 18, 2013 at 01:29:35PM +0800, lina wrote:
-? ? ? ? ?? XX.tar
-? ? ? ? ?? try.pdb
-? ? ? ? ?? try-c.pdb
-? ? ? ? ?? test_xtc2pdb.f
-? ? ? ? ?? SUB_UTILITY.o
-? ? ? ? ?
On Sun, Dec 09, 2012 at 03:18:32PM +1100, CaT wrote:
Felt that was a bit too many packages (182 new i386 packages) to be installed
so:
apt-get purge ia32-libs ia32-libs-gtk
For you this will get rid of more packages than you may want. Make a note.
For me skype is not installed as a deb
On Sat, Dec 08, 2012 at 02:17:55PM +0100, Hans-J. Ullrich wrote:
Thanks for the answer, Andrei,
but something is still not completely clear.
When you purge a package (any package) all its files should be removed
by dpkg, but sometimes packages generate files on install and don't
clean
On Mon, Oct 01, 2012 at 10:48:53AM -0400, Tom H wrote:
On Mon, Oct 1, 2012 at 10:35 AM, Hendrik Boom hend...@topoi.pooq.com wrote:
On Mon, 01 Oct 2012 10:08:43 -0400, Tom H wrote:
How big's your post-MBR gap?
I gather that's the so-called embedding region. I don't know. How do I
go
On Fri, Jul 01, 2011 at 02:45:15PM +0100, Joao Ferreira Gmail wrote:
Hello,
can I somehow join 2 ext3 partitions ?
/dev/sda6 28G 15G 12G 56% /media/armazem
/dev/sda7 19G 8.2G 9.3G 47% /media/despensa
they both contain data.
It's fun danger time. :)
They're small.
On Tue, Jul 06, 2010 at 09:15:35AM +0200, Johann Spies wrote:
Apparently '/etc/init.d/networking restart' is depricated. It is not
doing the job any more on squeeze.
'/etc/init.d/ifplugd restart' ignores virtual interfaces defined in
/etc/network/interfaces.
So how do I get my virtual
On Fri, Jul 02, 2010 at 05:31:22PM -0400, Mike Viau wrote:
Hello List,
I was just wondering what some of the debian community users has been
experiencing in regards to the new Western Digital 4K Advanced format
drives? Has any one tried using one of these drives on the 2.6.26
(64/32 bit)
On Sun, Apr 04, 2010 at 08:33:05PM -0700, Tech Geek wrote:
Anybody's input who has expereince running GNOME on a low end system like
this would be helpful.
Whilst not an direct answer to your question, try xfce. It's meant to be
lightweight and, on my EEE it works great. You can install gnome
On Sun, Oct 18, 2009 at 08:35:24PM -0400, Thomas H. George wrote:
I decided to give your approach a try. The installation of Thunderbird
went well and on start up it recovered all my saved emails and my
account settings. The Firefox installation has not been so successful.
The program
On Sun, Aug 02, 2009 at 02:02:56PM +0800, Bret Busby wrote:
On Sat, 1 Aug 2009, Brian Marshall wrote:
On Sun, Aug 02, 2009 at 10:00:44AM +0800, Bret Busby wrote:
The problem with downloading the applications from seamonkey, is
that they are .tar.gz files, rather than .deb packages, and my
On Mon, Jul 06, 2009 at 07:30:19PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
How would one go about computing a *single* hash value for a complete
directory tree?
hash everything and then hash the result? (if you don't care about metadata
that is - if you do add a nice stat of everything into the final hash)
On Sun, Apr 19, 2009 at 05:51:17AM -0500, Dave Sherohman wrote:
So, what do I need to do to recover from this?
Not had this problem myself but at a guess... put a deb-src line for etch
in your sources.list file, then
apt-get -b source postgresql-server-7.4
Install all the needed things, then
On Fri, Apr 17, 2009 at 04:59:39PM +0200, Erik Xavior wrote:
why isn't working? :S
if [ $(date +%H) 10 ]; then echo later then 10h; else echo before 10h;
fi;
Because is a string comparison. Do
help test
in bash
or man test
--
A search of his car uncovered pornography, a
On Tue, Apr 14, 2009 at 04:26:57PM +0200, Dirk wrote:
Install nullmailer, I'm pretty sure that's what you're looking for.
i thought so too.. but it doesn't seem to do what it name implies...
it's config kept asking where to redirect the mails too... and
/dev/null wasn't an option :(
it
On Wed, Apr 15, 2009 at 03:24:29PM +0100, Adam Hardy wrote:
Just done etch - lenny upgrade and wondering why apt-get upgrade won't
upgrade the following, when some of them might be nice to have (and
synaptic seems to find no reason not to give them to me):
Try apt-get dist-upgrade instead.
On Sat, Mar 07, 2009 at 08:32:27AM +0100, karun wrote:
Top Posting is an unfortunate side effect, of Microsoft Outlook becoming
the standard for non Opensource computer software users.
Actually, I'd say it was a side-effect of pine in the unix world and any
graphical client everywhere else.
On Fri, Dec 19, 2008 at 08:15:11PM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
An automated voice told me that my (non-existant, of course)
Jefferson Parish[0] Credit Union Visa card has been blocked.
I immediately hung up on it, of course, and am slightly unnerved
that they are now calling people at home
On Tue, Dec 16, 2008 at 10:07:06AM +0530, Girish Kulkarni wrote:
You're probably right. But I was expecting at least the
lobflashplayer.so (v10) from Adobe's site to work!
Adobe didn't compile it with the libs that are avail in etch.
--
A search of his car uncovered pornography, a homemade
On Tue, Nov 04, 2008 at 10:03:28AM -0600, gary turner wrote:
The only things I found were
/usr/lib/nspluginwrapper/plugins/npwrapper.libflashplayer.so
/usr/lib/iceweasel/plugins/npwrapper.libflashwrapper.so
/usr/lib/firefox/plugins/npwrapper.libflashwrapper.so
Try running ldd on them.
--
On Sun, Oct 19, 2008 at 12:12:08PM +0200, Rico Secada wrote:
Can someone please explain why the BLEEP support was removed?
It was probably removed because the BLEEP is mostlikely non-BLEEP and
as such would violate the BLEEP. But that's just a BLEEP.
--
Police noticed some rustling sounds
On Mon, Jul 07, 2008 at 04:03:04PM -0500, Mark Allums wrote:
Hah!, my mail client is stupid, it responds in kind, so my last message
(and this one, too) may have been sent in MIME and HTML as well. Sorry
No, no they haven't. :)
about this, I will try to fix it, so that it won't happen
On Mon, Jul 07, 2008 at 06:12:51PM -0400, Barclay, Daniel wrote:
However, since my MUA is _not_ sending HTML out of my computer (my BCC copy
from my mail server confirms that), my MUA's HTML vs. text settings and my use
of them are not the problem.
I suspect that a mail server or gateway
On Fri, Jul 04, 2008 at 12:55:56AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
Changing topic: what ensures that the kernel will always see that
device as sda, instead of sdb?
udev afaik.
--
Police noticed some rustling sounds from Linn's bottom area
and on closer inspection a roll of cash was found
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 06:06:56AM +, Paul Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 2008-07-02 at 14:01 +0800, Magicloud wrote:
I don't think so. Obviously, if the network is broken, it absolutely does
not mean that there is NO packages, just aptitude can not know.
That's by far the most round logic
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 06:41:09AM +, Paul Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 2008-07-02 at 16:19 +1000, CaT wrote:
I believe that would be the point the original poster was getting at. If
aptitude is really doing that then it is in the wrong.
I understood it, but given that this is how apt has
On Wed, Jul 02, 2008 at 08:22:59AM +0200, Sven Joachim wrote:
Still there should be an option to turn this behavior off, since it is
very annoying for people with low bandwith and frequent network
problems. In apt-get you can set APT::Get::List-Cleanup=false to avoid
erasing the list files if
On Wed, May 14, 2008 at 01:14:38AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
You may also not be able to access all your RAM,
Sure, on the 80486 or early Pentia. But everything since then has PAE.
With a performance hit. :)
You conveniently snipped the part where I agreed with the RAM
performance
On Wed, May 14, 2008 at 12:31:40AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
On 05/13/08 22:15, Todd A. Jacobs wrote:
On Tue, May 13, 2008 at 09:45:48AM -0700, Abraham Chaffin wrote:
wondering if it makes a difference if I install the 64bit version of
the debian vs the i386 version of debian? If it's
over ssh in urxvt :) and the above looks like what
may well be Hebrew.
The other thing you may wish to make sure of is that you are using a
UTF-8 locale. For me that's en_AU.UTF-8. If you don't you'll probably
see a lot of question marks (I know I do).
cat.
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On Fri, Apr 04, 2008 at 12:16:56PM +1100, Owen Townend wrote:
a distro debate. I have used something similar as such with a gentoo mate.
So how did mating Gentoo go for you?
cat
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% in the last 3 years.
Link to this statistics?
Oh. Sorry. This page: http://www.google.com/trends?q=debian
*looks outside* It's dark! This can only mean the sky has fallen! Eep!
cat
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within craves but it works
and I always found it not to be that much of a hassle. Generally you
don't download KDE or GNOME every other day. It's just a once off and
then security updates or the odd other small thing.
cat.
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, hd types and even network hds and it'll just deal.
Hope this helps. :)
cat.
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:)
mentioned... Thank you :)
A better way to do the above, if you must, would be to use renice on $$.
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| command2
This is one of those, once you see it it'll be the most bleedingly
obvious things I think. :)
runprogram command1 | runprogram command2
:)
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On Sat, Jan 12, 2008 at 11:04:11PM +0100, s. keeling wrote:
right (to your tastes)? Why spin off instead into this silly I'm
right and everyone else is evil! diatribe?
It's hard to stop breathing. ;)
--
To the extent that we overreact, we proffer the terrorists the
greatest tribute.
On Fri, Nov 09, 2007 at 05:43:21AM -0800, Serena Cantor wrote:
Are you kidding?
I think you meant: Wow. Thanks. That does exactly what I need.
Or similar.
--
To the extent that we overreact, we proffer the terrorists the
greatest tribute.
- High Court Judge Michael Kirby
--
On Sat, Oct 06, 2007 at 08:21:30AM -0400, Peter Smerdon wrote:
Hello everyone.
What is the preferred method of starting an iptables script at boot time
on Debian hosts? I have come across two common ways, one with a pre-up
command that calls the script from /etc/network/interfaces and the
On Fri, Sep 21, 2007 at 03:15:49PM +0300, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
drwxr-xr-x 2 storage storage 4096 2007-09-19 17:42 store
Which is of course empty. After the mount, which is successfull, the command
ls -al /home/storage yields:
drwxrwsr-x 10505505 4096 2007-09-21 16:03 store
On Sat, Aug 25, 2007 at 04:47:52PM +0100, Richard Lyons wrote:
So it looks as though they are objecting to Linux per se, rather
than to the browser.
I'm not sure what url you accessed as you did nto state but watching a
video off video.yahoo.com.au wfm using Seamonkey under Debian.
--
To
On Thu, Jul 19, 2007 at 12:13:42PM +0800, Magicloud Magiclouds wrote:
Dear all,
I have a crontab like this:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] # crontab -l
# m h dom mon dow command
* 0,12* * * root/root/update.sh
If this is in roots personal crontab then you don't
On Mon, Jun 25, 2007 at 02:31:09PM -0500, Mike McCarty wrote:
SQL in the early 1970s. It just didn't become an ISO standard until 1987.
Follow the link I gave you.
I replied to your message AS WRITTEN. If you don't mean to imply
that MicroSoft doesn't predate 1987, then you shouldn't make
On Sat, Jun 16, 2007 at 09:10:15AM +0100, Anthony Campbell wrote:
I gave up on aptitude long ago because it kept trying, and sometimes
succeeding, to remove lots of things it shouldn't. I now use apt-get
via wajig, which seems to be one of the best-kept Linux secrets.
Interesting. I'll try to
On Fri, Jun 15, 2007 at 08:17:45AM -0400, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
Could some of that problem be having aptitude treat recommends as
required?
Or something similar. I gave up on aptitude within a few minutes of
trying to use it during my upgrade to sarge. It completely refused to,
getting
On Fri, Jun 15, 2007 at 09:05:59AM -0400, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
On Fri, Jun 15, 2007 at 10:50:58PM +1000, CaT wrote:
On Fri, Jun 15, 2007 at 08:17:45AM -0400, Douglas Allan Tutty wrote:
Could some of that problem be having aptitude treat recommends as
required?
Or something
On Thu, Jun 14, 2007 at 05:51:00PM -0500, John Hasler wrote:
s. keeling wrote:
(0) heretic /home/keeling_ aptitude -s install foomatic-gui
...
The following packages will be automatically REMOVED:
lprng
...
...
toncho/~ sudo apt-get -s install foomatic-gui
Thank you. At least
On Wed, Jun 13, 2007 at 10:36:57PM +, s. keeling wrote:
This is on Etch with Desktop Environment de-selected on install (no
Gnome or KDE :-). Perhaps my mistake was in installing xserver-xorg
before printer configuration. Surely then, it would notice there'd be
no web browser it could be
On Thu, Jun 14, 2007 at 01:29:49AM +, s. keeling wrote:
aptitude -R install foomatic-filters-ppds
And what does apt-get install foomatic-filters-ppds get you?
---
(0) heretic /home/keeling_ dpkg -L foomatic-filters-ppds | wc -l
2696
That doesn't
On Tue, Jun 05, 2007 at 12:56:33AM -0400, Roberto C. S?nchez wrote:
Try http://bugs.debian.org/wnpp
That is a great benchmark page for any browser.
That took 10 seconds from the moment it got over its data
gathering hump (ie the download). Using SeaMonkey 1.1.2 under Linux
here. Still on
On Thu, May 17, 2007 at 12:19:34AM +0800, Uwe Heinz Rudi Dippel wrote:
I know, you can always scold me for not enough space. But this is an old box
with a small hard disk:
df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/hda7 133M 93M 33M 74% /
...
On Sun, May 20, 2007 at 01:38:51AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
It's not a big deal, but undoing her mucking of the desktop is
something I'd rather not have to waste time with.
What if you have the login script recreate /home/guest each time?
Indeed, though I'd rsync on logout from someplace
On Sat, May 19, 2007 at 03:12:51PM -0400, Hal Vaughan wrote:
On Saturday 19 May 2007, Joey Hess wrote:
There exists a gentoo-user mailing list. If a post to debian-user
would be exactly as on-topic if posted to gentoo-user, then it is
offtopic on *both* lists, and belongs on neither.
Not
On Sat, May 19, 2007 at 06:05:10PM -0500, Gnu_Raiz wrote:
I personally think that everyone has a right to post, and who am I to tell
someone else not to exercise their right to freedom of speech. I
You know... we should just merge every mailing list on the net into
one list and see just how
Hi guys,
funny but i am experiencing the same problem with my fujitsu-siemens pc. I can
only open few sites: www.google.com, www.ya.ru.
I've tried all advices listed above and it aint help:(
I wonder where else i can have a look for the answer...
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On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 01:43:54AM -0400, Greg Folkert wrote:
On Tue, 2007-04-10 at 15:39 +1000, CaT wrote:
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 01:28:38AM -0400, Greg Folkert wrote:
DB monkies generally like turning it off as it has proven to cause data
loss in certain corner cases. Good DB monkies
On Tue, Apr 10, 2007 at 01:28:38AM -0400, Greg Folkert wrote:
caching is still okay to use. Why else would manufacturers put cache
ON-BOARD the hard-drives if it was BAD... do you think they LIKE
SPENDING MONEY on things that won't be used? They would rather just not
include it and save more
On Sun, Apr 08, 2007 at 12:07:35AM +0200, Mathias Brodala wrote:
My system boots from hda3 using grub. hda1 and hda5 are swap partitions.
Whats the best way to get an exact copy of my two Linux systems onto the
new drive?
Put the new drive into your PC and use dd to copy the whole 30GB
On Mon, Apr 02, 2007 at 08:34:53AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 04/02/07 03:19, Dave Ewart wrote:
On Sunday, 01.04.2007 at 16:12 -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
Most people I know pronounce this post-gress (dropping/ignoring
the 'SQL' part at
On Mon, Apr 02, 2007 at 02:10:08PM +0800, Wei Chen wrote:
You know that Etch is about to release. This means that new features and
software will not get into it any more.
So what is a better choice now, to stick to Etch or to switch to the
next testing? I am not sure which is more important
On Fri, Mar 30, 2007 at 06:49:35PM -0300, Jorge Peixoto de Morais Neto wrote:
quality), and I tried again. Then with a better recharger. I eventually gave
up and put the batteries away. One year later, I looked at the batteries and
realized why they did not work.
They were Sony batteries. Of
On Fri, Mar 30, 2007 at 01:13:44AM -0400, Kevin Mark wrote:
On Fri, Mar 30, 2007 at 02:38:04PM +1000, CaT wrote:
On Fri, Mar 30, 2007 at 12:19:39AM -0400, Kevin Mark wrote:
The sensible way to handle hardware support independent of any installed
software would be to ship each pc
On Fri, Mar 30, 2007 at 01:11:06AM -0400, Kevin Mark wrote:
tech support folks stop saying 'but you need to use windows for us to
diagnose the problem before we can authorizes this' or similar.
FWIW, the diagnostics, etc CD that Dell ships with servers is Linux
based.
I found
On Fri, Mar 30, 2007 at 12:19:39AM -0400, Kevin Mark wrote:
The sensible way to handle hardware support independent of any installed
software would be to ship each pc with a bootable CD with custom Dell test
software. Linux would make a convenient base for such a CD.
This is something I
On Fri, Mar 30, 2007 at 02:38:04PM +1000, CaT wrote:
On Fri, Mar 30, 2007 at 12:19:39AM -0400, Kevin Mark wrote:
The sensible way to handle hardware support independent of any installed
software would be to ship each pc with a bootable CD with custom Dell test
software. Linux would make
On Sat, Mar 24, 2007 at 11:25:08PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
tmpfile()
Return a new file object opened in update mode (w+b).
The file has no directory entries associated with it and
will be automatically deleted once there are no file
descriptors for the
On Sun, Mar 25, 2007 at 10:56:42AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
All in all I think you're making a mountain out of flat grass-plains
here. There is nothing inherently faulty, false or wrong in what the
zebra do there. For one, it makes sure that it is truly temporary. If
the app exits in some
On Sat, Mar 24, 2007 at 08:38:54PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
However, realize that some programs create a file /tmp and then promptly
unlink it, thus causing the file to take up space even though it does
not have a directory entry.
How's that?
UNIX does not deallocate disk space until
with the situation and
it must be my lousy email client.
Oops. Sorry, CaT. I meant to post that last message to Ben, not you.
Hehe. No worries and it's not your client. Mine displays it as per the
quoted printable encoding also, which is broken, as I have the html
component of email de-prioratised
On Sun, Mar 11, 2007 at 12:00:22AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
Let me show you what your message looks like on a plain text client
(for example). Your paragraphs are single lines, but that's not much of
a problem in the end. What is more of a problem is that your mail client
does not
On Sat, Mar 10, 2007 at 09:56:51PM +0100, Ben Humpert wrote:
Date: Sat, 10 Mar 2007 22:44:46 +0200 From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Ben
Humpert [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I'd love to use the Etch
installer...if I could ever get it. Iused the etch installer
last night and it worked
On Sun, Nov 26, 2006 at 01:23:59PM -0800, Todd A. Jacobs wrote:
I'm running 1.3.33-6sarge3, and have been noticing that apache is not
restarting when the logs are rotated every week. The logrotate script
doesn't seem to be directly at fault, but I can't understand why it's
not restarting.
On Tue, Sep 12, 2006 at 12:58:49AM -0400, H.S. wrote:
Others have given you good replies. I would add that do not name your
output file (the executable) as test. A test command already exists
in Linux.
I don't believe it matters much. Only the crazy and the inept have . in
their $PATH and
On Thu, Sep 07, 2006 at 11:04:36PM -0700, Paul Johnson wrote:
On Thursday 07 September 2006 18:51, Cameron L. Spitzer wrote:
[This message has also been posted to linux.debian.user.]
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED], [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
qmail has the least Debian support, due to
On Thu, Sep 07, 2006 at 11:52:45AM -0700, Marc Wilson wrote:
Unless the ncurses installer is *deficient* in some manner, the mere
GUI-ness of the other installer does not enhance the installation in any
way. They both do exactly the same job in exactly the same way. If they
don't, then one
On Fri, Sep 08, 2006 at 01:20:35PM +0200, Jordi Carrillo wrote:
I'm using Debian testing and I was thinking about switching to unstable. Is
Debian unstable, stable enough for a Desktop system? Are there broken
dependencies in unstable?
There might not be today but there may be tomorrow. I
On Tue, Aug 22, 2006 at 07:00:09PM -0600, edwardsa wrote:
He should get a clue, and you should get a life!
If you look at this
list over time, you will find a rich history of OT threads. They can be
cathartic, offering another kind of support-- relief from boredom and
a place to run your
On Mon, Aug 21, 2006 at 01:15:06AM -0400, Hal Vaughan wrote:
On Sunday 20 August 2006 23:43, Ron Johnson wrote:
Paul Johnson wrote:
On Sunday 20 August 2006 18:47, Hal Vaughan wrote:
I heard the purpose of the law was to create jobs.
Nope. By order of the Department of
On Sat, Apr 22, 2006 at 12:27:30PM +0100, Robert Hulme wrote:
If I do 'chroot /target mount -t proc proc /proc' I get: chroot:
cannot execute mount: No such file or directory
If I just 'mount' it lists the mounts ok. If I /target/mount it also
lists the mounts ok.
'chroot /target' results
On Sat, Apr 22, 2006 at 11:20:27PM +1000, CaT wrote:
On Sat, Apr 22, 2006 at 12:27:30PM +0100, Robert Hulme wrote:
If I do 'chroot /target mount -t proc proc /proc' I get: chroot:
cannot execute mount: No such file or directory
If I just 'mount' it lists the mounts ok. If I /target/mount
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