Re: Isolated Web Co Session crash Firefox-ESR

2023-12-02 Thread jeremy ardley
On 3/12/23 13:59, Phil Wyett wrote: Your system RAM total is? 32G You have swap and it is enabled? No Swap. I prefer not on SSD What Desktop Environment (DE) are you using - GNOME, KDE etc.? Mate with multiple panels. How many apps would you normally be running on the system at onc

Isolated Web Co Session crash Firefox-ESR

2023-12-02 Thread jeremy ardley
I noticed my Firefox -esr browser becoming progressively more sluggish. Then suddenly I was back to the system login screen This is not the first time this has happened although previously when it started getting sluggish I killed all Firefox related process System logs show the start of the

Re: Firefox 115.5.0esr(64-bit) can't show mp4

2023-12-01 Thread jeremy ardley
On 2/12/23 06:10, Van Snyder wrote: When I try to view a mp4 video in Firefox 115.5.0esr(64-bit) on Debian GNU/Linux 10 (buster), it puts up a sad-face window saying "No video with supported format and MIME type found." It doesn't offer to download the file, or play it with an external applic

Re: dedicated IP

2023-11-28 Thread jeremy ardley
On 28/11/23 17:19, Joe wrote: A third use, now becoming more important, is that some services such as banks will not accept connections from ISPs other than the one you normally use, or won't accept connections from some particular institutions. One use I make of the VPN is to give my phon

Re: dedicated IP

2023-11-27 Thread jeremy ardley
On 28/11/23 05:59, Maureen L Thomas wrote: I would like some advice.  I have been offered a dedicated IP through NORD.  Is it worth it or is it not needed?  Pros and cons would be very helpful.  Thank you. Moe For a home user the best use-case is to install a VPN - such as openvpn - and

Re: Temporary failure in name resolution error when I try to ping Debian 12 / DomU running on top of the Devuan 5 host os / Dom0

2023-11-19 Thread jeremy ardley
On 20/11/23 05:54, Mario Marietto wrote: root@bookworm:~# ifup enX0 root@bookworm:~# ip a 1: lo: mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group default qlen 1000    link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00    inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo   valid_lft for

Re: IMAP vs POP was Thunderbird vs Claws Mail

2023-11-18 Thread jeremy ardley
On 19/11/23 08:04, jeremy ardley wrote: On 19/11/23 01:59, Alex wrote: IMAP clients will therefore keep messages on the IMAP server and not delete them unless you specifically tell them to, for example via right-click -> delete. A client can also alter messages retained on a server

Re: IMAP vs POP was Thunderbird vs Claws Mail

2023-11-18 Thread jeremy ardley
On 19/11/23 01:59, Alex wrote: IMAP clients will therefore keep messages on the IMAP server and not delete them unless you specifically tell them to, for example via right-click -> delete. A client can also alter messages retained on a server or event insert new messages. This is interest

Re: Hardware Advice Wanted: Router

2023-11-15 Thread jeremy ardley
On 16/11/23 15:40, Tixy wrote: On Thu, 2023-11-16 at 09:04 +0800, jeremy ardley wrote: My current favourites are RK3588 based CPU SBC devices which have an exceptionally fast set of CPUs, high speed networking, and options for Debian or Ubuntu or OpenWRT or Armbian. Are these the usual SBC

Re: Hardware Advice Wanted: Router

2023-11-15 Thread jeremy ardley
On 16/11/23 10:15, Charles Curley wrote: On Thu, 16 Nov 2023 09:04:55 +0800 jeremy ardley wrote: My current favourites are RK3588 based CPU SBC devices which have an exceptionally fast set of CPUs, high speed networking, and options for Debian or Ubuntu or OpenWRT or Armbian. They can

Re: Hardware Advice Wanted: Router

2023-11-15 Thread jeremy ardley
On 14/11/23 08:42, Dan Ritter wrote: I bought one of these: https://www.amazon.com/Firewall-Appliance-HUNSN-Barebone-Storage/dp/B0B53MKZBX/ (4 x 2.5Gb NICs, N5105 CPU) -- I paid about $250 including 16GB RAM and a 500GB SSD. Works very nicely. For about $70 less you can get them with 2x 2.5G

Re: Hardware Advice Wanted: Router

2023-11-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 14/11/23 06:57, Charles Curley wrote: My FIT-PCs that provide network services are getting old, and i386 Linux is slowly fading away. So I would like to replace them with a router/gateway computer. It should run Debian. It should either have two gigabit (or better) Ethernet interfaces or h

Re: Request advice on Optimal Combo-usage of Gmail and Mailman, as mentioned in Msg-Id. "2023/11/msg00443"

2023-11-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 14/11/23 02:30, Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote: On 13/11/2023 14:50, Anssi Saari wrote: The Wanderer writes: And those are getting rare, I can't find a nice MUA for Android with proper threading. If you ever do find one, please let me know. The lack of such a thing is the primary reason w

Re: Hardware Misses on MacBook Air M1 2020

2023-11-09 Thread jeremy ardley
On 10/11/23 04:44, Kent West wrote: I have an M1-chip 2020 MacBook Air on which I have dual-booted with Debian 12 initially, then "upgraded" to sid (in hopes of getting better hardware support). Out of curiosity, does Debian 12 support the M1 NPU (Neural Processing Unit) ?

Re: How to use dmsetuup?

2023-11-08 Thread jeremy ardley
On 9/11/23 02:02, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote: Double check - sometimes one socket may be intended primarily for "other" M2 devices. There shouldn't be any particular difference between the two - one is obviously easier to reach than the other. Occasionally, having two may mean that they run slight

Re: Installing on Radxa Rock Pi 4B using SD-card-images

2023-11-06 Thread jeremy ardley
On 6/11/23 15:22, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote: For future readers of the list: I had to search for the meaning of an NPU and found this reference helpful - https://www.backblaze.com/blog/ai-101-gpu-vs-tpu-vs-npu/ - no further opinions as to the company behind it. NPU - Neural Processing Unit - c

Re: Installing on Radxa Rock Pi 4B using SD-card-images

2023-11-05 Thread jeremy ardley
On 6/11/23 06:26, Andrew M.A. Cater wrote: I think you've hit the curse of almost all ARM single board computers. Almost all are small production runs / out of East Asia somewhere as "prototypes"** with a board support package (BSP) that's probably just the manufacturer's kernel, u-boot and d

Re: Anybody familiar with dd (copy)?

2023-11-03 Thread jeremy ardley
On 4/11/23 03:37, Schwibinger Michael wrote: I found: dd if=/dev/sr0 of=/tmp/dvd.bin conv=noerror oflag=direct It does not work. What do I do wrong? the conv and oflag parameters will be causing the problem. If you want to simply copy a disk image dd if=/dev/sr0 of=/tmp/dvd.bin bs=1M

Re: Installing on Radxa Rock Pi 4B using SD-card-images

2023-11-03 Thread jeremy ardley
On 4/11/23 00:22, Daniel Gnoutcheff wrote: The best answer is if the board has been supported for a while by Armbian then that is probably a better choice than a less well supported/documented manufacturer specific build of Debian. Oh, I should clarify.  By "official Debian binaries and image

Re: Installing on Radxa Rock Pi 4B using SD-card-images

2023-11-01 Thread jeremy ardley
On 2/11/23 08:01, y...@vienna.at wrote: On Wed, 1 Nov 2023 18:17:24 -0400  Daniel Gnoutcheff wrote: I have a Radxa Rock Pi 4B (an arm64 single-board computer) with a (removable) eMMC module.  I'd like to install Debian stable on it, and would strongly prefer to use official Debian binaries a

Re: Domain name to use on home networks; was: Bookworm:NetworkManager

2023-10-25 Thread jeremy ardley
On 26/10/23 07:24, David Wright wrote: Or if you already have a domain, you can use a subdomain. eg. I have rail.eu.org, and at home it is depot.rail.eu.org I'm not sure how that would work when my home network is on a different continent from my domain's hosting. This is no problem asides

Re: pam auth with ssh public key

2023-10-03 Thread jeremy ardley
On 4/10/23 11:12, Kushal Kumaran wrote: Perhaps set AuthenticationMethods to publickey,keyboard-interactive in sshd_config? Do read the full description of that parameter in the manpage for other things that might interest you. I finally managed to get my desired public key and google authen

pam auth with ssh public key

2023-10-03 Thread jeremy ardley
I have set up a server with sshd allowing public key access. I also set up google authenticator in pam by putting this line at the head of /etc/pam.d/sshd auth required pam_google_authenticator.so If I connect to the server without a public key I get the authenticator prompt and then password

Re: Is there a debian tool for this goal?

2023-09-23 Thread jeremy ardley
On 24/9/23 06:46, Karen Lewellen wrote: Hi folks, Any tool in Debian, or another Linux application that will take audio and translate that audio  into English? Have a friend who wishes to translate Armenian news broadcasts into English, apparently not finding translations on the sites themsel

Re: just a question about the iwlwifi_20230515-3 file

2023-09-04 Thread jeremy ardley
On 5/9/23 12:23, Maureen L Thomas wrote:   I have tried every witch way to install it but am at a complete loss. Assuming you downloaded a deb file, the usual mechansim is sudo dpkg - i .deb sudo apt --fix-broken install

Re: Components of the computer

2023-09-04 Thread jeremy ardley
On 5/9/23 04:05, David Christensen wrote: I recommend looking for a new, recently manufactured, aftermarket battery that is the recommended replacement for your specific laptop. In my experience, just about any aftermarket laptop battery you buy off ebay or Amazon will have significantly l

Re: I uninstalled OpenMediaVault (because totally overkill for me) and replaced it with borgbackup and rsync

2023-08-31 Thread jeremy ardley
On 1/9/23 12:44, Jason wrote: Or how does your backup look like? I had a QNAP NAS but it became so incredibly slow I replaced it with Debian using Samba and SSH. The backups are managed by the clients, but periodically I save part of the NAS to Amazon S3. I also have a remote Nextclou

Re: door bell like sound effect

2023-08-28 Thread jeremy ardley
On 28/8/23 15:29, gene heskett wrote: what extension might that file be carrying to indicate its a .snd fle Try .wav .mp3 .aac .oga  .m4a  .ogg .m4b  .opus  .ra  .rm .mid  .midi  .ac3  .dts

Re: /etc/resolv.conf changes every booting time

2023-08-05 Thread jeremy ardley
On 6/8/23 09:28, Jon Smart wrote: Hello I have removed the default systemd-resolved local dns service following the link below, https://askubuntu.com/questions/907246/how-to-disable-systemd-resolved-in-ubuntu And I have unbound installed and enabled as local DNS server. But every time I reb

Re: 127.0.1.1 line, was Re: chrome web browser worthless

2023-08-02 Thread jeremy ardley
On 3/8/23 07:34, Greg Wooledge wrote: On Wed 02 Aug 2023 at 16:00:24 (-0400), gene heskett wrote: On 8/2/23 15:15, Brian wrote: Where is the line with 127.0.1.1? Debian always provides that. True, but I've never seen a description of what that does or what its for. https://www.debian.org/d

Re: Unable to ssh to Debian 9 from 9 or 11

2023-07-16 Thread jeremy ardley
On 16/7/23 15:39, Roger Price wrote: So it's something else?  Roger Have you checked /etc/ssh/sshd_config on the target to see if it is actually listening on port 22? You can also use netstat to see listening ports and processes Second is to check the /etc/ssh/ssh_config on the originati

Re: General question regarding SSD and harddrive

2023-07-15 Thread jeremy ardley
On 15/7/23 17:01, Keith Bainbridge wrote: I was interested because my connection has timed out a couple of times and the only solution I found was rebooting. Hasn't dis-connected for a few days, so maybe this issue is resolved. I have nothing concrete to add but I see the connections are man

Re: General question regarding SSD and harddrive

2023-07-15 Thread jeremy ardley
On 15/7/23 16:23, Keith Bainbridge wrote: Is this done via gnome-settings? Or is there now a better option. An URL would be good I set it up on my Debian 12 system first by using gnome desktop. My mate desktop then inherited the map I later found that you can run the cloud mapping applic

Re: General question regarding SSD and harddrive

2023-07-14 Thread jeremy ardley
On 15/7/23 09:05, zithro wrote: Generally, you put your OS and programs on an SSD, so your experience is snappy: they are fast and have a low latency. Then you put your data on HDDs (rotating rust), because you don't need speed but gigas/teras. As you seem to want to buy a new computer and/o

Re: Wireless temperature & humidity measurement

2023-07-14 Thread jeremy ardley
On 14/7/23 15:27, Bruno Kleinert wrote: Do you have any hardware recommendations and can you share experience? The big problem is power at the collection point. Some people use a solar panel and batteries but other options are available Once you know your power budget you can use a variet

Re: Migrating system from u-sd to nvme memory on arm64's?

2023-07-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 14/7/23 06:25, Stefan Monnier wrote: It's not obvious how to translate that to "30%". Jeremy? Do you remember what data made it possible to get this 30% estimate? Further to my previous reply, I ran this on my SBC lan server. I'm certain the power on hours is wrong as it's been 100% for

Re: Migrating system from u-sd to nvme memory on arm64's?

2023-07-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 14/7/23 06:25, Stefan Monnier wrote: It's not obvious how to translate that to "30%". Jeremy? Do you remember what data made it possible to get this 30% estimate? sudo apt-get install nvme-cli sudo nvme list Node  Generic   SN Model  

Re: Migrating system from u-sd to nvme memory on arm64's?

2023-07-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 14/7/23 04:39, jeremy ardley wrote: On the topic of a swap partition, that is usually absent, as is the partitioning of the drive into various parts for O/S, user data etc. That's a 50 year old relic for use cases where you are running a timesharing server for multiple users

Re: Migrating system from u-sd to nvme memory on arm64's?

2023-07-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 13/7/23 21:20, Stefan Monnier wrote: Images for SBCs are fairly different from typical desktop/laptop circumstances: there is no real "SSD" in most SBCs. Instead they typically have a small eMMC (if it all) that might hold the OS but not much more and then the image itself is often expected

Re: Migrating system from u-sd to nvme memory on arm64's?

2023-07-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 13/7/23 19:00, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote: jeremy ardley wrote: In the same vein, it's really a bad idea to run video surveillance on a SSD as overwriting the complete SSD every couple of weeks will trash it in no time. There are probably SSDs that boast to do this, bu

Re: Migrating system from u-sd to nvme memory on arm64's?

2023-07-12 Thread jeremy ardley
On 13/7/23 11:15, Charles Curley wrote: I'm not sure that this is correct. I have several SSDs around here, all several years old, all with swap partitions and all in daily use. None has failed me yet. Most modern SBC images for Debian and Armbian don't have a swap partition. It's not usual

Re: Migrating system from u-sd to nvme memory on arm64's?

2023-07-12 Thread jeremy ardley
On 13/7/23 10:15, Dan Ritter wrote: M.2 is an interface format, a micro card edge. M.2 has a set of key cutouts that specify what exact interfaces are allowed to connect. It can be used to connect PCIe, SATA, or USB devices. There are enough possibilities that it's best to reference the wikipe

Re: Migrating system from u-sd to nvme memory on arm64's?

2023-07-12 Thread jeremy ardley
On 13/7/23 10:49, Carl Fink wrote: Really? I have never owned a computer where I couldn't replace the SSD. Low end laptops and notebooks come with the SSD soldered to the board, usually eMMC

Re: Migrating system from u-sd to nvme memory on arm64's?

2023-07-12 Thread jeremy ardley
On 13/7/23 08:31, mick.crane wrote: I was wondering what these Nvme M2 things are and if can plug into motherboard or need an adaptor, are they like a RAM disk or something. mick Depending on your motherboard you can plug them in directly. With an older motherboard you need a PCiE adaptor

Re: file server

2023-07-12 Thread jeremy ardley
On 12/7/23 17:44, lina wrote: My computer only has 2 TB data storage capacity, I want to have 100 TB capacity to store/analyze data. On this scale it's almost certainly easier and cheaper to use a cloud provider who can provide a good CPU and a large attached storage. I use AWS as a prov

Re: why bookworm isn't called deb12?

2023-07-07 Thread jeremy ardley
On 7/7/23 21:05, jeremy ardley wrote: On 7/7/23 20:47, Nate Bargmann wrote: What MS has done has never been relevant to the creation of GNU, X, or the Linux kernel. Agreed, those technologies were mostly independent of anything Microsoft has done. GNU is a clone of Unix so a derivative

Re: why bookworm isn't called deb12?

2023-07-07 Thread jeremy ardley
On 7/7/23 20:47, Nate Bargmann wrote: What MS has done has never been relevant to the creation of GNU, X, or the Linux kernel. Agreed, those technologies were mostly independent of anything Microsoft has done. GNU is a clone of Unix so a derivative. MS is also a derivative but not much l

Re: why bookworm isn't called deb12?

2023-07-07 Thread jeremy ardley
On 7/7/23 19:28, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote: That may be or not, but is irrelevant. Accurate attribution of quotes is important, IMHO, and not difficult to do. So doubling down on your mistake instead of a simple mea culpa means you move further down in my hierarchy of respect. :( I s

Re: why bookworm isn't called deb12?

2023-07-07 Thread jeremy ardley
On 7/7/23 16:59, Bret Busby wrote: On 7/7/23 16:30, Bret Busby wrote: Microsoft didn't invent anything. I did not post that statement as the original poster of that statement. Your comment about  BSOD strongly suggests you agree with the sentiment. I reiterate. Microsoft for good or

Re: why bookworm isn't called deb12?

2023-07-07 Thread jeremy ardley
On 7/7/23 16:30, Bret Busby wrote: Microsoft didn't invent anything. This is highly off topic, but Microsoft 'invented' a lot of stuff much in the say way that many GNU developers 'invented' stuff. This is a process of continual adaptation of existing software and methodology. In the Mic

Re: For syslog : apt-get install rsyslog

2023-07-06 Thread jeremy ardley
On 7/7/23 07:59, Greg Wooledge wrote: As with many of the unpopular changes that Debian embraces, this is a decision they made, and no matter how utterly daft and ridiculous it is, no amount of griping by users will change their minds about it. As I have taken the first step of changing one

Re: Why does Debian have code names for releases?

2023-07-04 Thread jeremy ardley
On 4/7/23 19:22, Emanuel Berg wrote: mick.crane wrote: Or is "metric" one of these things spared by the Brexit Bonfire? It depends which gear your camp is since the metric system is partly implemented and partly co-exists British Standard Pipe still in use for plumbing and 1/4", 3/8" of spe

Re: Very small fonts on 4K monitor [solved]

2023-06-30 Thread jeremy ardley
On 1/7/23 10:27, Stefan Monnier wrote: I think you'll want to read things like https://wiki.debian.org/MonitorDPI That's a rather old reference and not particularly relevant to Debian 12 / Bookworm, and certainly not relevant to Mate desktop. It also doesn't fix the problem with Goog

Very small fonts on 4K monitor [solved]

2023-06-30 Thread jeremy ardley
I recently upgraded my display to a 4K monitor. I am running it with a new instance of Debian 12 under the Mate desktop, though I think the problem happens with other desktops. I had the immediate problem that most text was almost too small to view. This occurred in many different application

Re: Ok so Now which backup should I use

2023-05-18 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 17/5/23 15:36, to...@tuxteam.de wrote: Not many. An "apt-file search /usr/local" turns up exactly three packages. And I'd venture the guess that those three are doing this by mistake. I did a very brief search and many well known packages default to /usr/local. It's just the packagers at

Re: Ok so Now which backup should I use

2023-05-17 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 17/5/23 14:53, Anssi Saari wrote: It's an odd claim. I typically don't have anything in /usr/local except what I put there myself. Some Debian packages do create a directory in /usr/local/share but leave it empty. So what goes in /usr/local is mostly software I've compiled myself and maybe s

Re: Ok so Now which backup should I use

2023-05-15 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 16/5/23 09:11, pa...@quillandmouse.com wrote: I'd suggest backing up /etc, since that's where your system settings are. I also back up /var, since that's typically where your logs and mail are. There is a lot relevant of stuff in /usr/local For instance some programs use /usr/local/etc ra

Re: shell script run in backend

2023-05-13 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 14/5/23 14:21, Tom Reed wrote: Currently the script is running in front-end in shell. How can I run it with the backend way? can I register it as a system service? sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/myscript.service [Unit] Description=My Script [Service] ExecStart=/path/to/your/script.sh [In

Re: iptables reject with TCP RST

2023-05-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 14/5/23 08:28, Tom Reed wrote: I telnet to host:587 not the port 23. And port 587 already reject access with tcp rst. -- check if you are listening on port 587 netstat -tulpnW | grep 587 Jeremy

Re: iptables reject with TCP RST

2023-05-13 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 14/5/23 08:14, Tom Reed wrote: /usr/sbin/iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 143 -j REJECT --reject-with tcp-reset /usr/sbin/iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 587 -j REJECT --reject-with tcp-reset When I telnet from another host to the protected port, it gets timeout message as follows. telnet

Re: iptables and system reboot

2023-05-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 13/5/23 18:56, Tom Reed wrote: for iptables-save, after system rebooting, does it know where to locate the file? Yes. That's all taken care of by the iptables-persistent package Also I made a typo. correction; sudo nano /etc/iptables/rules.v4 sudo nano /etc/iptables/rules.v6 -- Jeremy

Re: iptables and system reboot

2023-05-13 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 13/5/23 18:48, Tom Reed wrote: How to recovery iptable rules after system rebooting? I know I can put a @reboot crontab for this but there is maybe the better way. sudo apt install iptables-persistent sudo iptables-save > /etc/iptables/rules.v4 sudo ip6tables-save > /etc/iptables/rules.

Re: how to find out regdomain/country of wifi network

2023-05-13 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 13/5/23 18:46, jeremy ardley wrote: Some programs are on the root path and some on the user path and most (all?) on both. Correction Most (all?) are on the root path, not including programs specific to a user or application. -- Jeremy (Lists)

Re: how to find out regdomain/country of wifi network

2023-05-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 13/5/23 18:36, to...@tuxteam.de wrote: Ip is by default in /bin, perhaps because it's more "modern". Ifconfig has always been in /sbin, long before Debian existed. -- Some programs are on the root path and some on the user path and most (all?) on both. The exact reasons are in the mists o

Re: how to find out regdomain/country of wifi network

2023-05-13 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 13/5/23 18:17, Nicolas George wrote: This is your interpretation, not an official stance. It might as well be that they considered polluting the completion namespace of users with a command they rarely need was less convenient. The actual reason is they have deprecated it in favour of the

Re: how to find out regdomain/country of wifi network

2023-05-13 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 13/5/23 18:07, Vincent Lefevre wrote: You should learn what a run path is. A "command not found" just means that the command isn't in your path. So, provide the path explicitly or add /sbin to $PATH. The reason it's not on the path is because the Debian designers thought it would best if

Re: how to find out regdomain/country of wifi network

2023-05-13 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 13/5/23 17:57, Vincent Lefevre wrote: Moreover, it should not be necessary to be root: you are just reading non-private data. However, "list countries" does not seem to exist. Debian 11 seems to have a different opinion on who can run ifconfig. Sudo or root is required. jeremy@client:~$

Re: how to find out regdomain/country of wifi network

2023-05-13 Thread jeremy ardley
On 13/5/23 17:51, Nicolas George wrote: Also, ifconfig has nothing to do with wireless, so it was a red herring from the start. wlan0 is an interface like any other and ifconfig works with it Your issue is you don't have a wlan0 on your particular system so you got an error. The OP indicat

Re: how to find out regdomain/country of wifi network

2023-05-13 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 13/5/23 17:38, Jeremy Ardley wrote: ifconfig needs to be run as root or sudo. e.g. sudoifconfig wlan0 list countries Wrong. sudo ifconfig wlan0 list countries -- Jeremy (Lists)

Re: how to find out regdomain/country of wifi network

2023-05-13 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 13/5/23 17:19, hl wrote: To view the current list of regulatory domains and SKUs:  # ifconfig wlan0 list countries To view the current regulatory domain frequency and operating modes:  # ifconfig wlan0 list regdomain but ifconfig isn't available in buster ifconfig needs to be run as

Re: ssh-keygen as a regular user

2023-05-12 Thread jeremy ardley
On 12/5/23 13:50, Jeremy Ardley wrote: ode[ ssh-keygen usually works better than ssh-keygem try cd mkdir .ssh ssh-keygen I now remember some ssh functions check file and directory permissions and will fail if not correct Improved procedure: cd mkdir .ssh chmod 700 .ssh ssh

Re: ssh-keygen as a regular user

2023-05-11 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 11/5/23 11:22, Igor Korot wrote: [code] igor@wxTest:~/wxwidgets$ ssh-keygem bash: ssh-keygem: command not found igor@wxTest:~/wxwidgets$ su Password: root@wxTest:/home/igor/wxwidgets# apt-get install openssh-client Reading package lists... Done Building dependency tree Reading state informa

Re: ssh-keygen as a regular user

2023-05-11 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 12/5/23 13:07, Igor Korot wrote: Hi, ALL, Is there a reason I can't run "ssh-keygen" as a regular user? I am able to do it as "root" though, but I think it shouldn't happen. Check the file permissions and ownership of ~/.ssh files ? -- Jeremy (Lists)

Re: EPSON ET M 1120 new printer: If You can read this, you are using the wrong driver

2023-05-07 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 8/5/23 08:47, Jeremy Ardley wrote: On 8/5/23 08:12, Will Mengarini wrote: * Brian [23-05/08=Mo 00:27 +0100]: https://download3.ebz.epson.net/dsc/f/03/00/14/48/15/1d37501ad39bd2b5753 \ cce3b2715b3e2fef557/epson-inkjet-printer-escpr_1.7.26-1lsb3.2_amd64.deb That includes a literal space

Re: EPSON ET M 1120 new printer: If You can read this, you are using the wrong driver

2023-05-07 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 8/5/23 08:12, Will Mengarini wrote: * Brian [23-05/08=Mo 00:27 +0100]: https://download3.ebz.epson.net/dsc/f/03/00/14/48/15/1d37501ad39bd2b5753 \ cce3b2715b3e2fef557/epson-inkjet-printer-escpr_1.7.26-1lsb3.2_amd64.deb That includes a literal space in the middle of that hash (because th

Re: Need some advice please.

2023-05-04 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 5/5/23 14:21, David Christensen wrote: If the file is a some kind of archive (e.g. tar(1)), both the data and metadata are inside the tarball and the full-circle results should be identical. Not quite. The file times are usually changed in the un-tar operation. You can usually expe

Re: Need some advice please.

2023-05-04 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 5/5/23 08:15, Jeremy Ardley wrote: The harder ways to solve this should work. However you may have to pay for at least one drive. 1. Get an external USB drive and a powered USB 3 hub. Then create a bootable USB/DVD recovery drive such as knoppix http://www.knopper.net/knoppix/index

Re: Need some advice please.

2023-05-04 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 5/5/23 08:00, Maureen L Thomas wrote: The USB hub is plugged into the USB on the computer and does not have a power adapter with it, the seagate does not have a power adapter just a special plug with a usb on one end and the right one for the seagate but no power supply. If I remove the

Re: how to reverse an IPv4

2023-04-30 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 1/5/23 08:24, cor...@free.fr wrote: Hello list, I wrote this script for reversing an IP: #!/bin/bash IP=$1 if [ -z $IP ];then   echo "$0 IP"   exit 1 fi REVERSE=$(echo $IP|awk -F\. '{print $4.$3.$2.$1}') echo $REVERSE it won't work as the output below. $ bin/rbl.sh 61.144.56.32 32561

Re: Unable to print PDF file with evince on Debian 12.

2023-04-29 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 29/4/23 14:50, Serkan KURT wrote: Hi friends. When I tried to print a PDF document, I got the message "Print job canceled at printer". I was able to print the same document to file with a PDF printer. I wa

Re: I need help with my var partition.

2023-04-28 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 29/4/23 08:25, Maureen L Thomas wrote: I am 72 and have forgotten a few things.  I looked up debian/var and was told I could delete /var/log/ and /var/tmp/ and /var/cores/.  I left cores alone and deleted the other two.  Now I cannot burn a backup, download files and even go to web sites

Debian support for AMD GPU applications

2023-04-24 Thread jeremy ardley
Is there any reliable source of information to install computational back-ends using AMD GPUs on Debian 11? I have found some references to packages such as rocm-dev on repo.radeon.com but they are all ubuntu related and won't install in Debian 11. In the end I want to run tensorflow, pytorc

Re: Gnome desktop environment

2023-04-22 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 23/4/23 04:49, Peter Ehlert wrote: Be careful and don't include any Gnome/"Debian desktop". When you select a desktop install with standard Debian you don't have lot of control over what is installed. And that's even with an advanced install. Personally I use only Mate but it's riddl

FTP Repository all man pages?

2023-04-20 Thread jeremy ardley
Is there any FTP repository that holds all the current Jessie man page files in one location? I have tried various scripts and wget to extract man pages from https://manpages.debian.org/jessie/ but my scripting ability lacks somewhat. Jeremy

Re: gitification (was Re: /etc/fstab question (problem)?

2023-04-20 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 21/4/23 05:41, songbird wrote: Stefan Monnier wrote: songbird I have not used these, but there seem to be some work-arounds for storing metadata in/with git lfs has the ability to script xattr handling https://git-lfs.github.com/ These applications work directly with metadata and

Re: gitification (was Re: /etc/fstab question (problem)?

2023-04-20 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 20/4/23 20:10, songbird wrote: aside rant, thank gitification for that IMO. one of the worst design decisions i've come across in the modern era was the lack of git respecting file metadata. i got bit by this a few weeks ago yet again. i hate using git because of it destroyi

Re: AW: EPSON ET M 1120 new printer: If You can read this, you are using the wrong driver

2023-04-19 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 19/4/23 17:14, Schwibinger Michael wrote: Good morning Thank You. What did I do wrong. On the printer there is written ET M 1120. If this is wrong what is the right name? Its made by EPSON Regards Sophie I think your problem is you have to change the driver your system already ha

Re: AW: EPSON ET M 1120 new printer: If You can read this, you are using the wrong driver

2023-04-19 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 19/4/23 17:14, Schwibinger Michael wrote: Good morning Thank You. What did I do wrong. On the printer there is written ET M 1120. If this is wrong what is the right name? The Epson ET-M1120 printer supports the Epson ESC/P-R printer language, which is a command protocol used by Epson

Re: Am I infected with a rootkit?

2023-04-18 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 18/4/23 21:36, Jesper Dybdal wrote: 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. Coincidentally I was ch

Re: EPSON ET M 1120 new printer: If You can read this, you are using the wrong driver

2023-04-14 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 15/4/23 06:52, Brian wrote: The EPSON ET M 1120 doesn't exist. Do we have to guess its correct name as well I asked ChatGPT3.5 about that text string. At least ChatGPT could figure it out >> My Question Linux printer driver and printer command protocol for epson ET M 1120 ? >

Re: EPSON ET M 1120 new printer: If You can read this, you are using the wrong driver

2023-04-14 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 15/4/23 06:22, The Wanderer wrote: The make *was* stated: Epson. The model may also have been stated, albeig only in the Subject line: ET M1120. From a bit of Googling, the "ET" appears to stand for "EcoTank". If you look hard enough you find epson does support it. https://download.ebz.e

Re: ICMP router advertisement (ipv4)

2023-04-10 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 11/4/23 11:40, Tim Woodall wrote: My googling suggests that a superhub or hub 5 can be switched to 'modem only' mode but I've got a hub 6 which doesn't have that option.   Virgin Media: Virgin Media is the largest cable broadband provider   in the UK, operating its own network separate

Re: ICMP router advertisement (ipv4)

2023-04-10 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 11/4/23 02:19, Tim Woodall wrote: Unfortunately, I don't seem to have that option any more. My cable modem appears only to expose a layer 4 connection. Previous version of my router appear to have a "modem mode" but that doesn't exist in my version. Here in Australia we have a national op

Re: ICMP router advertisement (ipv4)

2023-04-09 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 10/4/23 12:49, Tim Woodall wrote: And it doesn't forward packets from new ips either, it just silently drops them. I don't know how the router learns ips but I suspect it's something to do with DAD, I don't know about your router specifically, but here in Australia the Network Terminatio

Re: ICMP router advertisement (ipv4)

2023-04-09 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 10/4/23 11:02, Tim Woodall wrote: My firewall has a single /128 acquired via SLAAC and the RA from the router. My entire network is masqueraded through that single IP. What does the RA contain? Typically on connection to an IPv6 capable ISP you will get assigned a single /128 from their r

Re: [OFFTOPIC] Re: how to limit a CPU temperature?

2023-04-08 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 9/4/23 00:56, Stefan Monnier wrote: I recommend to go fanless whenever possible. Computers should be silent. I have a fanless ARM router that even in high summer has no thermal problems (I am in Australia and I have no aircon). It does have a massive case bonded to the CPU I also have

bounncy keyboard

2023-04-06 Thread jeremy ardley
My keybboard is getting bouncy agaain. I can swap it out under warranty but I wondered if there were some setting in Debian 11 to ignore the same character arriving too soon after the previous one? It should also not worry if two different characters arrive closely spaced. Jeremy

Re: Strange locally-originating spam messages from sport.qc.ca

2023-03-30 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 30/3/23 16:30, Julian Gilbey wrote: I'm getting a significant number of spam messages being sent to my MTA (exim) for the address FRPJXbKeKuek at sport.qc.ca, and now I'm starting to see some sent to www-data at aether.toine.be. What is disturbing is that the machine is on a local network,

Re: can't see shared printers from clients o local network

2023-03-30 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 30/3/23 16:32, gene heskett wrote: Greetings all; hosts based local 192.158.xx.yy network. cups at localhost:631 on any buster machine sees my printers just fine, and the buster machines can print to them. Those machines running bullseye aren't allowed. can't see my printers unless I s

Re: Which takes priority, ipv4, or ipv6?

2023-03-27 Thread Jeremy Ardley
On 27/3/23 20:05, Richmond wrote: Jeremy Ardley writes: Both DNS return records. I am not sure why this choice of DNS should make a difference. host -v ip6.me |grep IN 9306IN 2001:4838:0:1b::201 host -v ip6.me 8.8.8.8

<    1   2   3   4   5   >