On Fri 12 Aug 2022 at 01:03:45 (-0400), Timothy M Butterworth wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 11, 2022 at 11:21 PM Dan Ritter wrote:
> > Albretch Mueller wrote:
> > > Sorry, for my late reaction. I'd wish I could dedicate myself to
> > > coding and reading only. This is what blkid and hwinfo are telling me
On Thu, Aug 11, 2022 at 11:21 PM Dan Ritter wrote:
> Albretch Mueller wrote:
> > Sorry, for my late reaction. I'd wish I could dedicate myself to
> > coding and reading only. This is what blkid and hwinfo are telling me
> > and I know that that SSD is not sda or sdb, nor is it the DVD; so,
> > w
Albretch Mueller wrote:
> Sorry, for my late reaction. I'd wish I could dedicate myself to
> coding and reading only. This is what blkid and hwinfo are telling me
> and I know that that SSD is not sda or sdb, nor is it the DVD; so,
> what is it and how do I mount that SSD
> Isn't it weird that I
Sorry, for my late reaction. I'd wish I could dedicate myself to
coding and reading only. This is what blkid and hwinfo are telling me
and I know that that SSD is not sda or sdb, nor is it the DVD; so,
what is it and how do I mount that SSD
Isn't it weird that I don't see it on blkid or hwinfo? C
On 2022-07-27 15:20:19 -0500, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> https://wiki.debian.org/SSDOptimization
I'm wondering whether information is obsolete. At least for the
"Low-Latency IO-Scheduler" section, it talks about the cfq vs
deadline scheduler, but it seems that they no longer exist:
zira:~> cat /s
On 7/28/22 13:01, Nicolas George wrote:
gene heskett (12022-07-28):
gene@coyote:/var/log$ sudo sysctl -w
sysctl: no variables specified
Try `sysctl --help' for more information.
Have you tried reading the fine manual?
yes.
Cheers, Gene Heskett.
--
"There are four boxes to be used in defense
gene heskett (12022-07-28):
> gene@coyote:/var/log$ sudo sysctl -w
> sysctl: no variables specified
> Try `sysctl --help' for more information.
Have you tried reading the fine manual?
--
Nicolas George
On Thu, Jul 28, 2022 at 12:46:46PM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> On 7/28/22 05:24, Nicolas George wrote:
> > sudo syctl -w
> A typu? Added an s...
>
> gene@coyote:/var/log$ sudo sysctl -w
> sysctl: no variables specified
> Try `sysctl --help' for more information.
>
> debian bullseye, no reboot, t
On 7/28/22 05:24, Nicolas George wrote:
sudo syctl -w
A typu? Added an s...
gene@coyote:/var/log$ sudo sysctl -w
sysctl: no variables specified
Try `sysctl --help' for more information.
debian bullseye, no reboot, takes 15+ minutes to get everything up and
running after a reboot.
What was I
gene heskett (12022-07-28):
> > sudo vim /etc/sysctl.conf
> > kernel.dmesg_restrict=0
> Did that Nicolas, on bullseye still no perms w/o the sudo.
Did you reboot or have the corresponding service apply the change or do
the change manually (sudo syctl -w)?
Regards,
--
Nicolas George
On 7/27/22 13:06, Albretch Mueller wrote:
I googled: "mount solid state drive" Linux, and I got very few hits
(like 16?) which were mostly totally irrelevant.
I got a laptop with Windows installed on which I installed WSLg.
WIndows and WSLg both seem to detect the SSD just fine, but in ways
t
On 7/28/22 03:26, David wrote:
On Thu, 28 Jul 2022 at 14:33, wrote:
On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 06:54:32PM -0400, Jude DaShiell wrote:
An easy way to locate an ssd is to have it unplugged from the system and
run lsblk and save that to a file then plug the ssd in and run lsblk again
saving its outp
a recap and this ought to be better.
lsblk >orig
# plug ssd in.
lsblk >new
comm -1 -3 -f orig new
On Thu, 28 Jul 2022, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 03:06:47PM -0500, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> > I googled: "mount solid state drive" Linux, and I got very few hits
> > (like 16
On 7/28/22 02:35, Nicolas George wrote:
to...@tuxteam.de (12022-07-28):
To add one to the toolbox: do "tail -f /var/log/messages" while plugging
in the device: you'll watch your OS pondering on what to do about it.
Or do "dmesg | tail" right away after having plugged it in. In both cases
you'll
On Thu, 28 Jul 2022 at 14:33, wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 06:54:32PM -0400, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> > An easy way to locate an ssd is to have it unplugged from the system and
> > run lsblk and save that to a file then plug the ssd in and run lsblk again
> > saving its output to another file.
to...@tuxteam.de (12022-07-28):
> To add one to the toolbox: do "tail -f /var/log/messages" while plugging
> in the device: you'll watch your OS pondering on what to do about it.
>
> Or do "dmesg | tail" right away after having plugged it in. In both cases
> you'll see which name the device was re
On Thu 28 Jul 2022 at 06:33:18 (+0200), to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 06:54:32PM -0400, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> > An easy way to locate an ssd is to have it unplugged from the system and
> > run lsblk and save that to a file then plug the ssd in and run lsblk again
> > saving its
On Wed 27 Jul 2022 at 15:06:47 (-0500), Albretch Mueller wrote:
> I googled: "mount solid state drive" Linux, and I got very few hits
> (like 16?) which were mostly totally irrelevant.
> I got a laptop with Windows installed on which I installed WSLg.
> WIndows and WSLg both seem to detect the SS
On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 06:54:32PM -0400, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> An easy way to locate an ssd is to have it unplugged from the system and
> run lsblk and save that to a file then plug the ssd in and run lsblk again
> saving its output to another file. The line in the second file that's
> missing f
On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 03:06:47PM -0500, Albretch Mueller wrote:
> I googled: "mount solid state drive" Linux, and I got very few hits
> (like 16?) which were mostly totally irrelevant.
First of all, you don't mount a drive. You mount a file system.
This may sound like an unimportant nit to pic
An easy way to locate an ssd is to have it unplugged from the system and
run lsblk and save that to a file then plug the ssd in and run lsblk again
saving its output to another file. The line in the second file that's
missing from the first file is the ssd.
On Wed, 27 Jul 2022, Dan Ritter wrote:
Albretch Mueller wrote:
> I got a laptop with Windows installed on which I installed WSLg.
> WIndows and WSLg both seem to detect the SSD just fine, but in ways
> that are not totally clear to me.
> What I care about is using the SSD for my data intensive code in
> Linux, but when I boot that co
https://wiki.debian.org/SSDOptimization
~
I googled: "mount solid state drive" Linux, and I got very few hits
(like 16?) which were mostly totally irrelevant.
I got a laptop with Windows installed on which I installed WSLg.
WIndows and WSLg both seem to detect the SSD just fine, but in ways
that are not totally clear to me.
What I care
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