On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 10:11:25AM -0800, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> Hi,
>
> https://wiki.debian.org/Root states,
>
> "At installation time, you are asked whether you want to use the root account
> or not.
> ...
> If not, no root account is enabled and the password of the first user created
Pankaj Jangid wrote:
>
> In my case though, I had verified that the output of find is okay for
> xargs. Then I added | xargs lp.
>
> But could this be cause of missing page. The output of find is:
>
> --8<---cut here---start->8---
[...]
>
Bonsoir,
Mon disque dur système vient de me lâcher. J'étais sous Debian Buster
par flemme de faire l'upgrade.
Maintenant que j'ai changé de disque dur, j'ai installé la dernière
stable Debian Bulleye.
Pas de soucis d'install.
Le soucis vient lorsque je me connecte à mon compte. Sous
On 2022-02-01 17:36 UTC+0100, Bob Weber wrote:
> On 2/1/22 10:32, Christian Britz wrote:
>> This is my entry in /etc/fstab:
>> diskstation:/volume1/Medien /Daten nfs
>> nfsvers=4,rw,x-systemd.automount,noauto 0 0
>>
> Have you tried the user option in fstab?
>
> user - Permit any user to
On Tue, 1 Feb 2022 15:08:44 -0500
Bijan Soleymani wrote:
> I can't think of a case where you'd want to remove all non root users
> though...
The only use case I can think of is if you want all the security of
Windows 95.
Don't do this. There are excellent reasons to separate system
From: john doe
Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2022 19:29:02 +0100
> If my understanding is correct, you will need to use 'sudo'.
Thanks. Still a multi-user system.
Whereas puppy linux has one user, root.
To make debian one-user I think of
mkdir /home/root ; cp -r /root/* /home/root ; rm -r
On Tue, 2022-02-01 at 11:43 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
[...]
> I'm unclear on how NFS v4 works. Everything I've read about it in the
> past says that you have to set up a user mapping, which is shared by
> the client and the server. And that this is *not* optional, and *is*
> exactly as much of
First I'd remove pulseaudio from user space then remove pulseaudio from
root space but use --purge that time so no evidence of pulseaudio is
anywhere on your system.
In your user directory rm -fr ~/.config/pulseaudio
should take care of user space and
apt remove pulseaudio --purge should take care
On Tue 01 Feb 2022 at 15:08:44 -0500, Bijan Soleymani wrote:
> On 2022-02-01 14:47, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> > Thanks. Still a multi-user system.
> >
> > Whereas puppy linux has one user, root.
> >
> > To make debian one-user I think of
> ...
> >
> > Then proceed as root rather than me.
>
>
On 2/1/2022 7:11 PM, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
Hi,
https://wiki.debian.org/Root states,
"At installation time, you are asked whether you want to use the root account
or not.
...
If not, no root account is enabled and the password of the first user created will
be used for administration
Thanks for the ideas. I got anxious, compressed the Folders
individually, then the files into a separate Zip.
I deleted the problem folder... not elegant, not solved.
On 2/1/22 09:20, Bijan Soleymani wrote:
On 2022-02-01 12:17, Bijan Soleymani wrote:
find | xargs stat
Oops that might not
On 2022-02-01 13:29, john doe wrote:
If my understanding is correct, you will need to use 'sudo'.
Yes.
sudo passwd
Should allow you so set a password for root.
It will ask for your password first (if you haven't run sudo recently),
and then new password for root and confirmation of that
On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 11:47:35AM -0800, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> From: john doe
> Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2022 19:29:02 +0100
> > If my understanding is correct, you will need to use 'sudo'.
>
> Thanks. Still a multi-user system.
>
> Whereas puppy linux has one user, root.
>
> To make
On 2022-02-01 14:47, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
Thanks. Still a multi-user system.
Whereas puppy linux has one user, root.
To make debian one-user I think of
...
Then proceed as root rather than me.
Oh! Is your goal to only have root? I assumed you wanted to login as
root, but didn't
On Tue, 2022-02-01 at 17:56 +0100, Yvan Masson wrote:
>
> Le 01/02/2022 à 14:24, Tixy a écrit :
> > On Tue, 2022-02-01 at 13:39 +0100, Yvan Masson wrote:
> > > Le 31/01/2022 à 18:02, Christian Britz a écrit :
> > > >
> > > >
> > > > On 2022-01-31 11:43 UTC+0100, Yvan Masson wrote:
> > > >
> >
Bonsoir
J'ai trouvé cette commande avec /snap/chromium et l'ai adapté à mes
bespoins. Je ne sais pas d'où sortent les options --user-data-dir et
--class et à quelle commande elles se rapportent, peut-être chromium,
mais ça m'intéresse.
/snap/chromium/current/usr/lib/chromium-browser/chrome
Hi,
https://wiki.debian.org/Root states,
"At installation time, you are asked whether you want to use the root account
or not.
...
If not, no root account is enabled and the password of the first user created
will be used for administration tasks."
Are instructions to configure that post
On 2/1/2022 8:47 PM, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
From: john doe
Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2022 19:29:02 +0100
If my understanding is correct, you will need to use 'sudo'.
Thanks. Still a multi-user system.
If you do not want the regular user, you can simply lock/disable it.
This way you
On 2/02/22 00:26, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
On 2022-01-31 01:36:06 +1300, Richard Hector wrote:
On 29/01/22 04:17, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> Servers shouldn't have pkexec installed in the first place, anyway.
libvirt-daemon-system depends on policykit-1.
Should that not be on my (kvm) server
Bonjour,
J'ai installé Bullseye sur mon PC principal.
Dans l'application Gnome Fichiers, il y a sur la partie gauche de
l'écran, une liste de signets dont les signets Récents, Favoris et
Dossier personnel.
Comment utilise-t-on ce signet Favoris ?
J'ai imaginé que l'on pouvait marquer certains
On 2022-02-01 20:01, Nate Bargmann wrote:
I must be the odd one out as I interpreted the OP as having set a root
password but now wanting to remove it so as to have just the main user
set to do root's work and that root can no longer log in directly. I
hope the OP can clarify!
I guess that
* On 2022 01 Feb 14:09 -0600, Bijan Soleymani wrote:
> On 2022-02-01 14:47, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> > Thanks. Still a multi-user system.
> >
> > Whereas puppy linux has one user, root.
> >
> > To make debian one-user I think of
> ...
> >
> > Then proceed as root rather than me.
>
> Oh! Is
On 2022-02-01 17:28 UTC+0100, Henning Follmann wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 04:32:57PM +0100, Christian Britz wrote:
>> 2. Accessing the mounted share with my personal user: The access rights
>> for /Daten look right, the user on the NAS has the same name as the user
>> on my machine. But:
On 2022-02-01, Stanislav Vlasov wrote:
> 2022-02-01 17:20 GMT+05:00, Curt :
>> On 2022-01-31, Stefan Monnier wrote:
Technically correct, but Curt's response was good enough for Richard
Owlett to make progress. Richard Owlett is very unlikely to be using
a 64-bit kernel with 32-bit
On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 10:42:31PM +0530, Pankaj Jangid wrote:
> Greg Wooledge writes:
> > A correct version would be:
> >
> > find . -name "pref*.pdf" -exec lp {} +
> Thanks for this brief course, Greg. I really liked it.
>
> In my case though, I had verified that the output of find is okay
2022-02-01 17:20 GMT+05:00, Curt :
> On 2022-01-31, Stefan Monnier wrote:
>>> Technically correct, but Curt's response was good enough for Richard
>>> Owlett to make progress. Richard Owlett is very unlikely to be using
>>> a 64-bit kernel with 32-bit userspace.
>>
>> BTW, for the twisted-minded
On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 04:32:57PM +0100, Christian Britz wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I am playing with NFS on my home network for the first time and I have
> some difficulties/questions.
>
> The server is a Synology NAS, it is based on Linux, supports NFS4 and
> gets configured by a web interface.
>
Le 01/02/2022 à 14:24, Tixy a écrit :
On Tue, 2022-02-01 at 13:39 +0100, Yvan Masson wrote:
Le 31/01/2022 à 18:02, Christian Britz a écrit :
On 2022-01-31 11:43 UTC+0100, Yvan Masson wrote:
Thanks for the links, I missed that NTF3 was already included in the
kernel I use (from Debian
I am using Debian Mate with the GUI.
in Caja file manager, right click on the desired folder.
"Compress" is displayed on a list of options.
default is .tar.gz format
this works fine, I do it regularly ... mostly big folders, ~11.4 GB and
~2,400 items.
now I am following the same method
On 2022-02-01 12:04, Peter Ehlert wrote:
Ideas?
If you want to debug, do a binary search.
Move out half the files and try to compress again until it works. And
then add back half the files until it fails.
should I file a bug report?
Sure.
Since there's not too many files you can
On 2022-02-01 12:17, Bijan Soleymani wrote:
find | xargs stat
Oops that might not work if there are spaces in the filenames/directories.
You can do:
find -print0 | xargs -0 stat
In that case.
Bijan
On 2/1/22 10:32, Christian Britz wrote:
This is my entry in /etc/fstab:
diskstation:/volume1/Medien /Daten nfs
nfsvers=4,rw,x-systemd.automount,noauto 0 0
Have you tried the user option in fstab?
user - Permit any user to mount the filesystem.
nouser - Only permit root to mount the
On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 11:28:55AM -0500, Henning Follmann wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 04:32:57PM +0100, Christian Britz wrote:
> > This is my entry in /etc/fstab:
> > diskstation:/volume1/Medien /Daten nfs
> > nfsvers=4,rw,x-systemd.automount,noauto 0 0
> >
> > Mounting only works as root,
Bonjour,
J'envisage d'acquérir un clavier et une souris sans fil pour faire de
l'administration système ou de la programmation.
Un peu par hasard, j'ai découvert une nouvelle gamme de produit sans
fil de Logitech nommée Bolt.
À l'inverse d'Unifying, celle-ci s'appuie sur Bluetooth.
1. Logitech
Greg Wooledge writes:
> On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 03:04:06PM +0530, Pankaj Jangid wrote:
>> I tried to print ~40 pages using the following combination of commands:
>>
>> find . -name "pref***.pdf" | xargs lp
>>
>> The result was that a couple of pages were missed.
>
> That command is
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On 25/01/2022 00:14, Jude DaShiell wrote:
Have you run pulseaudio --cleanup-shm yet?
I tried, didn't worked. Should I check some config file I forgot I modified in
the remote past maybe?
thanks,
Nicola
On Mon, 24 Jan 2022, nmanca wrote:
Dear list,
Since upgrading to bookworm I have to
Am Montag, 31. Januar 2022 schrieb Richard Owlett:
> >> 2. As superuser, how can I determine which is installed on a
> >> different partition?
> >> [ My typical installation routine has been a descriptive
> >> label for each root partition. But not always done ;{ ]
> >
> > If the superuser
I tried to print ~40 pages using the following combination of commands:
find . -name "pref***.pdf" | xargs lp
The result was that a couple of pages were missed. I tried this four
times with different set of files. The number of skipped pages is not
fixed but it was around 5 pages. That makes it
On Fri, Jan 28, 2022 at 10:45:05AM +, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
I don't think it has been formally abandoned or deprecated but I don't
think anyone is really working on it anymore.
By coincidence the topic of Haskell Platform came up on Reddit:
On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 03:04:06PM +0530, Pankaj Jangid wrote:
> I tried to print ~40 pages using the following combination of commands:
>
> find . -name "pref***.pdf" | xargs lp
>
> The result was that a couple of pages were missed.
That command is fundamentally broken. It will fail if any of
On Tue, 2022-02-01 at 13:39 +0100, Yvan Masson wrote:
> Le 31/01/2022 à 18:02, Christian Britz a écrit :
> >
> >
> > On 2022-01-31 11:43 UTC+0100, Yvan Masson wrote:
> >
> > > Thanks for the links, I missed that NTF3 was already included in the
> > > kernel I use (from Debian testing). So in my
On 2022-01-31 01:36:06 +1300, Richard Hector wrote:
> On 29/01/22 04:17, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> > Servers shouldn't have pkexec installed in the first place, anyway.
>
> libvirt-daemon-system depends on policykit-1.
>
> Should that not be on my (kvm) server either?
I don't need
On 02/01/2022 12:12 AM, songbird wrote:
Richard Owlett wrote:
...
My hardware can support either 32 or 64 bit OS.
I *ONLY* use one or the other.
My goal is to determine which I chose at installation.
that should be somewhere in:
/var/log/installer
Yes but ;/
"dpkg --print-architecture"
On 2022-01-31, Stefan Monnier wrote:
>> Technically correct, but Curt's response was good enough for Richard
>> Owlett to make progress. Richard Owlett is very unlikely to be using
>> a 64-bit kernel with 32-bit userspace.
>
> BTW, for the twisted-minded it's probably possible to run a 64bit
>
Le 31/01/2022 à 18:02, Christian Britz a écrit :
On 2022-01-31 11:43 UTC+0100, Yvan Masson wrote:
Thanks for the links, I missed that NTF3 was already included in the
kernel I use (from Debian testing). So in my case ntfs3g is able to
mount a rescued partition, while NTFS3 is not (thanks
On Tue, Feb 01, 2022 at 12:32:24AM -0500, Stefan Monnier wrote:
that's not running a 64bit userspace on a 32bit kernel,
Why not? You have a 64bit system on top, a 32bit kernel at the bottom
and whether execution of those 64bit binaries is performed directly by
the CPU or via binfmt + qemu is
Hello,
I am playing with NFS on my home network for the first time and I have
some difficulties/questions.
The server is a Synology NAS, it is based on Linux, supports NFS4 and
gets configured by a web interface.
The NAS offers a Kerberos authentification for NFS but I did not
configure this.
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