I keep /boot on /. I guess you separate /home from / to have its files on a
different type of filesystem. The hypothetical time gain (in ms) is probably
lost the first time you forgot to remove the older kernels for some time and
face the problem CESQ reports.
You're welcome yair! I don't recommend debian testing over any other version,
I'm not that much into debian to recommend one over the other. On the neomutt
website, the developers have posted a link to the packaged version, which is
inside debian testing repository. So, if I were bound on
I do have separate /boot and /home partitions. On UEFI-based systems, I have
both /boot and /boot/efi (ESP) partitions.
Thank you! It worked!
The better solution isn't to turn off IPv6 but to use a VPN provider that
supports IPv6 so that you can have IPv4 and IPv6 both go through the VPN.
GDebi will automatically propose the installation of dependencies in versions
that are available in Trisquel's repository. For missing dependencies or
dependencies in newer versions than those in Trisquel's repository, GDebi
will report them. You can download them from the same repository
Hi guys, sorry to bug you with another question. But I use openVPN on
Trisquel. When I check my IP on ipleak.net it will show my ip address on the
right where it says ipv6. On my Windows PC, I disabled ipv6 and it fixed the
issue. However, I'm not sure how to disable it on Trisquel. I found
Why?