I'm finishing up an install of Wheezy with the latest netinst CD (7.4). I noticed that I made a typo in one of the partition labels. I typed "man tune2fs" to check my memory, I got a badly garbled text with most of the hyphens and option letters missing, among other things. Surely not a usable man page. But when I started composing this letter, I cut and pasted (with mouse manipulation) a few lines from the bash window into the emacs window, this is what appeared:
<start> TUNE2FS(8) TUNE2FS(8) NAME tune2fs - adjust tunable filesystem parameters on ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystems SYNOPSIS tune2fs [ -l ] [ -c max-mount-counts ] [ -e errors-behavior ] [ -f ] [ -i inter‐ val-between-checks ] [ -j ] [ -J journal-options ] [ -m reserved-blocks-percent‐ age ] [ -o [^]mount-options[,...] ] [ -r reserved-blocks-count ] [ -s sparse- super-flag ] [ -u user ] [ -g group ] [ -C mount-count ] [ -E extended-options ] [ -L volume-name ] [ -M last-mounted-directory ] [ -O [^]feature[,...] ] [ -Q quota-options ] [ -T time-last-checked ] [ -U UUID ] device DESCRIPTION tune2fs allows the system administrator to adjust various tunable filesystem parameters on Linux ext2, ext3, or ext4 filesystems. The current values of these options can be displayed by using the -l option to tune2fs(8) program, or by using the dumpe2fs(8) program. The device specifier can either be a filename (i.e., /dev/sda1), or a LABEL or UUID specifier: "LABEL=volume-name" or "UUID=uuid". (i.e., LABEL=home or UUID=e40486c6-84d5-4f2f-b99c-032281799c9d). OPTIONS -c max-mount-counts Adjust the number of mounts after which the filesystem will be checked by e2fsck(8). If max-mount-counts is 0 or -1, the number of times the file system is mounted will be disregarded by e2fsck(8) and the kernel. Staggering the mount-counts at which filesystems are forcibly checked will avoid all filesystems being checked at one time when using journaled filesystems. ...<ellipsis> <end> In particular, the headings "NAME", "SYNOPSIS", "DESCRIPTION", and "OPTIONS" did not appear in the emulator window. I guessed that there was something wrong with text rendering in my terminal emulator. I was using gnome-terminal. I also have xfce-terminal, and xterm installed, so I tried them, and they both gave very nice displays of the man page. I conclude that there is something wrong with with my installation of gnome-terminal. In doing the recent install, I did not go directly to Xfce desktop, and I attempted to save and restore my /home from an image of a previous working /home, so I cannot say what, exactly, the configuration is, and I cannot even guess where to look. But looking at what Aptitude displays, there are both Xfce and Gnome (and Xwindows) packages installed. Lightdm is the selected display manager. I want to use Gnome-terminal because of the there emulators, Gnome gives me a better interface for adjusting the size of emulator windows. My style of working involves a lot of overlapping windows in a lot of workspaces. Any quick fix? Or what further information can I provide? Thanks, -- Paul E Condon pecon...@mesanetworks.net -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org Archive: https://lists.debian.org/20140328171422.ga8...@pec.lan.gnu