This is addressed in an ANCIENT bug report. My organization has worked
around it for months. Please don't act like you're the only one affected by
stable's slow uptake of drivers.
If you want "desktop" support, use a "desktop" distro.
Quoting Igor Levicki (i...@levicki.net):
> Exactly what is pre
If there's any way for my last response to be removed/redacted, please
enforce it. I'm in no position to be responding here
My apologies.
On Jan 7, 2014 2:28 AM, "Zach Morgan" wrote:
> This is addressed in an ANCIENT bug report. My organization has worked
> around it for months. Please don't act
Accepted:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Format: 1.8
Date: Mon, 06 Jan 2014 07:36:25 +0100
Source: partman-crypto
Binary: partman-crypto partman-crypto-dm
Architecture: source i386 all
Version: 69
Distribution: unstable
Urgency: low
Maintainer: Debian Install System Team
Changed
partman-crypto_69_i386.changes uploaded successfully to localhost
along with the files:
partman-crypto_69.dsc
partman-crypto_69.tar.gz
partman-crypto_69_i386.udeb
partman-crypto-dm_69_all.udeb
Greetings,
Your Debian queue daemon (running on host franck.debian.org)
--
To UNSUBSC
partman-crypto_69_i386.changes uploaded successfully to ftp-master.debian.org
along with the files:
partman-crypto_69.dsc
partman-crypto_69.tar.gz
partman-crypto_69_i386.udeb
partman-crypto-dm_69_all.udeb
Greetings,
Your Debian queue daemon (running on host ravel.debian.org)
--
Quoting Igor Levicki (i...@levicki.net):
> Exactly what is preventing you to add new driver module which
> supports both old and new hardware?
What? Easy to understand: you doing the work.
Of course that requires also you to understand how the Debian kernel
team work is organized, how the Debian
Let me first clarify that I wanted to build a production system for
daily use, not an unstable test system where I could risk losing data so
that is why I opted for a stable release.
Since Debian 7.3 was released in December I assumed that it supports
hardware which hit retail in June.
Obv
On Mon, 2014-01-06 at 17:21 +0100, Cyril Brulebois wrote:
> Lennart Sorensen (2014-01-06):
> > Debian stable means not changing things in general, so adding new
> > drivers is not something that is done.
>
> Sorry, that's wrong.
>
> The linux kernel is regularly updated in stable to add support
It seems to be using the correct suite now "wheezy", but all the packages
it can't find seem to be from unstable, unless I'm wrong here.
@debian-7:~/debian-installer/installer/build$ make reallyclean
@debian-7:~/debian-installer/installer/build$ make build_netboot
USE_UDEBS_FROM=wheezy
W
On Mon, Jan 06, 2014 at 05:21:30PM +0100, Cyril Brulebois wrote:
> Lennart Sorensen (2014-01-06):
> > Debian stable means not changing things in general, so adding new
> > drivers is not something that is done.
>
> Sorry, that's wrong.
>
> The linux kernel is regularly updated in stable to add s
Lennart Sorensen (2014-01-06):
> Debian stable means not changing things in general, so adding new
> drivers is not something that is done.
Sorry, that's wrong.
The linux kernel is regularly updated in stable to add support for
new(er) hardware.
Mraw,
KiBi.
signature.asc
Description: Digital
I think it means your /dev/sda has GPT partition table suitable for
UEFI, but it does not contain a fake msdos partition table for BIOS.
--
ChangZhuo Chen (陳昌倬)
Key fingerprint = EC9F 905D 866D BE46 A896 C827 BE0C 9242 03F4 552D
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature
On Sat, Jan 04, 2014 at 04:10:22PM +0100, Igor Levicki wrote:
> Package: installation-reports
>
> Boot method: unetbootin (USB stick)
> Image version: debian-7.3.0-amd64-netinst.iso
> Date: 2013-01-04 15:00:00 CET
>
> Machine: ASUS Z87 PRO
> Processor: Intel Core i7-4770K
> Memory: 16 GB DDR3
> P
13 matches
Mail list logo