James Brown writes:
> There is 3071MB RAM I can see in my BIOS.
I must be missing something, but let me ask the stupid question: Why do
you think Linux should something else?
Bjørn
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James Brown writes:
> When I tried install the kvm, the system tell me: "Your system does not
> have the CPU extensions required to use KVM. Not doing anything. failed!"
from the kvm package description:
KVM requires your system to support hardware virtualization, provided by AMD's
SVM capab
James Brown writes:
> Bjørn Mork wrote:
>
>> But do check your BIOS setup if you think your CPU should support
>> hardware virtualization. Most have some option to disable it, and it
>> may be disabled by default.
>>
> What is the name of item I need to enab
lsore...@csclub.uwaterloo.ca (Lennart Sorensen) writes:
> On Fri, Jul 24, 2009 at 08:32:22PM +0200, Bjørn Mork wrote:
>> Depends. It should be an option related to the CPU, and it will often
>> include the word "virtualization".
>>
>> But I've also see
James Brown writes:
> model name : Intel(R) Core(TM)2 CPU T5500 @ 1.66GHz
That one is supposed to support VT according to
http://ark.intel.com/Product.aspx?id=27253
Bjørn
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Michelle Konzack writes:
> Am 2011-01-19 10:10:36, hacktest Du folgendes herunter:
>> Hello,
>>
>> in my Laptop there is an Intel 3945ABG and it works fine.
>> Also take a look at this page: http://wiki.debian.org/iwlwifi
>
> OK tnaks, found the Link to the "ipw2200" and the
> non-free firmware i
Stefan Monnier writes:
>> into some random mailing list question. For example, you made me just
>> install cpufreqd on my PC where i never considered that a priority.
>
> Nowadays installing cpufrequtils should be all you need to do.
No, actually, nowadays you don't even have to do that. CPU f
Florian Reitmeir writes:
> All ssd should support TRIM, and all do, except some very old models.
The original X301 64GB and 128GB Samsung SSDs are definitely in the
"very old models" category. They were manufactured in 2008, well before
TRIM became a standard feature on SSDs.
Personally I woul
Michael writes:
> Edit /etc/default/halt and change the value as Eddy writes.
>
> Yes, systemd is probably the cause, it replaced pm acpi by its own
> terminology, disregarding the legacy convention.
Yes, systemd will happily break existing ACPI PM setups without any
warning.
The systemd point
"maiky.lambo...@runbox.no" writes:
> Hi,
> I have just installed Debian Jessie in my new ultra-book that have Intel
> Corporation Wireless 7260 (rev bb).
>
> As I can read here
> http://forums.debian.net/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=111840
>
> It has open-source driver that are included in Linux Kernel 3.
"maiky.lambo...@runbox.no" writes:
> On 21/01/15 12:10, Bjørn Mork wrote:
>
>> Did you install firmware-iwlwifi from non-free?
>
> No, I need it?
> Does this card have opensource driver?
>
> Probably I'm wrong but this card should have opensource driver.
Hannu Virtanen writes:
> usb_modeswitch -H -v 0x12d1 -p 0x157d
Which usb_modeswitch version do you have? This device is supported by
default since usb-modeswitch-data version 20140327-1, and should be
automatically switch when it is discovered.
In any case, the -H option won't work for this ne
Bill Harris writes:
> Besides, I think my concern comes ahead of that: do I need to do anything
> special to prepare for Intel RST (fake RAID)? If I knew that there were no
> problems ahead with that feature, then I could just start the installer,
> choosing to repartition for dual-boot or for
wg...@china.com writes:
> Hi, everyone,
>
> Since my Debian testing was upgraded on Oct 29, the mobile broadband in my
> laptop could not be used. The mobile broadband is missing in the
> network-manager UI, and wvdialconf can not configure the broadband either.
> The message of wvdialconf is a
wg...@china.com writes:
> I use dmesg to view the system message, and get these informations as below,
>
> [ 1535.372130] usb 1-6: new high-speed USB device number 8 using xhci_hcd
> [ 1535.378889] thinkpad_acpi: unknown possible thermal alarm or keyboard
> event received
> [ 1535.378893] thinkpa
Data
> wMaxPacketSize 0x0200 1x 512 bytes
> bInterval 0
> *****
>
> mmcli -L
>
> No modems were found
> ***
Bob Proulx writes:
> IBM ThinkPad T60p
> Intel T2600 cpu (32-bits)
> AMD/ATI RV530/M56 GL Mobility FireGL V5200 graphics
>
> Fresh install of Debian Stretch 9. X11 starts in software rendering
> mode. The same laptop with Ubuntu 16.04 runs with hardware rendering.
>
> Any hints on how what is n
Leslie S Satenstein writes:
> BTW, swap should be completely _unused_ during normal computer operation
> if you don't want a snail slow machine.
> Consider to install a swap file instead of a swap partition for the rare
> cases where you run out of physical memory.
>
> The only situation you r
> On Sat, Aug 21, 2021 at 7:42 AM Bjørn Mork wrote:
>
>> try booting with intel_iommu=off on the kernel command line
>
> It works now, thanks for your help.
Great! Glad it could be resolved as easily as that.
> Is there a known bug or something?
Probably a firmware bug
Just had an interesting experience installing Debian bullseye on a
Lenovo Thinkpad P14s Gen 3.
I tried to PXE boot the Debian installer and could see in the tftp
server log that the Thinkpad loaded the shim, but nothing more. It just
jumped back to the PXE boot menu.
After several failed attempt
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