Apparently it is no longer an issue[1].
Footnotes:
[1] http://glandium.org/blog/?p=933
--
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The Phone Booth Rule:
A lone dime always gets the number nearly right.
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On 20100321_181749, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 2010-03-21 17:52, Tom H wrote:
> *You* should not need to set the UUID. It should just magically be
> there.
> $ /sbin/blkid -t TYPE=swap
> /dev/sdb1: TYPE="swap" LABEL="swap1" \
> UUID="c69f59ff-b928-4232-b44c-8da0f12c52db"
> >
> >>>
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Dotan Cohen wrote:
> I can have as many open connections as I want, it's on the LAN. But I
> would _prefer_ just one terminal window for both commands (SSH) and
> file transfers.
First of all, I believe the ssh protocol (not necessarily the ssh
progra
On 20100322_010210, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> On 22 March 2010 00:57, Selçuk Mıynat wrote:
> > On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 00:52, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> >> I am managing a small embedded device that I SSH into over the LAN. To
> >> run commands, I use KDE Konsole, and to transfer files I use Konqueror
> >>
On Sunday 21 March 2010 23:14:32 Andrew Reid wrote:
> On Sunday 21 March 2010 18:52:36 Dotan Cohen wrote:
> > I am managing a small embedded device that I SSH into over the LAN. To
> > run commands, I use KDE Konsole, and to transfer files I use Konqueror
> > and SFTP. I understand that SFTP also r
I think someone broke into my hotmail account and sending some type of e-mails
out. Please ignore all e-mails from my hotmail account.
My yahoo account if fine. If you don't know it already just replace hotmail
with yahoo. It's the same ID.
__
On Sunday 21 March 2010 18:52:36 Dotan Cohen wrote:
> I am managing a small embedded device that I SSH into over the LAN. To
> run commands, I use KDE Konsole, and to transfer files I use Konqueror
> and SFTP. I understand that SFTP also runs over SSH, so is there a way
> to send files in Konsole a
>
> So I got as a present a Laptop, the giver was aware that I don´t use M$
> anymore for some time now (about 5years) and she (my wife) did this as a
> surprise in the coming of our new baby girl (she took pity at my old Laptop
> - witch Toshiba should buy me up for historical purposes). This mean
> Aliases, scripts and passwordless login.
>
I never use them an alias on a remote system because then I will never
remember which have aliases and which do not. I need to keep my
knowledge portable.
I have a bunch of these little critters that I need to configure:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dr
On Sun, Mar 21, 2010 at 11:44 PM, Rick Pasotto wrote:
> Recently the 2.6.32-3-686 kernel was posted to testing. When it was
> added to the grub menu it was put *after* the 2.6.32-trunk-686 kernel.
>
> Which is the newer kernel? If 2.6.32-3 is newer why was it placed in
> second position?
>
> --
>
On 2010-03-21 19:34, Dotan Cohen wrote:
That could be worded better. I meant that "lls" does not exist in
sftp, but it is something that I've always wanted.
"man ssh" and "man scp" really are your friends!
From machine_a:
$ ssh u...@machine_b ls -aFl /some/remote/dir
No, that's a workarou
Dotan Cohen put forth on 3/21/2010 7:37 PM:
>> http://www.mosix.org/
>>
>
> Thanks, Stan, but I think you missed a few messages in the thread! I
> am looking for an interface to a remote machine that include features
> from both sftp and ssh shell.
Mosix negates those interfaces. All resources a
Stan Hoeppner put forth on 3/21/2010 7:34 PM:
> Dotan Cohen put forth on 3/21/2010 6:47 PM:
>>> Sigh. What exactly are you trying to *accomplish*
>>>
>>
>> Just an example:
>> I want to move a tarball to the machine, unpack it there then edit a
>> file it in. I then want to make that file exec
> http://www.mosix.org/
>
Thanks, Stan, but I think you missed a few messages in the thread! I
am looking for an interface to a remote machine that include features
from both sftp and ssh shell.
--
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http://what-is-what.com
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>> That could be worded better. I meant that "lls" does not exist in
>> sftp, but it is something that I've always wanted.
>
> "man ssh" and "man scp" really are your friends!
>
> From machine_a:
> $ ssh u...@machine_b ls -aFl /some/remote/dir
>
No, that's a workaround. I'll have RSI before I g
Dotan Cohen put forth on 3/21/2010 6:47 PM:
>> Sigh. What exactly are you trying to *accomplish*
>>
>
> Just an example:
> I want to move a tarball to the machine, unpack it there then edit a
> file it in. I then want to make that file executable, run it, and
> transfer the output file back t
>> That is what I am doing. But I thought it would be nice to have it all
>> in one session.
>
> http://i-want-a-pony.com/IWantAPony.jpg
>
I know!
But I've actually gotten quite a few ponies by asking, thus this
thread. Certainly I am not the first man to administer a remote
machine with the need
Recently the 2.6.32-3-686 kernel was posted to testing. When it was
added to the grub menu it was put *after* the 2.6.32-trunk-686 kernel.
Which is the newer kernel? If 2.6.32-3 is newer why was it placed in
second position?
--
"All men recognize the right of revolution; that is, the right to
On Mon Mar 22, 2010 at 01:27:22 +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> I had considered fuse, but there is no real advantage. I still need
> two terminal windows open: one for transferring files (sftp) and the
> second for running commands (ssh).
gnu screen. One terminal. Multiple programs.
Steve
--
ht
On 2010-03-21 19:10, Dotan Cohen wrote:
And maybe having a "lls" (local ls) would have been nice too,
something I've always missed from sftp.
That could be worded better. I meant that "lls" does not exist in
sftp, but it is something that I've always wanted.
"man ssh" and "man scp" really a
Dotan Cohen wrote:
Why don't you have two sessions open, one for transferring through
sftp and one vi and whatever else through ssh
That is what I am doing. But I thought it would be nice to have it all
in one session.
http://i-want-a-pony.com/IWantAPony.jpg
--
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI
edua..
> And maybe having a "lls" (local ls) would have been nice too,
> something I've always missed from sftp.
>
That could be worded better. I meant that "lls" does not exist in
sftp, but it is something that I've always wanted.
--
Dotan Cohen
http://bido.com
http://what-is-what.com
Please CC me i
> Always starting from machine_a, where machine_b is the "original" remote
> host.
>
> METHOD A.
> 1. ssh u...@machine_b
> 2. scp -v u...@machine_a:/some/tar/ball .
> 3. untar ...
> 4. chmod u+x
> 5. ./whatever
> 6. scp -v output.txt u...@machine_a:/home/user/.
> 7. exit
>
>
> METHOD B.
> 1. scp -v
On 2010-03-21 18:26, Tom H wrote:
I'd want *proof* (i.e., booting into different distros) that different
mkswap invocations generate different UUIDs.
I have no idea what proof I can provide except to say that I have been
caught by that.
I installed a second distribution and I could either not
On 22 March 2010 01:58, Ustun Kaya wrote:
> still scp:
>
> us...@local>ls
> file.tgz
> us...@local>ssh us...@remote
> us...@remote>scp us...@local:file.tgz .
While this is more cumbersome than "put" I will contend that it works.
Frankly I am surprised that this is the lease cumbersome way, I was
On 2010-03-21 18:47, Dotan Cohen wrote:
Sigh. What exactly are you trying to *accomplish*
Just an example:
I want to move a tarball to the machine, unpack it there then edit a
file it in. I then want to make that file executable, run it, and
transfer the output file back to my localhost.
On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 01:25:33AM +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> > Eh? I think you're imposing unneeded self limits.
> >
>
> How so? With scp I can send file to the machine that I'm remotely connected
> to?
Like this:
# On local-machine
ssh
# type type type in remote-machine shell…
scp local-ma
still scp:
us...@local>ls
file.tgz
us...@local>ssh us...@remote
us...@remote>scp us...@local:file.tgz .
us...@remote>ls
file.tgz
us...@remote>tar xzvf file.tgz
us...@remote>"do whatever you want"
us...@remote> scp file.tgz us...@local:
Best,
Ustun
On Sun, Mar 21, 2010 at 4:47 PM, Dotan Cohen wr
> gnu screen. One terminal. Multiple programs.
>
That has no advantage over multiple terminal windows. If I cd in one
of them, the other doesn't cd, for instance.
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with a
> Sigh. What exactly are you trying to *accomplish*
>
Just an example:
I want to move a tarball to the machine, unpack it there then edit a
file it in. I then want to make that file executable, run it, and
transfer the output file back to my localhost.
--
Dotan Cohen
http://bido.com
http:/
>> How so? With scp I can send file to the machine that I'm remotely
>> connected to?
>
> Of course. It's a *copy* program.
>
For copying to a remote machine. But once I have a shell on that
machine open in my terminal, I'm not able to send commands to my local
machine in that terminal.
>> So t
On 2010-03-21 18:26, Dotan Cohen wrote:
Yes, but then I cannot get a regular shell for vim and such. I need to
both run commands and also transfer files.
That's what scp is for!
How can I get a shell with scp?
Sigh. What exactly are you trying to *accomplish*
--
"History does no
On 2010-03-21 18:28, Dotan Cohen wrote:
well you can ssh to the remote machine first, then scp back to the
localhost from the remote machine, does the trick?
scp is for putting files, not for getting files.
That's just *not* true. It doesn't care whether the source or
destination are remo
On 2010-03-21 18:25, Dotan Cohen wrote:
No, scp is for sending files to a remote machine that the user has yet
to connect to:
Eh? I think you're imposing unneeded self limits.
How so? With scp I can send file to the machine that I'm remotely connected to?
Of course. It's a *copy* program
> sftp is to ftp what ssh is to telnet. You did not have a telnet shell
> in the past when connecting through ftp.
>
I realize that.
> If you can only have one connection and need both shell and transfer
> access, someone suggested sshfs earlier.
>
I can have as many open connections as I want,
> Why don't you have two sessions open, one for transferring through
> sftp and one vi and whatever else through ssh?
>
That is what I am doing. But I thought it would be nice to have it all
in one session.
--
Dotan Cohen
http://bido.com
http://what-is-what.com
Please CC me if you want to be
>> sftp.
> ✈dcl:~$ sftp u...@1.2.3.4
> Connecting to 1.2.3.4...
> u...@1.2.3.4's password:
> sftp> which ls
> Invalid command.
> sftp>
>
> So there, no shell. I need a shell.
sftp is to ftp what ssh is to telnet. You did not have a telnet shell
in the past when connecting through ftp.
If you can
> well you can ssh to the remote machine first, then scp back to the
> localhost from the remote machine, does the trick?
>
scp is for putting files, not for getting files.
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http://bido.com
http://what-is-what.com
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>> Yes, but then I cannot get a regular shell for vim and such. I need to
>> both run commands and also transfer files.
>>
>
> Well, you can't. But sshfs might help, you mount a remote filesystem
> (accessed via ssh) and use files as in any other filesystem.
>
>
I had considered fuse, but there is
> I'd want *proof* (i.e., booting into different distros) that different
> mkswap invocations generate different UUIDs.
I have no idea what proof I can provide except to say that I have been
caught by that.
I installed a second distribution and I could either not prevent it
from running mkswap or
>> Yes, but then I cannot get a regular shell for vim and such. I need to
>> both run commands and also transfer files.
>>
>
> That's what scp is for!
>
How can I get a shell with scp?
--
Dotan Cohen
http://bido.com
http://what-is-what.com
Please CC me if you want to be sure that I read y
>> No, scp is for sending files to a remote machine that the user has yet
>> to connect to:
>
> Eh? I think you're imposing unneeded self limits.
>
How so? With scp I can send file to the machine that I'm remotely connected to?
> sftp.
>
✈dcl:~$ sftp u...@1.2.3.4
Connecting to 1.2.3.4...
u...@
>> The default
>> /etc/ssh/sshd_config
>> has a
>> subsystem sftp ...
>> towards the end of the file, so you should be able to run
>> sftp u...@host
>> and use the above ftp commands.
> Yes, but then I cannot get a regular shell for vim and such. I need to
> both run commands and also transfer fil
On 2010-03-21 17:52, Tom H wrote:
*You* should not need to set the UUID. It should just magically be
there.
$ /sbin/blkid -t TYPE=swap
/dev/sdb1: TYPE="swap" LABEL="swap1" \
UUID="c69f59ff-b928-4232-b44c-8da0f12c52db"
You can cnahe the UUID of any ext partition with
cnahe???
It is Sunday
well you can ssh to the remote machine first, then scp back to the
localhost from the remote machine, does the trick?
Best,
Ustun
On Sun, Mar 21, 2010 at 4:14 PM, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 2010-03-21 18:05, Dotan Cohen wrote:
>>>
>>> The default
>>> /etc/ssh/sshd_config
>>> has a
>>> subsystem sft
Dotan Cohen wrote:
Yes, but then I cannot get a regular shell for vim and such. I need to
both run commands and also transfer files.
Well, you can't. But sshfs might help, you mount a remote filesystem
(accessed via ssh) and use files as in any other filesystem.
--
Eduardo M KALINOWSKI
edu
On 2010-03-21 18:05, Dotan Cohen wrote:
The default
/etc/ssh/sshd_config
has a
subsystem sftp ...
towards the end of the file, so you should be able to run
sftp u...@host
and use the above ftp commands.
Yes, but then I cannot get a regular shell for vim and such. I need to
both run commands an
On 2010-03-21 18:02, Dotan Cohen wrote:
On 22 March 2010 00:57, Selçuk Mıynat wrote:
On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 00:52, Dotan Cohen wrote:
I am managing a small embedded device that I SSH into over the LAN. To
run commands, I use KDE Konsole, and to transfer files I use Konqueror
and SFTP. I unde
On Mon, 22 Mar 2010 00:58:28 +0200
Dotan Cohen wrote:
> I understand that English is the only language in which two
> negatively-oriented words do not make a positive
I don't not understand that; they can. ;-}
> , but two
> positively-oriented words do make a negative.
Cybe R. Wizard
--
Re
> The default
> /etc/ssh/sshd_config
> has a
> subsystem sftp ...
> towards the end of the file, so you should be able to run
> sftp u...@host
> and use the above ftp commands.
>
Yes, but then I cannot get a regular shell for vim and such. I need to
both run commands and also transfer files.
--
On 22 March 2010 00:57, Selçuk Mıynat wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 00:52, Dotan Cohen wrote:
>> I am managing a small embedded device that I SSH into over the LAN. To
>> run commands, I use KDE Konsole, and to transfer files I use Konqueror
>> and SFTP. I understand that SFTP also runs over S
> I am managing a small embedded device that I SSH into over the LAN. To
> run commands, I use KDE Konsole, and to transfer files I use Konqueror
> and SFTP. I understand that SFTP also runs over SSH, so is there a way
> to send files in Konsole as well? I am familiar with the FTP commands
> such a
> No.
>
> zeal: positive connotations.
> zealot: negative connotations.
>
Thanks. I needed that confirmation.
> English is tricky that way.
>
I understand that English is the only language in which two
negatively-oriented words do not make a positive, but two
positively-oriented words do make a
On Mon, Mar 22, 2010 at 00:52, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> I am managing a small embedded device that I SSH into over the LAN. To
> run commands, I use KDE Konsole, and to transfer files I use Konqueror
> and SFTP. I understand that SFTP also runs over SSH, so is there a way
> to send files in Konsole as
On 2010-03-21 14:01, Dotan Cohen wrote:
[snip]
Is "zeal" a negative word as well? Googling it I see only positive connotations.
No.
zeal: positive connotations.
zealot: negative connotations.
English is tricky that way.
--
Obsession with "preserving cultural heritage" is a racist impedimen
>>> *You* should not need to set the UUID. It should just magically be
>>> there.
>>> $ /sbin/blkid -t TYPE=swap
>>> /dev/sdb1: TYPE="swap" LABEL="swap1" \
>>> UUID="c69f59ff-b928-4232-b44c-8da0f12c52db"
>> You can cnahe the UUID of any ext partition with
> cnahe???
It is Sunday and my first we
I am managing a small embedded device that I SSH into over the LAN. To
run commands, I use KDE Konsole, and to transfer files I use Konqueror
and SFTP. I understand that SFTP also runs over SSH, so is there a way
to send files in Konsole as well? I am familiar with the FTP commands
such as cd, lcd,
On 2010-03-21 10:42, Tom H wrote:
[snip]
*You* should not need to set the UUID. It should just magically be there.
$ /sbin/blkid -t TYPE=swap
/dev/sdb1: TYPE="swap" LABEL="swap1" \
UUID="c69f59ff-b928-4232-b44c-8da0f12c52db"
You can cnahe the UUID of any ext partition with
cnahe???
tune2
Hi,
recently I set up a new server using Debian testing. When I tried adding a
new user a few days later, I noticed that it was impossible to set a
password for the user.
The error-message ist "System error" together with the information that the
password is unchanged.
r...@fp:/home/airflow# add
On 2010-03-21, Camaleón wrote:
> On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 20:13:22 +, Liam O'Toole wrote:
>
>> On 2010-03-21, Camaleón wrote:
>
> (...)
>
>>> Is someone seeing that behavior or it's just me?
>>>
>>> If yes, I could report it to the backport's guys. If not, something
>>> went wrong at my side and an
On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 20:13:22 +, Liam O'Toole wrote:
> On 2010-03-21, Camaleón wrote:
(...)
>> Is someone seeing that behavior or it's just me?
>>
>> If yes, I could report it to the backport's guys. If not, something
>> went wrong at my side and any hints would be great :-)
>>
>>
> I see the
Now that my wireless is working on my eeePC (thank you, Andrei and Stephen) I
have started working on other annoyances. I got sound working (Alsa was not
installed by default). Now I am trying to get Taps to work on my touchpad. I
have looked through the wiki and the earlier thread by Micha F
On Thu, Mar 18, 2010 at 08:47:32PM +0900, Osamu Aoki wrote:
> On Wed, Mar 17, 2010 at 09:23:18AM +0100, Klaus Jantzen wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > due to a discussion of git I would like to know which of the
> > numerous git-packages I have to
> > install on lenny when I want to use git in my local e
> 1) You cant use the firefox name without using the whole "branding"
> (ie the copyrighted - and non free, icons), where as Mozilla had given
> Debian an exception to this rule, they decided to clamp down.
Debian had to clamp down because Mozilla had given _Debian_
permission. DFSG forbids accept
>> Is Debian not openly resisting the legal yet anti-civilian wrath of
>> those who would rule us, our software, and our rights to use our
>> hardware as we see fit?
>
> Who is "Debian"? Some developers are just trying to create the best
> possible operating system. Not everyone is out to change
On 2010-03-21, Camaleón wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I have udpated -in one of my testing computers running Lenny/GNOME-
> Iceweasel package from backports (now featuring 3.5.8). So far so good :-)
>
> But I have noted that when launching the program from taskbar icon
> (associated command "iceweasel %u"
Hello,
I have udpated -in one of my testing computers running Lenny/GNOME-
Iceweasel package from backports (now featuring 3.5.8). So far so good :-)
But I have noted that when launching the program from taskbar icon
(associated command "iceweasel %u") Iceweasel opens fine but mouse cursor
kee
Dotan writes:
> Is Debian not openly resisting the legal yet anti-civilian wrath of
> those who would rule us, our software, and our rights to use our
> hardware as we see fit?
Who is "Debian"? Some developers are just trying to create the best
possible operating system. Not everyone is out to c
http://dewi-nusantara.com/Dave.html
_
Hotmail has tools for the New Busy. Search, chat and e-mail from your inbox.
http://www.windowslive.com/campaign/thenewbusy?ocid=PID27925::T:WLMTAGL:ON:WL
>> I now understand that there are negative connotations with the word
>> "zealot". I did not mean it in a negative way at all. Mockery is
>> flattery, and it gives stage to the idea. I wouldn't want Debian to
>> change it's stance on the issue at all.
>>
>
> There are negative connotations for a g
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 20:15:58 +0200
Dotan Cohen wrote:
> >
> > The Firefox naming thing is entirely due to Mozilla's zealotry
> > about their trademark.
> >
>
> Correct.
>
>
> > Go hang around the FSF for a while if you want to see some _real_
> >
>> The Firefox naming thing is entirely due to Mozilla's zealotry about
>> their trademark.
>
> Could they be a bit sensitive, remembering the Debian ssl "patch"? Or was
> that in the wrong time span?
>
I'm pretty sure the Iceweasel thing was before the SSL patch incident
became known.
>> Go han
> IIUC Debian changed the name upon explicit request from the Mozilla
> foundation, so while it's silly, it doesn't seem to be because of
> Debian's zeal.
>
It's both:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Iceweasel
Therefore, I mock them both.
--
Dotan Cohen
http://bido.com
http://what-is-what.com
Pl
On 21 March 2010 17:00, John Hasler wrote:
> Dotan writes:
>> Extreme devotion to the principals of FOSS...
>
> Debian is not extreme. "IP" law is.
>
IP (why is there no property tax on that, by the way) law is extreme,
I agree. Debian is one of the few entities treating it with the same
extreme
About a week ago K3b and Mythfrontend stopped working on my home squeeze
system (i386 when running gnome).
K3b gives me the error:
Error message was: "org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.NoReply" : " "Did not
receive a reply. Possible causes include: the remote application did not
send a reply, the messag
> There is a quote, which I can't find now, which approximately says,
> "Excess in defense of liberty is not excess." Said by a Republican...
"Extremism in the defense of liberty is no vice. And let me remind you
also that moderation in the pursuit of justice is no virtue."
Said by Barry Goldwat
Recent udev packges in squeeze/sid lack vol_id command since 22 Aug 2009
(146-1). What is the best way to obtain UUID of partition?
I could read it like ...
$ ls -l /dev/disk/by-uuid|grep sda4
Is this the best way? Any thoughts ?
>>> blkid
>> http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-
On 2010-03-21 10:00, John Hasler wrote:
Dotan writes:
Extreme devotion to the principals of FOSS...
Debian is not extreme. "IP" law is.
...and the willingness to sacrifice usability (confuse users with
application naming, for one) to achieve that goal.
The Firefox naming thing is entirely
> How about Puddlerodent? Would that be an appropriate form of mockery
> of the situation? I mock both Debian (zealotry) and primarily Mozilla
> (love-hate relationship with FOSS and control freaks) with that one.
IIUC Debian changed the name upon explicit request from the Mozilla
foundation, so w
Dotan writes:
> Extreme devotion to the principals of FOSS...
Debian is not extreme. "IP" law is.
> ...and the willingness to sacrifice usability (confuse users with
>application naming, for one) to achieve that goal.
The Firefox naming thing is entirely due to Mozilla's zealotry about
their tr
On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 13:50:58 +, Pasi Oja-Nisula wrote:
> Replying to myself here. Yes, it helps. I searched the closets at the
> office and found a dvi cable. Change the cable, reboot and vesa works
> fine with 1280x1024 resolution. So with this, I'll manage for now.
> Hopefully the integrated
Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 2010-03-21 08:25, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>> Ron Johnson wrote:
>>> On 2010-03-21 05:59, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>>>
Teemu Likonen writes:
> I don't know answers to all your questions but sometimes I have had
> similar problems. I fixed the slow startup by ans
On 2010-03-21 08:25, Merciadri Luca wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
On 2010-03-21 05:59, Merciadri Luca wrote:
Teemu Likonen writes:
I don't know answers to all your questions but sometimes I have had
similar problems. I fixed the slow startup by answering "Yes" to the
debconf question
Keep
On Sun, Mar 21, 2010 at 2:09 PM, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 2010-03-21 07:54, John Hasler wrote:
>>
>> Stephen Powell writes:
>>>
>>> This is off topic, but why exactly did Debian have to rebrand Firefox
>>> as iceweasel for their distribution?
>>
>> Mozilla owns the "FIREFOX" trademark and threatens
On 2010-03-21, Pasi Oja-Nisula wrote:
> So the right side of the picture is shown at the left. I just don't
> know how I could adjust this. I'm using a vga cable btw, maybe dvi
> cable would help?
Replying to myself here. Yes, it helps. I searched the closets at the
office and found a dvi cable.
On 2010-03-21 07:54, John Hasler wrote:
Stephen Powell writes:
This is off topic, but why exactly did Debian have to rebrand Firefox
as iceweasel for their distribution?
Mozilla owns the "FIREFOX" trademark and threatens to sue anyone who
applies that label to patched versions. Debian backpor
On Sun, Mar 21, 2010 at 13:12 -, Jen wrote:
> I have installed the Kernel package Linux-image-2.6.32-4, but can't
> automatically boot from it. I thought I could just change the default number
> in
> /boot/grub/menu.lst, but the new kernel package is not listed in this file.
Do you still have
Camaleón wrote:
> On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 09:59:05 +0100, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>
>
>> After the boot, I have chosen to start with a user window, which asks me
>> the username & password of the user. The problem is that this invite
>> window is in QWERTY mode, i.e. I need to write letters as if I wa
Ron Johnson wrote:
> On 2010-03-21 05:59, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>
>> Teemu Likonen writes:
>>
>>> I don't know answers to all your questions but sometimes I have had
>>> similar problems. I fixed the slow startup by answering "Yes" to the
>>> debconf question
>>>
>>> Keep number of DNS-queries
Camaleón wrote:
> On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 13:04:37 +0100, Merciadri Luca wrote:
>
>
>> Camaleón wrote:
>>
>
>
>>> Maybe this is something worth to report it.
>>>
>>>
>> And when you put the cursor on the other applet, does it show exactly
>> the same remaining time?
>>
>
> Yes
On 21 March 2010 14:42, John Hasler wrote:
> Dotan writes:
>> How about Puddlerodent? Would that be an appropriate form of mockery
>> of the situation? I mock both Debian (zealotry)
>
> What "zealotry"?
>
Extreme devotion to the principals of FOSS, and the willingness to
sacrifice usability (conf
f not then what's the
process for making it appear in the list of kernels in /boot/grub/menu.lst?
Any help would be really appreciated.
Thanks,
Jen.
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Stephen Powell writes:
> This is off topic, but why exactly did Debian have to rebrand Firefox
> as iceweasel for their distribution?
Mozilla owns the "FIREFOX" trademark and threatens to sue anyone who
applies that label to patched versions. Debian backports security
patches (Mozilla refuses to
Dotan writes:
> How about Puddlerodent? Would that be an appropriate form of mockery
> of the situation? I mock both Debian (zealotry)
What "zealotry"?
--
John Hasler
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On 2010-03-21 07:03, Arthur Marsh wrote:
Constantine wrote, on 05/03/10 23:24:
blkid
On Fri, Mar 5, 2010 at 3:31 PM, Osamu Aoki wrote:
Hi,
Recent udev packges in squeeze/sid lack vol_id command since 22 Aug 2009
(146-1). What is the best way to obtain UUID of partition?
I could read it li
On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 09:59:05 +0100, Merciadri Luca wrote:
> After the boot, I have chosen to start with a user window, which asks me
> the username & password of the user. The problem is that this invite
> window is in QWERTY mode, i.e. I need to write letters as if I was using
> a QWERTY keyboard
Hello,
fuser -m /home
will list the process ids which are accessing any file under /home.
Compare that to the output of "ps aux" to see which processes you
need to terminate in order to be able to umount /home.
Since I'm doing a pivot_root before trying to umount the old root there
are s
On 2010-03-21 05:59, Merciadri Luca wrote:
Teemu Likonen writes:
I don't know answers to all your questions but sometimes I have had
similar problems. I fixed the slow startup by answering "Yes" to the
debconf question
Keep number of DNS-queries minimal (Dial-on-Demand)?
Run "dpkg-recon
On Sun, 21 Mar 2010 13:04:37 +0100, Merciadri Luca wrote:
> Camaleón wrote:
>> Maybe this is something worth to report it.
>>
> And when you put the cursor on the other applet, does it show exactly
> the same remaining time?
Yes :-)
If you carefully look the picture I sent, you will see the
Camaleón wrote:
> El Sun, 21 Mar 2010 00:23:32 +0100, Merciadri Luca escribió:
>
>
>> That is also what I think. However, these are out-of-the-box applets,
>> and they should consequently be compatible (i.e. give the same results).
>>
>> The output of your command is the same as the info box you
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