another example
perl -pi -e "s/^ServerName .*$/ServerName
$HOME_SERVER_NAME/g" /etc/cups/client.conf
how do I do this with systemd?
I'll try now the _netdev option and see if it works for me without systemd
thanks in advance
On Wednesday 06 January 2016 12:45:43 deloptes wrote:
> I do this with two custom init script
> - network script (checks the interface and network/domain)
> and updates fstab, resolv.conf + mounts nfs if 1)
I do a similar task with a script located in /etc/network/if-up.d/
This i
dig can get A records of the domain name in question. But it looks
like the response got rejected by the OS. Is it related to the
wildcard?
$ dig mint.lc.intuit.com
; <<>> DiG 9.9.5-9+deb8u4-Debian <<>> mint.lc.intuit.com
;; global options: +cmd
;; Got answer:
;; ->>HEADER<<- opcode: QUERY, stat
This is puzzling me. My Xorg is set up for dual-head operation with
each head having its own screen and four Xfce workspaces per screen.
It's something I've had working well for several years.
For various reasons I would like to use Gnome Terminal for an terminal
application as it can be easily c
On 01/07/2016 04:22 PM, W. Martin Borgert wrote:
I try to install Jessie with a soft RAID6 of four disks, 1 TB each.
The idea is to use the complete disk for RAID and then only on top
separate swap and root. ...
grub does not install on the fourth disk. It turns out, that the
fourth disk is GPT,
On 01/08/2016 02:51 AM, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Christian Seiler a écrit :
>> for compatibility reasons every tool that manipulates MBR
>> partitions will therefore want to leave a gap after the MBR.
>
> Current tools won't align for compatibility purpose any more. The
> default 1-MiB alignment i
Christian Seiler a écrit :
>
> Well sure, but MBR also has all the CHS baggage - and while it isn't
> used anymore on modern systems, there still is the de-factor standard
> of aligning the first partition with the first CHS-sector that is so
> ingrained historically that the gap between MBR and t
On 2016-01-07 18:47:48 +, Brian wrote:
> Many WiFi devices require firmware. Some of those devices will not have
> an interface registered (they are not initialised) if the firmware is
> not present to be loaded into the device. Other devices get an interface
> whether the firmware is present o
On 01/08/2016 02:03 AM, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Christian Seiler a écrit :
>> Problem is that GPT doesn't have such a gap.
>
> GPT usually also has such a gap for partition alignment purpose.
Well sure, but MBR also has all the CHS baggage - and while it isn't
used anymore on modern systems, the
Christian Seiler a écrit :
>
> Ok, if you use MBR, only the first 512 bytes are used for the MBR
> partition table, so that the gap between those bytes and the first
> partition (and there is *always* a gap, the size depends on the
> details of the logical geometry of the disk) has traditionally
>
On 01/08/2016 01:22 AM, W. Martin Borgert wrote:
> I try to install Jessie with a soft RAID6 of four disks, 1 TB each.
> The idea is to use the complete disk for RAID and then only on top
> separate swap and root.
>
> The installation worked fine on one machine, but for some reason,
> grub does no
W. Martin Borgert a écrit :
>
> I try to install Jessie with a soft RAID6 of four disks, 1 TB each.
> The idea is to use the complete disk for RAID and then only on top
> separate swap and root.
>
> The installation worked fine on one machine, but for some reason,
> grub does not install on the f
Hi,
I try to install Jessie with a soft RAID6 of four disks, 1 TB each.
The idea is to use the complete disk for RAID and then only on top
separate swap and root.
The installation worked fine on one machine, but for some reason,
grub does not install on the fourth disk. It turns out, that the
fou
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On Thu 07 Jan 2016 at 13:12:59 +, Brian wrote:
> Pass. 70-persistent-net.rules was generated on Jessie and carried over
> to testing. You would need a Jessie install on the same machine to
> investigate.
Perhaps not; one theory could be tested on Stretch.
Many WiFi devices require firmware.
Le 07/01/2016 16:43, David Christensen a écrit :
'lsblk' can tell you the relationship between kernel names (e.g. sda,
sda1, etc.) and mount points:
$ lsblk
not always. I just tested: lsblk only flag as swap the active swap partition
fdisk -l
gives all the necessary info
example:
De
Steve Matzura wrote:
> Sven: On Thu, 7 Jan 2016 08:29:46 +0100, you wrote:
>> /dev/sda5 to /dev/sda8 are logical partitions inside an extended
>> partition. The extended partition is /dev/sda2.
> How did you know that? sda6 isn't even a mounted filesystem--sda1, 5,
> 7 and 8 are the mounted file
On Thu, Jan 07, 2016 at 08:02:14AM -0600, John Hasler wrote:
> deloptes writes:
> > You've seen an "obese" coming out from McDonalds or similar with take
> > away bag full to the top? How do you feel? S/he is taking care of
> > what ... the money all we pay to the health care system for her/his
>
deloptes writes:
> You've seen an "obese" coming out from McDonalds or similar with take
> away bag full to the top? How do you feel? S/he is taking care of
> what ... the money all we pay to the health care system for her/his
> treatments?
Chris Bannister writes:
> I personally resent that.
Do
Sven:
On Thu, 7 Jan 2016 08:29:46 +0100, you wrote:
>/dev/sda5 to /dev/sda8 are logical partitions inside an extended
>partition. The extended partition is /dev/sda2.
How did you know that? sda6 isn't even a mounted filesystem--sda1, 5,
7 and 8 are the mounted filesystems for /, /tmp, /var, and
Le 07/01/2016 08:08, Steve Matzura a écrit :
I actually tried answering my own questions by looking at an other
running system to see how this is done, but the system is a different
df is not the right tool to lokk at partitions, simply use "sudo fdisk -l"
jdd
On Thu, Jan 07, 2016 at 01:07:13AM -0500, kamaraju kusumanchi wrote:
> >
> > http://www.debian.org/doc/manuals/debian-faq/ch-choosing
> >
> > I myself use stable, even thought when I used unstable (not even testing)
> > on armhf, I had almost zero problems.
> >
>
> This just made my day. I wro
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