On Sun, Apr 2, 2017 at 1:14 PM, Dan Hitt wrote:
> /etc/debian_version says '9.0' for me, and i think it is called
> 'stretch' (it is not in the list of debian versions in the wikipedia,
> which stops at 8, 'jessie').
FWIW, you can get this information even without going to wikipedia.
% sudo apt
On 04/07/2017 08:19 PM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
[snip]
Why no one looks at their project and sees the people
involved when making a statistic up for the amount of dissatisfied
systemd users I don't know.
That's an argument for another day.
Back when the systemd FLAME WAR was prominent, I follo
On Fri, 7 Apr 2017 14:27:40 -0400 David Niklas wrote:
> On Mon, 13 Mar 2017 12:30:11 -0700
> Patrick Bartek wrote:
> > The Linux mantra has always been "choice," plethoras of choices. So
> > why at install time, is there no choice for the init system? You
> > get what the developers decide. Ye
On Fri, 7 Apr 2017 14:27:40 -0400
David Niklas wrote:
> On Mon, 13 Mar 2017 12:30:11 -0700
> Patrick Bartek wrote:
> > The Linux mantra has always been "choice," plethoras of choices. So
> > why at install time, is there no choice for the init system? You get
> > what the developers decide. Ye
On Fri, Apr 7, 2017 at 12:31 PM, David Niklas wrote:
> As someone who is curious about PXE, did you ever figure this out?
>
>
Unfortunately I was not able to spend too much time on this and have not
yet figured out how to set UEFI PXE booting options like where to look for
files. If I figure this
On Wed, 15 Mar 2017 13:53:08 -0600
Joshua Schaeffer wrote:
> Ahoy,
>
> I've been learning how to setup PXE booting to install an OS image on a
> 100% UEFI system (CSM completely disabled). I use Debian 8 as my DHCP
> server (ISC DHCP) and as my TFTP server (tftpd-hpa). I also use the
> Debian net
On Mon, 13 Mar 2017 12:30:11 -0700
Patrick Bartek wrote:
> The Linux mantra has always been "choice," plethoras of choices. So why
> at install time, is there no choice for the init system? You get what
> the developers decide. Yes, you can install a new one -- I've done it
> and it works -- but
Le 06/04/2017 à 13:10, Nathanael Schweers a écrit :
Rick Thomas writes:
You need an un-encrypted /boot partition to hold the kernel and
initrd, of course…
This is not true, although I also thought it to be the case.
Grub2 can handle LUKS, so it is possible to encrypt the whole disk.
Actua
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Would you be interested in Targeted *Blue Coat* leads? We are happy to
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Hi F-,
have a look at /etc/default/cryptdisks
> # Mountpoints to mount, before cryptsetup is invoked at initscripts. Takes
> # mountpoins which are configured in /etc/fstab as arguments. Separate
> # mountpoints by space.
> # This is useful for keyfiles on removable media. Default is unset.
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