Hi,
>Problem: Neither Win 10 OS has been able to successfully update since
>about last April. I have tried all the things I have found in an
>Internet search, including making sure the Win partition is marked
>boot-able, and downloading and running the Win 10 trouble shooter--all
>to no avail.
Hi.
On Thu, Jan 31, 2019 at 09:50:14PM -0800, X200 wrote:
> fingerprint enrolling passes successfully with super user, but does not ask
> to swipe finger when "su" command executed.
Do you have "libpam-fprintd" installed?
What are the contents of "/etc/pam.d/common-auth"?
Reco
Tom Browder composed on 2019-01-31 16:02 (UTC-0600):
> I have a new Win 10 Pro installation (from an MS DVD) on a PC upon
> which I then installed Deb 9 as a second OS dual-bootable. Boot
> selection works fine with either OS.
> I have an old Win 10 installation (upgraded from the original Win 7
fingerprint enrolling passes successfully with super user, but does not
ask to swipe finger when "su" command executed.
debian buster 4.19
thinkpad X200
amd64
On Fri, 1 Feb 2019 at 05:50, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>
> Le 31/01/2019 à 02:15, David a écrit :
> >
> > A *loop* device is a *filesystem* technique to make a file
> > accessible as a block device.
>
> I do not think that loop devices have anything to do with filesystems.
> The losetup(8) manpage st
On Thu, Jan 31, 2019 at 4:21 AM Joe wrote:
> ... NM is a Gnome application. ...
>
That's funny: Last year, I installed Kubuntu (not Debian, but same Package
Manager) and, even though no Gnome, Network Manager was installed.
--
> Joe
>
Kenneth Parker
On Thu 31 Jan 2019 at 15:01:49 (-0500), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > > mine runs clear && reset rather than clear_console.
> > > Does that make any difference?
> >
> > Thank you for looking at this. I tried 'clear && reset' on unstable and
> > have no complaints. Back to tty2 on after logging in
On Wed 30 Jan 2019 at 00:30:40 (-0500), Albretch Mueller wrote:
> use case:
>
> Say, you have a computer preinstalled with Windows, on which you
> would like to install a Debian Linux base. You would:
>
> 1) resize the larger, Windows proper (/dev/sda3) partition
Yes, the largest partition (/
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
Also in reply to:
20190131092106.2a6b3...@jresid.jretrading.com
q2ugqc$4kcj$1...@blaine.gmane.org
20190131115051.3276c...@jresid.jretrading.com
On 2019-01-31 09:21 + "Joe" wrote:
>By 'removing' Cinnamon, do you mean that you uninstalled it?
>I
On 1/31/2019 2:02 PM, Tom Browder wrote:
Problem: Neither Win 10 OS has been able to successfully update since
about last April. I have tried all the things I have found in an
Internet search, including making sure the Win partition is marked
boot-able, and downloading and running the Win 10 trou
I have a new Win 10 Pro installation (from an MS DVD) on a PC upon
which I then installed Deb 9 as a second OS dual-bootable. Boot
selection works fine with either OS.
I have an old Win 10 installation (upgraded from the original Win 7)
on a laptop upon which I originally installed Deb 7 dual-boo
On Tue 29 Jan 2019 at 23:36:27 (-0500), Albretch Mueller wrote:
> On 1/29/19, David Wright wrote:
> > However, the second method uses manual partitioning of the disks with
> > gdisk, so I don't see why sda should not contain a(nother) FAT
> > partition which is ignored.
>
> I don't see why eithe
> > mine runs clear && reset rather than clear_console.
> > Does that make any difference?
>
> Thank you for looking at this. I tried 'clear && reset' on unstable and
> have no complaints. Back to tty2 on after logging in and out and mouse
> and keyboard normal operation on X in tty1.
>
> S
Hi,
Richard Owlett wrote:
> > > What bugs me is Gparted [though it does not output text] reports
> > > used/unused space on each partition/file system.
i wrote:
> > [...] Gparted runs external programs, which a simple
> > shell script could do too.
David Wright wrote:
> So going back to the OP,
On Thu 31 Jan 2019 at 12:51:05 -0600, David Wright wrote:
> On Thu 31 Jan 2019 at 18:36:58 (+), Brian wrote:
> > On Thu 31 Jan 2019 at 12:56:59 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> >
> > > tty1 became special with the introduction of systemd. Do not use tty1
> > > for X. Instead use tty2 and/or tty3 a
On Thu 31 Jan 2019 at 15:54:57 (+0100), Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Richard Owlett wrote:
> > Though I not a C programmer, their organization leads to answers for my
> > questions [even a few I hadn't asked].
>
> It's C++ in this case. (bleh ...)
>
> But what i meant is that Gparted runs external pro
On Thu 31 Jan 2019 at 18:36:58 (+), Brian wrote:
> On Thu 31 Jan 2019 at 12:56:59 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
>
> > tty1 became special with the introduction of systemd. Do not use tty1
> > for X. Instead use tty2 and/or tty3 and/or tty4 and/or tty5 and/or
> > tty6. Buster may have this fixed, a
Le 31/01/2019 à 02:15, David a écrit :
A *loop* device is a *filesystem* technique to make a file
accessible as a block device.
I do not think that loop devices have anything to do with filesystems.
The losetup(8) manpage states :
losetup is used to associate loop devices with regula
On Thu 31 Jan 2019 at 12:56:59 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> tty1 became special with the introduction of systemd. Do not use tty1
> for X. Instead use tty2 and/or tty3 and/or tty4 and/or tty5 and/or
> tty6. Buster may have this fixed, as upstream has apparently fixed it
> 3 months ago.
The behavio
Holger Herrlich composed on 2019-01-31 15:22 (UTC+0100):
> On Wed, 30 Jan 2019 14:57:59 -0500 Felix Miata wrote:
>> or what gfx,
> ??
Common shorthand for *graphics* hardware. AMD/ATI? Intel? NVidia? Matrox? Other?
Model? e.g.
# inxi -GxxSM
System:Host: big31 Kernel: 4.9.0-8-amd64 x86_64 b
Hi,
Richard Owlett wrote:
> Though I not a C programmer, their organization leads to answers for my
> questions [even a few I hadn't asked].
It's C++ in this case. (bleh ...)
But what i meant is that Gparted runs external programs, which a simple
shell script could do too.
https://github.com/GN
systemd is very aware the state:
loginctl list-sessions
SESSIONUID USER SEAT TTY
1 1000 addams seat0/dev/tty1
25 1000 addams seat0/dev/tty2
2 sessions listed.
On Wed, 30 Jan 2019 20:25:59 +
Brian wrote:
> On Wed 30 Jan 2019 at 14:57:59 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
>
> > Brian composed on 2019-01-30 19:12 (UTC):
> >
> > > On Wed 30 Jan 2019 at 13:48:17 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> >
> > >> hoh...@arcor.de composed on 2019-01-30 18:38 (UTC+0
On Wed, 30 Jan 2019 14:57:59 -0500
Felix Miata wrote:
> Brian composed on 2019-01-30 19:12 (UTC):
>
> > On Wed 30 Jan 2019 at 13:48:17 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
>
> >> hoh...@arcor.de composed on 2019-01-30 18:38 (UTC+0100):
>
> >> > I logged in (to tty1)
> >> > started X (startx)
> >>
On Wed, 30 Jan 2019 20:33:44 +
Brian wrote:
> On Wed 30 Jan 2019 at 13:54:14 -0600, David Wright wrote:
>
> > On Wed 30 Jan 2019 at 19:12:42 (+), Brian wrote:
> > > On Wed 30 Jan 2019 at 13:48:17 -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> > > > hoh...@arcor.de composed on 2019-01-30 18:38 (UTC+
On 01/30/2019 10:04 AM, Joe wrote:
[snip]
I suspect that to get exactly what you want, you will need to write a
script that uses basic tools, checking for mounted filesystems and then
temporarily mounting as necessary.
Yes ;}
But before this thread I didn't have needed background.
By the wa
On 01/29/2019 10:16 AM, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Hi,
Richard Owlett wrote:
Gparted displays the desired data in the GUI, but I see no way to get that
information as a text stream.
Well, it seems to inquire the info by filesystem specific means.
The method is obviously named set_used_sectors(). S
On Wed, 30 Jan 2019 19:23:43 +0100
deloptes wrote:
> hoh...@arcor.de wrote:
>
> > I finally want to know how to separate the sessions.
>
> why don't you use a window manager. Most of them offer the option to
> log in as different user, which will open a new session on the next
> console.
On Thu, 31 Jan 2019 10:57:42 +0100
deloptes wrote:
> Joe wrote:
>
> > NM is a Gnome application.
>
> Are you sure? IMO it is not a gnome only tool although it is
> developed by gnome
> https://developer.gnome.org/NetworkManager/stable/NetworkManager.html
>
That's what I mean. It was develop
Joe wrote:
> NM is a Gnome application.
Are you sure? IMO it is not a gnome only tool although it is developed by
gnome
https://developer.gnome.org/NetworkManager/stable/NetworkManager.html
Description-en: network management framework (daemon and userspace tools)
NetworkManager is a system netw
On Thu, 31 Jan 2019 07:21:10 +
"Harley A.W. Lorenzo" wrote:
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA512
>
> After digging around more, the service file isn't just the only thing
> gone, the entire package has been removed as well. Honestly, I have
> no idea what could have resulted i
On Thu, Jan 31, 2019 at 12:15:58PM +1100, David wrote:
> On Thu, 31 Jan 2019 at 02:52, wrote:
> >
> > [...]
> >
> >A plain regular file can be made available as a device
> >via the loopback driver
>
> I have a small addition to this excellent message.
>
> There is very widespread mixup o
32 matches
Mail list logo