For the sake of completeness, I seem to have solved it after some more
research and it turned out to be systemd, as following bug that was
reported for Centos7 seems to be applying to Debian Buster as well:
https://github.com/systemd/systemd/issues/9276
Luckily the workaround mentioned in:
https
On Wed, 8 Jul 2020 Zenaan Harkness wrote:
On Wed, Jul 08, 2020 at 02:59:20AM +, Ajith R wrote:
Hi David,
As a rule, send replies to the listserv address:
debian-user@lists.debian.org
2. In-Line replies, instead of Top-Posting
3. I apologise for being a Terrible Person
Hey! I tho
On Mi, 08 iul 20, 02:35:09, Andrew McGlashan wrote:
> On 8/7/20 2:11 am, Michael Stone wrote:
> >
> > The short answer is that there simply isn't a good reason to do this
> > on a modern system, and there is no volunteer to donate the enormous
> > amount of effort required to make
> > something
On Ma, 07 iul 20, 17:11:08, Borden Rhodes wrote:
> Not a direct answer to your question, but the etiquette on the lists
> is to use plain text only messages wrapped at 80 characters to
72 allows for several levels of quoting without re-wrapping ;)
> maximise compatibility with clients - I assume
Hi,
> > since I am not well educated about macvlan, ipvlan, I could not get the
> > networking working at all. I would like to avoid using
> > "systemd-networkd/systemd-resolvd" especially on the Buster host - using
> > those
> > it seems should make everything work automagically.
>
> If you rea
On Mi, 08 iul 20, 10:44:39, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
>
> - so try somewhere in the session startup apps - nope, courdn't
> figure it out at least
For Debian you want ~/.xsessionrc
Kind regards,
Andrei
--
http://wiki.debian.org/FAQsFromDebianUser
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
On Mi, 08 iul 20, 09:59:52, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:29:47AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> >
> > $HOME/bin is placed into the user's default PATH by Debian's ~/.profile
> > (the one in /etc/skel/.profile) if it exists at the time the ~/.profile
> > is read, if the ~/.pro
On Ma, 07 iul 20, 16:28:16, Gary Dale wrote:
>
> The package maintainers are who make packages stable, not the product
> developers.
Hmm...
> There is nothing to prevent a none-esr version of Firefox from making it
> into stable.
For the particular software named "Firefox" there is. It's Mozil
On 7/4/20 15:38, Tom Dial wrote:
> Greetings.
>
> While trying to fix a broken Thunderbird/Enigmail installation on my
> wife's Windows laptop, I found the cause to be a new feature in
> Thunderbird 78, installed recently without notice: that it will not
> support Enigmail. The new version also
On Wed, 8 Jul 2020 Ajith R wrote:
Hi David,
Debian conformant style looks like this instead:
Do I understand the style correctly now?
LOL. Probably not. Maybe I should have allowed your discovery of the
mailing list's quoting conventions to take its natural course.
It was maybe silly
On Mi, 08 iul 20, 02:52:02, Ajith R wrote:
>
> Do I understand the style correctly now?
Mostly. Think of it as "conversational" style, with the reply following
the portion of text it addresses.
Other text should be removed, unless it provides useful context (would
your message make sense if re
On Tue 07 Jul 2020 at 20:20:11 (-0400), Roberto C. Sánchez wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 08, 2020 at 09:59:52AM +1000, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> > On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:29:47AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > > On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 03:17:37PM +0100, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> > > > On Tue, Jul 07, 202
On Tue 07 Jul 2020 at 17:55:34 (-0400), Borden Rhodes wrote:
> >> It would help if you said which version of Debian you're using.
> >
> >And which boot parameter.
>
> Debian Bullseye. I want to add pci=nomsi to the boot parameters to
> troubleshoot a USB 3 issue.
>
> https://wiki.debian.org/Grub#
On Wed, Jul 08, 2020 at 02:59:20AM +, Ajith R wrote:
> Hi David,
>
> >>>
> As a rule, send replies to the listserv address:
>
> debian-user@lists.debian.org
>
> 2. In-Line replies, instead of Top-Posting
> 3. I apologise for being a Terrible Person
Hey! I thought I had a patent, trade
On Wed, 8 Jul 2020 Ajith R wrote:
Hi David,
As a rule, send replies to the listserv address:
debian-user@lists.debian.org
2. In-Line replies, instead of Top-Posting
3. I apologise for being a Terrible Person
I didn't pay attention to the fact that the from address in the
email was
Hi Zenaan,
I'm not sure if it's been asked or stated by you, but which desktop are you
using?
I am using KDE
Thanks,
ajith
Hi David,
>>>
As a rule, send replies to the listserv address:
debian-user@lists.debian.org
2. In-Line replies, instead of Top-Posting
3. I apologise for being a Terrible Person
>>>
I didn't pay attention to the fact that the from address in the email was yours
and not that of the list se
Hi David,
>>>
Debian conformant style looks like this instead:
>>>
Do I understand the style correctly now? BTW, a query about how the original
message is quoted with '<'. Is it done by hand or does any email clients do it
automatically? Is it necessary that each line s marked with '<'? Or
l0f...@tuta.io wrote:
> Hi,
>
> 7 juil. 2020 à 09:23 de v...@sibptus.ru:
>
> > After reading your replies and the Debian security advisories, I made up
> > my mind that I probably just want to now if new versions of packages are
> > available in the repos. Perhaps it's the best thing I can do abo
On Wed, 8 Jul 2020 davidson wrote:
On Tue, 7 Jul 2020 Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Lu, 06 iul 20, 21:41:11, Andy Smith wrote:
I still wouldn't use OP's system for anything except curiosity or
maybe propping a door open.
That's probably the only use for which it is better than a Raspberry
Pi (or
On Fri, 3 Jul 2020 Davide Lombardo wrote:
Good evening Debian User, I have found an old PC with these specs:
CPU: Pentium III 700 Mhz;
DRAM: 64 MB SDDR
GPU: RIVA TNT-2
HARDISK: 10 GB
FLOPPY DISK DRIVE
MODEM 56K
In the receipt is written 3,000 Lire (1,500) Euro of today...
Do you think I can insta
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:27:55AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:07:35AM -0400, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> > Running up-to-date Buster here, amd64:
> > Linux debian.localdomain 4.19.0-8-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 4.19.98-1+deb10u1
> > (2020-04-27) x86_64 GNU/Linux
> >
> > I have mo
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:07:35AM -0400, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> Sorry to be all over the court here. I am an older um gentleman, and I am on a
I take it an "um gentleman" means "übér mènsche" :)
That sounds rather awesome actually...
> --
> A test of right and wrong must be the means, one wo
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:16:21AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> Gods, I am so tired of this question and having to repeat my demands
> for BASIC information over and over.
>
> Here are some resources for those of you who refuse to reveal any of
> the necessary background information to get answe
On Tue, 7 Jul 2020 Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Lu, 06 iul 20, 21:41:11, Andy Smith wrote:
I still wouldn't use OP's system for anything except curiosity or
maybe propping a door open.
That's probably the only use for which it is better than a Raspberry
Pi (or equivalent) ;)
Isn't OP's system l
On Wed, 8 Jul 2020 Zenaan Harkness wrote:
I'm not sure if it's been asked or stated by you, but which desktop
are you using?
Elsewhere in the thread,
https://lists.debian.org/msgid-search/885539452.3315628.1594115314...@mail.yahoo.com
OP mentions using Konsole and Kate, to test changes ma
On Wed, Jul 08, 2020 at 09:59:52AM +1000, Zenaan Harkness wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:29:47AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 03:17:37PM +0100, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> > > On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 04:14:16PM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> > > > cd ~/bin
> > > > ln -
On 7/7/20 1:26 pm, Keith bainbridge wrote:
On 7/7/20 8:20 am, Dan Ritter wrote:
Gary Dale wrote:
This is a wish-list feature but I'm running Debian/Bullseye and the only
version of Firefox is the ESR one. It's stable but it has display
bugs that
I'd like to if they are fixed in a newer versio
Ahh, asked too soon. Thanks Greg.
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:16:21AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 09:57:34AM -0400, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> > The Subject line is the problem
>
> Yeah. The Subject: line reveals the problem: you believe that PATH is
> set primarily by
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:29:47AM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 03:17:37PM +0100, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> > On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 04:14:16PM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> > > cd ~/bin
> > > ln -s ../opt/something/bin/something
> >
> > Not in the default PATH either.
>
On Wed 08 Jul 2020 at 02:35:09 (+1000), Andrew McGlashan wrote:
> On 8/7/20 2:11 am, Michael Stone wrote:
> > On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:45:17AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> >> On Wed 08 Jul 2020 at 00:41:12 (+1000), Andrew McGlashan wrote:
> >>> On 2/11/14 8:58 am, Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
> >>>
On Mon, Jul 06, 2020 at 10:57:05PM +0200, Jakob Miksch wrote:
> Hello everybody,
>
> I am running Debian "Sid" on a desktop PC with the "AMD ATI FirePro W5100"
> graphics card. When I connect a second monitor, Debian recognizes it but the
> monitor stays black. I can even move windows on it, but I
I'm not sure if it's been asked or stated by you, but which desktop are you
using? If you're new to Debian, perhaps just the default.
I am using XFCE and in the menu:
Applications → Settings → Keyboard
there are three tabs "Behaviour", "Application Shortcuts" and "Layout".
Under the "Layou
Hi Didier,
6 juil. 2020 à 23:42 de didier.gau...@gmail.com:
> man -s7 apparmor seems to indicate (DEBUGGING section) that for the DENY
> messages to appear, you have to "Turn off deny audit quieting" and for the
> ALLOW messages to appear you have to "Force audit mode"
>
Thanks for having check
>> It would help if you said which version of Debian you're using.
>
>And which boot parameter.
Debian Bullseye. I want to add pci=nomsi to the boot parameters to
troubleshoot a USB 3 issue.
https://wiki.debian.org/Grub#Configuring_GRUB_v2 says that
/etc/default/grub ought to exist, if it doesn't
On Tue, 7 Jul 2020 davidson wrote:
On Tue, 7 Jul 2020 Gary Dale wrote:
On 2020-07-07 09:57, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 09:45:56AM -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
I did install it and it is a single package. It runs fine in
parallel with the esr release. Hopefully the maintainers will
Not a direct answer to your question, but the etiquette on the lists
is to use plain text only messages wrapped at 80 characters to
maximise compatibility with clients - I assume because the list
forwards the messages using text-only headers.
I get digests. Even though I'm reading on modern e-mail
> So far the OP hasn't provided any information on what network management
> tool is in use, we can only guess.
Fair comment. I just assumed that everybody uses Network Manager these
days. I travel with my laptop to different WiFi networks, and I never
did learn any other form of WiFi setup. For t
On Tue 07 Jul 2020 at 20:39:05 (+0100), Joe wrote:
> Yes, my bank occasionally becomes inaccessible to FF, though not
> usually for more than about a week, when a cluebat has been wielded. I
> switch to Midori until it is fixed. It's a more limited browser, but it
> usually seems to handle sites th
Hi,
7 juil. 2020 à 09:23 de v...@sibptus.ru:
> After reading your replies and the Debian security advisories, I made up
> my mind that I probably just want to now if new versions of packages are
> available in the repos. Perhaps it's the best thing I can do about
> vulnerabilities.
>
> So I wrot
On Tue, 7 Jul 2020 Gary Dale wrote:
On 2020-07-07 09:57, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 09:45:56AM -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
I did install it and it is a single package. It runs fine in
parallel with the esr release. Hopefully the maintainers will
continue the practice of having fir
Borden Rhodes schreef op 2020-07-07 20:43:
I know this is an amateur question, but I want to make sure that I do
it correctly the first time. I want to add a boot parameter, so what
file do I edit/create to do so?
My computer doesn't have a /etc/default/grub file. I can't tell you
why. I didn't
Gary Dale wrote:
> There is nothing to prevent a none-esr version of Firefox from making it
> into stable. The maintainers just need to install the bug fix patches
> created to fix the bugs in that particular version. This is exactly what
> they do when significant bugs are found in the stable ver
Hi,
Please tell us the output of:
dpkg -l | grep -i grub
Best regards,
l0f4r0
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 04:28:16PM -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
> There is nothing to prevent a none-esr version of Firefox from making it
> into stable.
There are several things I can think of. One of them is "common sense".
Another one is "Debian policy".
But you can't hear anything that violates y
On 2020-07-07 09:57, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 09:45:56AM -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
I did install it and it is a single package. It runs fine in parallel with
the esr release. Hopefully the maintainers will continue the practice of
having firefox and firefox_esr available and br
I got this installed since debian has no foldingathome package.
It may work but is very slow when nix-env -qa is run even to present the
first package.
If I were working I wouldn't have any time for this package so it will be
interesting to see if it works at all. I managed to get enough drivers
i
On Tue 07 Jul 2020 at 15:14:33 -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 02:43:15PM -0400, Borden Rhodes wrote:
> > My computer doesn't have a /etc/default/grub file. I can't tell you
> > why. I didn't intentionally delete it. I have a bunch of configuration
> > files in /etc/grub.d ,
On Tue, 7 Jul 2020 22:10:54 +0300
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Ma, 07 iul 20, 09:26:58, Peter Ehlert wrote:
> >
> > I had that conversation with the IT goofball for my bank (credit
> > union) last
> > Monday and Tuesday when they "updated" their crapware and blocked
> > me.
> >
> > it was far fr
On Ma, 07 iul 20, 10:07:35, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> Running up-to-date Buster here, amd64:
> Linux debian.localdomain 4.19.0-8-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 4.19.98-1+deb10u1
> (2020-04-27) x86_64 GNU/Linux
>
> I have moved to a display manager (wmd), so is my xrdb ~/.Xresources line
> (xrdb ~/.Xresources) i
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 02:43:15PM -0400, Borden Rhodes wrote:
> My computer doesn't have a /etc/default/grub file. I can't tell you
> why. I didn't intentionally delete it. I have a bunch of configuration
> files in /etc/grub.d , but I don't want to touch any of them because I
> don't know what pu
On Ma, 07 iul 20, 09:26:58, Peter Ehlert wrote:
>
> I had that conversation with the IT goofball for my bank (credit
> union) last
> Monday and Tuesday when they "updated" their crapware and blocked me.
>
> it was far from painless but a couple links to the security statements in
> the Debian Wi
Due to the high volume of messages in this mailing list, I prefer to
read it via the newsgroup linux.debian.user using slrn. This works
well for the most part. However, some messages (e.g. ones from
Matthew Campbell) are MIME-encoded. I see appropriate headers:
Content-Type: text/plain; charse
I know this is an amateur question, but I want to make sure that I do
it correctly the first time. I want to add a boot parameter, so what
file do I edit/create to do so?
My computer doesn't have a /etc/default/grub file. I can't tell you
why. I didn't intentionally delete it. I have a bunch of co
On Lu, 06 iul 20, 19:44:06, Matthew Campbell wrote:
> I wouldn't recommend using ifconfig to enable or disable your second
> network card. It is somewhat deprecated. Try using ifup and ifdown.
Apples and... apple pie?
ifupdown is a network management tool, relying on other low level tools
to do
On Lu, 06 iul 20, 21:41:11, Andy Smith wrote:
>
> I still wouldn't use OP's system for anything except curiosity or
> maybe propping a door open.
That's probably the only use for which it is better than a Raspberry Pi
(or equivalent) ;)
Kind regards,
Andrei
--
http://wiki.debian.org/FAQsFromDe
Look at
https://backports.debian.org/
Note that for Firefox you need to go to
https://mozilla.debian.net/
--
John Hasler
jhas...@newsguy.com
Elmwood, WI USA
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 01:25:05PM -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
> And the 'deb' line in sources.list for stretches backports is?
https://www.google.com/search?q=debian%20backports%20stretch
https://backports.debian.org/Instructions/
Once you find the instructions for buster, just replace "buster"
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA512
hexpeek: a hex editor for huge files
Occasionally I need to work with huge binary files. Over the years I've
tried many different tools and never found one that was exactly what I
wanted. In my experience most hex editors either (1) do not work wel
On Tuesday 07 July 2020 12:32:39 John Hasler wrote:
> Gene writes:
> > I'd tend to look at it like this: If the banks IT people think its a
> > big enough risk to use the old version, and demands the new one even
> > before the paint is dry, then it must be pretty serious and the
> > distros shoul
On Tuesday 07 July 2020 12:26:58 Peter Ehlert wrote:
> On 7/7/20 9:02 AM, Gene Heskett wrote:
> > On Tuesday 07 July 2020 11:32:04 David Wright wrote:
> >> On Tue 07 Jul 2020 at 10:06:08 (-0400), rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> >>> On Tuesday, July 07, 2020 09:57:54 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> If y
Here the complete grep cdrom /var/log/syslog:
Jul 7 10:48:44 bilbo automount[31697]: key "cdrom" not found in map
source(s).
Jul 7 11:35:04 bilbo automount[31697]: key "cdrom" not found in map
source(s).
Jul 7 11:39:20 bilbo automount[31697]: key "cdrom" not found in map
source(s).
Jul 7 11:40
Hi,
On 8/7/20 2:11 am, Michael Stone wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:45:17AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
>> On Wed 08 Jul 2020 at 00:41:12 (+1000), Andrew McGlashan wrote:
>>> On 2/11/14 8:58 am, Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
>>> > * David Baron [2014-11-01 19:13 +0200]:
>>> >> On Friday 31 Octobe
On 7/7/20 9:02 AM, Gene Heskett wrote:
On Tuesday 07 July 2020 11:32:04 David Wright wrote:
On Tue 07 Jul 2020 at 10:06:08 (-0400), rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
On Tuesday, July 07, 2020 09:57:54 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
If you are the kind of person who MUST HAVE THE LATEST THING, then
Debian
Gene writes:
> I'd tend to look at it like this: If the banks IT people think its a big
> enough risk to use the old version, and demands the new one even before
> the paint is dry, then it must be pretty serious and the distros should
> turn up the heat to get it out into the users hands asap.
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:45:17AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 08 Jul 2020 at 00:41:12 (+1000), Andrew McGlashan wrote:
On 2/11/14 8:58 am, Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
> * David Baron [2014-11-01 19:13 +0200]:
>> On Friday 31 October 2014 13:08:27 Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
>
> [...]
>
>>> I
On 7/7/2020 3:13 PM, Didar Hossain wrote:
Hi,
TL;DR
How to get systemd-nspawn containers networking so that they can talk to each
other, the host and the internet inside a Buster VM? VirtualBox on Windows 10
which has internet connectivity via a wireless interface.
I am running a Buster VM wi
On Wed 08 Jul 2020 at 00:41:12 (+1000), Andrew McGlashan wrote:
> On 2/11/14 8:58 am, Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
> > * David Baron [2014-11-01 19:13 +0200]:
> >> On Friday 31 October 2014 13:08:27 Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
> >
> > [...]
> >
> >>> It's your decision. MODULES=most should be okay. B
On Tuesday 07 July 2020 11:32:04 David Wright wrote:
> On Tue 07 Jul 2020 at 10:06:08 (-0400), rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > On Tuesday, July 07, 2020 09:57:54 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > > If you are the kind of person who MUST HAVE THE LATEST THING, then
> > > Debian is not meant for you.
> >
>
rhkramer writes:
> but I will say one thing, you might run testing if your bank insists
> you have the latest thing (browser).
Get a browser from Backports. Or use Chromium. You're probably
allowing Google full access anyway.
--
John Hasler
jhas...@newsguy.com
Elmwood, WI USA
On Tue 07 Jul 2020 at 10:06:08 (-0400), rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Tuesday, July 07, 2020 09:57:54 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > If you are the kind of person who MUST HAVE THE LATEST THING, then
> > Debian is not meant for you.
>
> Wow, not sure what sparked that response,
Probably the fact th
Hi,
From the above, it sounds to me that you are saying you would like a
*single* keypress to result in entry of the above geminate form. Do I
understand you correctly?Yes, perfectly.
And if so, are you setting aside the question of how to enter the
simple glyph
ങ (U+0D19)
as an ex
Hi,
I test it by typing the letter from the keyboard (using shift / without it
based on the layout specification) from the same terminal (Konsole) that i use
setxkbmap to change to my layout. Then I run another terminal using the desktop
link and try tying it. Then I try in Kate. And finally I
On Mon 06 Jul 2020 at 22:10:10 (-0700), Will Mengarini wrote:
> TL;DR: How can I use *one* query (web or otherwise)
> to retrieve *all* my recently-bounced debian-user mail,
> or a list of URLs by which they can be retrieved?
Would subscribing to the digest (as well) help? I haven't checked what
a
On 2/11/14 8:58 am, Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
> * David Baron [2014-11-01 19:13 +0200]:
>
>> On Friday 31 October 2014 13:08:27 Elimar Riesebieter wrote:
>
> [...]
>
>>> It's your decision. MODULES=most should be okay. BUSYBOX=y is
>>> essential.
>>
>> This is what the install gave me. I hav
"Will Mengarini" writes:
> TL;DR: How can I use *one* query (web or otherwise)
> to retrieve *all* my recently-bounced debian-user mail,
> or a list of URLs by which they can be retrieved?
>
I don't know if this would be too radical a change, but you can also use
a news reader to access the mail
Jonathan Dowland (12020-07-07):
> Not in the default PATH either.
No, but probably one of the first things anybody who has non-elementary
use will have configured anyway.
Regards,
--
Nicolas George
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 03:17:37PM +0100, Jonathan Dowland wrote:
> On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 04:14:16PM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> > cd ~/bin
> > ln -s ../opt/something/bin/something
>
> Not in the default PATH either.
$HOME/bin is placed into the user's default PATH by Debian's ~/.profile
(th
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:07:35AM -0400, Bob Bernstein wrote:
> Running up-to-date Buster here, amd64:
> Linux debian.localdomain 4.19.0-8-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 4.19.98-1+deb10u1
> (2020-04-27) x86_64 GNU/Linux
>
> I have moved to a display manager (wmd), so is my xrdb ~/.Xresources line
> (xrdb ~/
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 10:06:08AM -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Tuesday, July 07, 2020 09:57:54 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > If you are the kind of person who MUST HAVE THE LATEST THING, then
> > Debian is not meant for you.
>
> Wow, not sure what sparked that response, but I will say one
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 04:14:16PM +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
cd ~/bin
ln -s ../opt/something/bin/something
Not in the default PATH either.
--
👱🏻 Jonathan Dowland
✎j...@debian.org
🔗 https://jmtd.net
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 09:57:34AM -0400, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> The Subject line is the problem
Yeah. The Subject: line reveals the problem: you believe that PATH is
set primarily by your shell.
It's not. It's set primarily by your method of login, and then by your
session tools, whether t
Roberto C. Sánchez (12020-07-07):
> You should add the export command to ~/.bashrc (for it to only be in
> effect for that user)
Except ~/.bashrc is only sourced for interactive shells, it will not be
run when applications are executed by a GUI, for example.
(Also, for some reason, the bash autho
Running up-to-date Buster here, amd64:
Linux debian.localdomain 4.19.0-8-amd64 #1 SMP Debian
4.19.98-1+deb10u1 (2020-04-27) x86_64 GNU/Linux
I have moved to a display manager (wmd), so is my xrdb
~/.Xresources line (xrdb ~/.Xresources) in .xinitrc being called
into the loop, so to speak?
Or
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 09:57:34AM -0400, Stephen P. Molnar wrote:
> The Subject line is the problem with my Debian Buster platform. Now from
> Google I see that there has been a change in the way Debian handles this
> problem.
>
I'm not sure what change you are referring to, but from what you
des
On Tuesday, July 07, 2020 09:57:54 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> If you are the kind of person who MUST HAVE THE LATEST THING, then
> Debian is not meant for you.
Wow, not sure what sparked that response, but I will say one thing, you might
run testing if your bank insists you have the latest thing (
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 09:45:56AM -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
> I did install it and it is a single package. It runs fine in parallel with
> the esr release. Hopefully the maintainers will continue the practice of
> having firefox and firefox_esr available and bring it to Testing.
You don't understan
The Subject line is the problem with my Debian Buster platform. Now from
Google I see that there has been a change in the way Debian handles this
problem.
My user path statement is:
comp@AbNormal:~$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/local/games:/usr/games
Now I have a number of app
On 2020-07-07 02:55, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Lu, 06 iul 20, 23:33:46, Gary Dale wrote:
On 2020-07-06 20:00, Bob Weber wrote:
Firefox 78 is in unstable. I run testing but I occasionally pick up
things in unstable if they don't mess up testing like firefox. I have
used it for a while mainly wa
Hi,
TL;DR
How to get systemd-nspawn containers networking so that they can talk to each
other, the host and the internet inside a Buster VM? VirtualBox on Windows 10
which has internet connectivity via a wireless interface.
I am running a Buster VM with hand picked minimal packages, networking
On Tue, Jul 07, 2020 at 09:44:38AM +, Ajith R wrote:
> I copied one line from your keyboard configuration file and my keyboard file
> looks like this now :# KEYBOARD CONFIGURATION FILE
>
> XKBMODEL="pc105"
> XKBLAYOUT="in"
> XKBVARIANT="eng"
> XKBOPTIONS="lv3:ralt_switch,compose:caps,termina
Peter Ehlert wrote:
> running a HP z820 workstation, Buster Mate.
> onboard sound does not cut it.
>
> I need more volume, and 5.1 stereo would be great
What are you planning on connecting the 5.1 audio to?
Yes, this is relevant.
-dsr-
Hi David,
Thanks for your reply.I presume XCompose(3) is a typo for 5, the file
format section.
There you will find that you don't use the XK_ prefix here.
I was looking at XCompose(3). Thanks for pointing out the mistake.
As I understand .XCompose, it is designed for "compositing",
On Mon, Jul 06, 2020 at 11:26:32PM -0400, Gary Dale wrote:
[...]
> >You're not disallowed from installing Firefox from Mozilla, it's
> >just not packaged because [... stable ...]
> Not disallowed but not exactly allowed.
By whom?
Cheers
-- t
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Victor Sudakov wrote:
>
> There is something about debsecan I don't understand, can you please clarify
> for me?
After reading your replies and the Debian security advisories, I made up
my mind that I probably just want to now if new versions of packages are
available in the repos. Perhaps it's
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On 06/07/2020 23:27, deloptes wrote:
> May be look deeper in documentation - I recall asking few years ago and was
> answered that now it would cache whatever it can and will free on demand.
> swap is done only if memory is really insufficient.
>
> I don't recall when or where I asked read this
>
On Lu, 06 iul 20, 15:52:32, Peter Ehlert wrote:
> running a HP z820 workstation, Buster Mate.
> onboard sound does not cut it.
>
> I need more volume, and 5.1 stereo would be great
>
> I have a couple free PCIe slots
>
> What sage advice can I get here?
>
> Internal vs USB
> Brand?
> budget is
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