On 11/13/22 23:15, DdB wrote:
Am 14.11.2022 um 07:16 schrieb Anssi Saari:
Charles Curley writes:
On Sun, 13 Nov 2022 16:32:51 +0100
DdB wrote:
every backup contains loads of unnecessary language files, and i saw
them scroll by during rsync. So one day, i wanted to get rid of those.
You m
On 11/14/22 13:48, hw wrote:
On Fri, 2022-11-11 at 21:55 -0800, David Christensen wrote:
Lots of snapshots slows down commands that involve snapshots (e.g. 'zfs
list -r -t snapshot ...'). This means sysadmin tasks take longer when
the pool has more snapshots.
Hm, how long does it take? It
On Fri, Nov 11, 2022, 7:27 PM Gareth Evans wrote:
>
>
> On 11 Nov 2022, at 16:59, Vukovics Mihály wrote:
>
>
>
> Hi Gareth,
>
> dmesg is "clean", there disks are not shared in any way and there is no
> virtualization layer installed.
>
> Hello, but the message was from Nicholas :)
>
> Looking
On Tue 15 Nov 2022 at 05:17:33 (+0800), jeremy ardley wrote:
> On 15/11/22 00:22, Curt wrote:
> > On 2022-11-14, jeremy ardley wrote:
> > >
> > > Network Manager is terrible. Some of the instructions include you having
> > > to reboot your system to make chages take.
> > What "instructions" would
On debian, have you got a gpg2 executable? If so, that executable may be
more current and if so possibly work better.
Jude "There are four boxes to be used in
defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940)
.
On Mon, 14 Nov 2022, T
I am still trying to do a fully verified installation of debian-11.5.0.
gpg --verify SHA512SUMS.sign SHA512SUMS responded with DF98...BE9B
gpg --recv-keys DF98...BE9B responded key DF98...BE9B: new key but
contains no user ID - skipped.
Another source suggested gpg --key-server keyring.debian
hw writes:
On Fri, 2022-11-11 at 21:26 +0100, Linux-Fan wrote:
> hw writes:
>
> > On Thu, 2022-11-10 at 23:05 -0500, Michael Stone wrote:
> > > On Thu, Nov 10, 2022 at 06:55:27PM +0100, hw wrote:
> > > > On Thu, 2022-11-10 at 11:57 -0500, Michael Stone wrote:
> > > > > On Thu, Nov 10, 2022 at 05
On Fri, 2022-11-11 at 21:55 -0800, David Christensen wrote:
> [...]
> As with most filesystems, performance of ZFS drops dramatically as you
> approach 100% usage. So, you need a data destruction policy that keeps
> storage usage and performance at acceptable levels.
>
> Lots of snapshots slows
On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 08:44:54PM -, Curt wrote:
> On 2022-11-14, wrote:
> >
> >> https://gitlab.com/muttmua/mutt/-/issues/428
> >
> > Is there a non-javascript-ey way to look at those issues?
> >
>
>
> Mutt crashes with SIGSEGV when uid -variable is NULL in
> pgp_gpgme_extrace_keys().
>
On 14/11/22 22:34, hw wrote:
[...]
However, systemd-networkd works as well (and better) with
an easier configuration.
Hm, then why isn't it the default, and what's network manager for?
NetworkManager seems to be a RedHat baby and has some effort put into a
GUI. systemd-networkd has not go
On 15/11/22 00:22, Curt wrote:
On 2022-11-14, jeremy ardley wrote:
Network Manager is terrible. Some of the instructions include you having
to reboot your system to make chages take.
What "instructions" would those be, and of what provenance, that require a
system reboot rather than a resta
On 2022-11-14, wrote:
>
>> https://gitlab.com/muttmua/mutt/-/issues/428
>
> Is there a non-javascript-ey way to look at those issues?
>
Mutt crashes with SIGSEGV when uid -variable is NULL in
pgp_gpgme_extrace_keys().
Found in Mutt 2.0.5 (Debian 11 + 2.0.5-4.1+deb11u1).
Reproducible in:
2.1
On Fri, 2022-11-11 at 21:26 +0100, Linux-Fan wrote:
> hw writes:
>
> > On Thu, 2022-11-10 at 23:05 -0500, Michael Stone wrote:
> > > On Thu, Nov 10, 2022 at 06:55:27PM +0100, hw wrote:
> > > > On Thu, 2022-11-10 at 11:57 -0500, Michael Stone wrote:
> > > > > On Thu, Nov 10, 2022 at 05:34:32PM +010
> For some unknown reason, network configuration (wireless networks
> etc.) in NetworkManager includes the MAC address of the local NIC
> too, so you may need to fix those up after transfer.
This sucks, indeed. I can't understand why they do that (maybe as an
option, I could see occas
On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 08:40:47PM +0100, hw wrote:
Not really, it was just an SSD. Two of them were used as cache and they failed
was not surprising. It's really unfortunate that SSDs fail particulary fast
when used for purposes they can be particularly useful for.
If you buy hard drives and
> I used the MODULES=dep setting and got a reduction from 70mb to 20mb
> for each initramfs.
Wow, that's still about twice as large as what I get on my
amd64/armhf/686 systems (I typically get about 40MB for MODULES=most and
10-12MB for MODULES=dep).
The compression algorithm in use makes some di
On Fri, 2022-11-11 at 14:48 -0500, Michael Stone wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 11, 2022 at 07:15:07AM +0100, hw wrote:
> > There was no misdiagnosis. Have you ever had a failed SSD? They usually
> > just
> > disappear.
>
> Actually, they don't; that's a somewhat unusual failure mode.
What else happens?
hw writes:
On Fri, 2022-11-11 at 22:11 +0100, Linux-Fan wrote:
> hw writes:
> > On Thu, 2022-11-10 at 22:37 +0100, Linux-Fan wrote:
>
> [...]
>
> > > If you do not value the uptime making actual (even
> > > scheduled) copies of the data may be recommendable over
> > > using a RAID bec
Hi,
Has anybody had much success with it?
This is the closest thing that I've managed to find:
https://github.com/LinearTapeFileSystem/
Only Debian 10 version with no updates for almost 2 years :(
My tape drive is Quantum LTO8 HH SAS External and works pretty well with
WS 2019.
Regards,
A
[CC'ing Claudia per her own wish]
On Sun, Nov 13, 2022 at 04:34:30PM -, Curt wrote:
> On 2022-11-12, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> >
> > If that is successful, the next step would be to tell udev to stop
> > loading that module. But first steps first :)
> >
>
> There is an oddly analogous thread
On Sat, 2022-11-12 at 07:27 +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 11, 2022 at 07:22:19PM +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
>
> [...]
>
> > I think what hede was hinting at was that early SSDs had a (pretty)
> > limited number of write cycles [...]
>
> As was pointed out to me, the OP wasn't
On Sat, Nov 12, 2022 at 02:14:25PM +0100, Claudia Neumann wrote:
> Hi Tomas,
>
> mmh, may be it has something to do with cdc_acm.
[...]
Possibly. But if there is no module, there is no ttyACM0, and you need
that :-)
I am sorry I have to postpone things a bit. I'm flooded at the moment,
but migh
On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 05:46:25PM +0100, Sven Joachim wrote:
> On 2022-11-14 11:39 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>
> > If anyone figures out a way to make mutt NOT segfault when reading this
> > type of email, I'd love to hear it.
>
> Upgrading to 2.2.8 or later should do the trick. I can confirm
On Sat 12 Nov 2022 at 01:57:51 (-0500), Felix Miata wrote:
> # grep MODULES= /etc/initramfs-tools/initramfs.conf
> MODULES=dep
> # ls -Ggh /boot/initrd.img-[5,6]*
> -rw-r--r-- 1 6.8M May 8 2022 /boot/initrd.img-5.17.0-1-686
> -rw-r--r-- 1 31M Aug 2 03:06 /boot/initrd.img-5.18.0-3-686
> -rw-r--r
On Fri, 2022-11-11 at 17:05 +, Curt wrote:
> On 2022-11-11, wrote:
> >
> > I just contested that their failure rate is higher than that of HDDs.
> > This is something which was true in early days, but nowadays it seems
> > to be just a prejudice.
>
> If he prefers extrapolating his anecdota
On Mon 14 Nov 2022 at 11:39:11 (-0500), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 07:33:00PM +0300, Gökşin Akdeniz wrote:
> > 14.11.2022 15:26 tarihinde Anssi Saari yazdı:
> > >
> > > So does mutt try to check the PGP signature in Gökşin's message and
> > > crash due to that or some other iss
ottavio2006-usenet2...@yahoo.com wrote:
>I have an old Thinkpad on its last legs which I cannot shutdown (long
>story). Then I have a slightly better Thinkpad with similar hard
>drive. Debian is split into three partitions (root. home and swap)/
>
>I'll recreate a similar partitioning from a live u
On 2022-11-14 11:39 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> If anyone figures out a way to make mutt NOT segfault when reading this
> type of email, I'd love to hear it.
Upgrading to 2.2.8 or later should do the trick. I can confirm that
mutt 2.2.9-1 in unstable no longer segfaults displaying the message
On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 07:33:00PM +0300, Gökşin Akdeniz wrote:
>
>
> 14.11.2022 15:26 tarihinde Anssi Saari yazdı:
>
> >
> > So does mutt try to check the PGP signature in Gökşin's message and
> > crash due to that or some other issue?
> >
>
> I use Thunderbird for reading, composing,sending
On Mon 14 Nov 2022 at 14:53:34 (+), Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> I have an old Thinkpad on its last legs which I cannot shutdown (long
> story). Then I have a slightly better Thinkpad with similar hard
> drive. Debian is split into three partitions (root. home and swap)/
>
> I'll recreate a similar
14.11.2022 15:26 tarihinde Anssi Saari yazdı:
So does mutt try to check the PGP signature in Gökşin's message and
crash due to that or some other issue?
I use Thunderbird for reading, composing,sending e-mail and signing and
encrypting, decrypting e-mail messages.
Probably it is why mut
On 2022-11-14, jeremy ardley wrote:
>
>
> Network Manager is terrible. Some of the instructions include you having
> to reboot your system to make chages take.
What "instructions" would those be, and of what provenance, that require a
system reboot rather than a restart of networking to make cha
* On 2022 14 Nov 09:16 -0600, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
> I have an old Thinkpad on its last legs which I cannot shutdown (long
> story). Then I have a slightly better Thinkpad with similar hard
> drive. Debian is split into three partitions (root. home and swap)/
>
> I'll recreate a similar partition
On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 06:50:53AM -0800, Thomas Nyberg wrote:
> Thanks for the help! That worked well with bash (i.e. if I set both
> /etc/security/limits.conf and /etc/sysctl.conf, then `ulimit -aH` returns
> what you'd expect).
>
> However, I have a server process and when I check its limits by
On 11/14/22 06:53, Ottavio Caruso wrote:
I have an old Thinkpad on its last legs which I cannot shutdown (long
story). Then I have a slightly better Thinkpad with similar hard
drive. Debian is split into three partitions (root. home and swap)/
I'll recreate a similar partitioning from a live u
Hi Nicholas,
in longer term the load of the raid members are equal:
DSK | sde | busy 7% | | read 102017 | write
217744 | KiB/r 9 | KiB/w 6 | | MBr/s 0.0 |
MBw/s 0.0 | avq 2.60 | | avio 5.91 ms |
DSK | sdb | busy
> On 14 Nov 2022, at 15:15, Ottavio Caruso
> wrote:
>
> [..] copy the data on the new drive, reinstall grub and modify
> fstab.
>
> Will this work?
Depends on what kind of “copy” you make. You will need to keep ownership,
permissions and links intact. And possibly more.
I would install a
I have an old Thinkpad on its last legs which I cannot shutdown (long
story). Then I have a slightly better Thinkpad with similar hard
drive. Debian is split into three partitions (root. home and swap)/
I'll recreate a similar partitioning from a live usb on the newer
laptop, then I'll mount the r
> On 13 Nov 2022, at 23:06, Mike Kupfer wrote:
>
> Hi Stefan!
>
> Stefan Monnier wrote:
>
>> I use `MODULES=dep` and my kernel+initrd uses less than 20MB still so my
>> 250MB /boot partition is currently 21% full with 2 kernels installed.
>
> Ah, thanks for the tip. I'll give that a try,
Thanks for the help! That worked well with bash (i.e. if I set both
/etc/security/limits.conf and /etc/sysctl.conf, then `ulimit -aH`
returns what you'd expect).
However, I have a server process and when I check its limits by looking
at `/proc/$PID/limits`, the hard limit is not raised there.
On Mon, 2022-11-14 at 19:23 +0800, jeremy ardley wrote:
>
> On 14/11/22 19:14, hw wrote:
> > On Mon, 2022-11-14 at 07:50 +0800, jeremy ardley wrote:
> > >
> > > I decided to use systemd-networkd service and removed most of the stuff
> > > from /etc/network/interfaces
> > > [...]
> > Thanks! I co
On Sun, Nov 13, 2022 at 08:25:33PM -0800, Thomas Nyberg wrote:
> $ ulimit -Hn
> 1048576
> ```
>
> I would like to increase that
The hard limit you're seeing is capped by the sysctl fs.nr_open value.
If you want to increase the hard limit, you first have to increase the
sysctl value.
unicorn:~$ s
steve writes:
> Le 14-11-2022, à 08:58:02 +0100, to...@tuxteam.de a écrit :
>
>>On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 08:51:47AM +0100, Henning Follmann wrote:
>>
>>[...]
>>
>>> Mutt crashes trying to open this post (while opening gnupg).
>>> That's weird.
>>
>>Confirmed.
>
> Here too.
>
> mutt 2.2.7 (2022-08-
On Mon, 2022-11-14 at 12:28 +0100, stefano gozzi wrote:
> Please loot at this:
> https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-networking-3/intel-x540-t2-network-card-installed-but-only-at-100mbit-cant-change-or-improve-4175686736/
>
> It seems that you need a 8x pcie slot to work fine
Thanks, t
On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 4:21 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sun, Nov 13, 2022 at 09:05:03PM -0600, David Wright wrote:
> > On Sun 13 Nov 2022 at 14:50:58 (+), Andrew M.A. Cater wrote:
> > > On Sun, Nov 13, 2022 at 06:04:51AM -0800, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> > > > root@joule:/home/root# /bin/pi
Please loot at this:
https://www.linuxquestions.org/questions/linux-networking-3/intel-x540-t2-network-card-installed-but-only-at-100mbit-cant-change-or-improve-4175686736/
It seems that you need a 8x pcie slot to work fine
On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 12:25 PM hw wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I have an X540-A
Hi,
I have an X540-AT2 network card in my backup server and it worked when I was
running Fedora on the server.
I installed Debian on it and wanted to make backups with rsync, but the
connection via this network card is now intermittent where it used to be stable
with Fedora.
The link always sh
On 14/11/22 19:14, hw wrote:
On Mon, 2022-11-14 at 07:50 +0800, jeremy ardley wrote:
I decided to use systemd-networkd service and removed most of the stuff
from /etc/network/interfaces
[...]
Thanks! I considered installing network manager, but the Debian wiki gave me
the impression that it
Henning Follmann wrote:
Mutt crashes trying to open this post (while opening gnupg).
That's weird.
When I save the message as attachment, and run gnupg over it, I get this
error message
| gpg: CRC error; 3B73F1 - DC33B7
| gpg: quoted printable character in armor - probably a buggy MTA has been
On Mon, 2022-11-14 at 07:50 +0800, jeremy ardley wrote:
>
>
> On 14/11/2022 12:07 am, hw wrote:
> > > Hi, > > the subject says it ... I have an interface that is being
> configured > with IPv4 and IPv6 addresses via dhcp. I need to assign an
> > additional IPv6 address to the interface. > > >
On Sun, 2022-11-13 at 19:49 +, Darac Marjal wrote:
>
> On 13/11/2022 16:07, hw wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > the subject says it ... I have an interface that is being configured with
> > IPv4
> > and IPv6 addresses via dhcp. I need to assign an additional IPv6 address to
> > the
> > interface.
> >
On Sun, 13 Nov 2022, Greg Wooledge wrote:
unicorn:~$ command -v ls
ls
But sure, the OP could provide the output of "command -v ping" in addition
to "type ping". It couldn't hurt.
command -V ping
Le 14-11-2022, à 08:58:02 +0100, to...@tuxteam.de a écrit :
On Mon, Nov 14, 2022 at 08:51:47AM +0100, Henning Follmann wrote:
[...]
Mutt crashes trying to open this post (while opening gnupg).
That's weird.
Confirmed.
Here too.
mutt 2.2.7 (2022-08-07)
Hi,
Thomas George wrote:
> I thought to skip this step and tried
> gpg --verify SHA515SUMS.sign.txt debian-11.5.0-amd64-netinst.iso
That's not the right way.
SHA515SUMS.sign verifies SHA515SUMS
SHA515SUMS verifies debian-11.5.0-amd64-netinst.iso
The latter step can be done by this command in the
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