On 11/04/23 15:17, gene heskett wrote:
On 4/10/23 18:04, zithro wrote:
So, I got curious about his claim : "that change to resolv.conf adding
the search line [search hosts, nameserver] has been required since red
hat 5.0 in 1998".
(The bracket addition is mine)
I'm not using RHEl-based syst
Le 10/04/2023 à 21:37, Greg Wooledge a écrit :
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 12:13:15PM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
Name: hornby.islandhosting.com
Address: 158.69.159.172
As expected, login at https://hornby.islandhosting.com:2096 and at
https://mail.easthope.ca:2096 appear equivalent.
But f
On 11/4/23 11:40, Tim Woodall wrote:
My googling suggests that a superhub or hub 5 can be switched to 'modem
only' mode but I've got a hub 6 which doesn't have that option.
Virgin Media: Virgin Media is the largest cable broadband provider
in the UK, operating its own network separate
On 11/04/23 15:17, gene heskett wrote:
In a man page from a good 20 years ago. I still have a copy of that
original redhat 5.0 on a shelf above me, but not a floppy drive to read
those disks with.
Downloading an iso ... :-)
Richard
On Mon 10 Apr 2023 at 17:39:57 (+0200), zithro wrote:
> On 10 Apr 2023 03:23, David Wright wrote:
> > On Sun 09 Apr 2023 at 21:48:22 (+0200), zithro wrote:
> > > > IOW, while I run crontab -e on bookworm, inside my emacs session,
> > > > I want a subshell to run crontab -l, but the latter has to ru
On Mon 10 Apr 2023 at 08:31:16 (+0200), Michel Verdier wrote:
> Le 10 avril 2023 David Wright a écrit :
>
> > In case it's not clear, bullseye and bookworm are Debian distribution
> > codenames, not hostnames. I can't edit my crontab on a newly installed
> > bookworm system while simultaneously li
On Tue, 11 Apr 2023, Jeremy Ardley wrote:
On 11/4/23 02:19, Tim Woodall wrote:
Unfortunately, I don't seem to have that option any more. My cable modem
appears only to expose a layer 4 connection.
Previous version of my router appear to have a "modem mode" but that
doesn't exist in my versio
On Mon 10 Apr 2023 at 12:13:15 (-0700), pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> [ … ]
Others have covered your "oddity", likely caused by a certificate
that seems normal.
> As expected, login at https://hornby.islandhosting.com:2096 and at
> https://mail.easthope.ca:2096 appear equivalent.
I notice that 209
On 4/10/23 18:04, zithro wrote:
On 10 Apr 2023 22:58, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 10:53:41PM +0200, zithro wrote:
Why can't you follow others advice, hell, if you don't trust us, even
the
perfectly correct and up-to-date manpages ?
After reading the posts of others, I'm more a
On 4/10/23 16:53, zithro wrote:
On 4/10/23 13:30, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Up to the resolv.conf, that is exactly what I do. But that change to
resolv.conf adding the search line has been required since red hat 5.0
in 1998. until bullseye. Just last week I found it is not needed in an
armbian bull
On Mon 10 Apr 2023 at 20:17:11 (-0400), Marc Auslander wrote:
> I'm on Buster.
>
> In /boot I keep a copy of the current working linux named by appending
> -knowngood to the four files. My idea is that if an update fails, I
> have a recent working linux. This is different from vmlinuz.old which
On 4/8/23 08:19, Emanuel Berg wrote:
Tom Dial wrote:
Look at the use of parentheses in Lisp [...]
I have thought about that - is Lisp possible without them?
But how do you then know priority? I'm sure someone tried
to get rid of them, but how?
Its quite a few years since I had anything t
On 11/04/2023 07:12, songbird wrote:
the bios did let me turn down the temperature so we'll see
how that works next time i need to do an upload.
I am curious if it affects
/sys/class/thermal/thermal_zone*
I have never tried to do anything with this interface. I decided to look
into sysfs
I'm on Buster.
In /boot I keep a copy of the current working linux named by appending
-knowngood to the four files. My idea is that if an update fails, I
have a recent working linux. This is different from vmlinuz.old which
is the previous kernel version. The updates in question are not to
songbird wrote:
> songbird wrote:
> ...
>> i've been trying to find anything that will let me set this
>> but no luck yet in my searches.
>
> ...
>
> of course the moment i send the message it comes to me that
> perhaps the BIOS will let me do this, but i don't want to reboot
> at the moment
On 11/4/23 02:19, Tim Woodall wrote:
Unfortunately, I don't seem to have that option any more. My cable modem
appears only to expose a layer 4 connection.
Previous version of my router appear to have a "modem mode" but that
doesn't exist in my version.
Here in Australia we have a national op
Hello,
On Tue, Apr 11, 2023 at 12:04:24AM +0200, zithro wrote:
> So, I got curious about his claim
Well you can't say you haven't been warned. This rabbit hole goes
very deep and the bottom will not contain the answers you seek!
Cheers,
Andy
--
https://bitfolk.com/ -- No-nonsense VPS hosting
On 10 Apr 2023 22:58, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 10:53:41PM +0200, zithro wrote:
Why can't you follow others advice, hell, if you don't trust us, even the
perfectly correct and up-to-date manpages ?
After reading the posts of others, I'm more and more thinking your simply a
tro
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 10:53:41PM +0200, zithro wrote:
> Why can't you follow others advice, hell, if you don't trust us, even the
> perfectly correct and up-to-date manpages ?
> After reading the posts of others, I'm more and more thinking your simply a
> troll (or a RedHat fanatic wasting Debian
On 4/10/23 13:30, Greg Wooledge wrote:
Up to the resolv.conf, that is exactly what I do. But that change to
resolv.conf adding the search line has been required since red hat 5.0
in 1998. until bullseye. Just last week I found it is not needed in an
armbian bullseye install.
What ?! Red Hat ?
Le 10 avril 2023 peter a écrit :
> "Warning: Potential Security Risk Ahead
>
> Firefox detected a potential security threat and did not continue to
> 158.69.159.172. If you visit this site, attackers could try to steal
> information like your passwords, emails, or credit card details.
>
> What can
Hello,
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 12:13:15PM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> As expected, login at https://hornby.islandhosting.com:2096 and at
> https://mail.easthope.ca:2096 appear equivalent.
>
> But for URL https://158.69.159.172:2096 Firefox warns,
What told you to use the URL with the IP ad
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 3:30 PM wrote:
>
> Noticed this oddity when working with the new service.
>
> $ nslookup hornby.islandhosting.com
> Server: 192.168.0.1
> Address:192.168.0.1#53
>
> Non-authoritative answer:
> Name: hornby.islandhosting.com
> Address: 158.69.159.172
> Name
> On 10 Apr 2023, at 20:30, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
>
> Noticed this oddity when working with the new service.
>
> $ nslookup hornby.islandhosting.com
> Server: 192.168.0.1
> Address:192.168.0.1#53
>
> Non-authoritative answer:
> Name: hornby.islandhosting.com
> Address: 1
On 4/10/23 13:30, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 12:05:06PM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
Thanks for the vote of confidence Greg, but I'd like to point out that the
help offered is only valid for systems with a working dhcpd.
You tell me I'm wrong, but you don't tell how to do it righ
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 12:13:15PM -0700, pe...@easthope.ca wrote:
> Name: hornby.islandhosting.com
> Address: 158.69.159.172
> As expected, login at https://hornby.islandhosting.com:2096 and at
> https://mail.easthope.ca:2096 appear equivalent.
>
> But for URL https://158.69.159.172:2096 Firef
Noticed this oddity when working with the new service.
$ nslookup hornby.islandhosting.com
Server: 192.168.0.1
Address:192.168.0.1#53
Non-authoritative answer:
Name: hornby.islandhosting.com
Address: 158.69.159.172
Name: hornby.islandhosting.com
Address: 2607:5300:203:66b5::
Hello,
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 12:05:06PM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> My way doesn't need that. But you've made it your lifes work to
> not understand how my way Just Works.
Just for the benefit of any inexperienced people who may read this
in future:
- As pointed out already, Gene's resolv.con
On Mon, 10 Apr 2023, Jeremy Ardley wrote:
On 10/4/23 12:49, Tim Woodall wrote:
And it doesn't forward packets from new ips either, it just silently
drops them.
I don't know how the router learns ips but I suspect it's something to
do with DAD,
I don't know about your router specifically, bu
On Mon, Apr 10, 2023 at 12:05:06PM -0400, gene heskett wrote:
> Thanks for the vote of confidence Greg, but I'd like to point out that the
> help offered is only valid for systems with a working dhcpd.
> You tell me I'm wrong, but you don't tell how to do it right w/o dragging in
> dhcpd. My way d
On Mon, 10 Apr 2023, Lee wrote:
Why are you using google as forwarders ?
To eliminate as many variables as possible.
delv talking to google works.
delv talking to bind talking to google fails.
When talking directly, delv is using udp to talk to google
When talking via bind, bind is using tc
On 4/9/23 11:20, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Apr 09, 2023 at 04:53:17PM +0200, zithro wrote:
Also, the line "search hosts, nameserver" is wrong. The place to put such
settings is "/etc/nsswitch.conf".
"search" is used to resolve hostnames to FQDN.
So if you put "search example.com", and you try
Hi,
i experience a strange behavior of my Debian 11 with firefox-esr and
pulseaudio.
After visiting
https://salsa.debian.org/groups/optical-media-team/-/activity
the most busy process on my Debian 11 is the one that was started at boot
(or user login) automatically by
/usr/bin/pulseaudio --dae
On 10 Apr 2023 03:23, David Wright wrote:
On Sun 09 Apr 2023 at 21:48:22 (+0200), zithro wrote:
IOW, while I run crontab -e on bookworm, inside my emacs session,
I want a subshell to run crontab -l, but the latter has to run on
bullseye in order to pick up the old crontab. I'm not sure how
I wou
Xiyue Deng writes:
> Xiyue Deng writes:
>
>> Xiyue Deng writes:
>>
>>> So after some more tries it looks like this issue is not directly memory
>>> usage related. I've tried the following:
>>>
>>> * Using older kernel version when I was on Bullseye.
>>> * Have a cronjob to drop memory caches
35 matches
Mail list logo