Am 16.01.2024 um 22:25:40 Uhr schrieb Jeff Jennings:
> Recently, I decided to download Debian 12.4 and was alarmed to notice
> that Debian 12 downloads are no longer through https connections.
https://cdimage.debian.org/debian-cd/current/amd64/bt-cd/
https works fine here.
Hi,
Gene Heskett wrote:
> lsblk, which I've published several times, shows 5 drives.
Duh. Obviously this thread overstretches my mental capacity.
> And I've since tried cp in addition to rsync, does the same thing, killing
> the sysytem with the OOM but much quicker. cp using all system memory
Hi Stefan,
On Mon, Jan 15, 2024 at 05:31:37AM +, Andy Smith wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 14, 2024 at 11:32:37PM -0500, Stefan Monnier wrote:
> > What happens if you use diskimages that contain directly a filesystem
> > without going through the trouble of using a partition table?
> > Does `ext4` also
On 1/16/24 17:08, gene heskett wrote:
> lsblk, which I've published several times, shows 5 drives. by-id listing
> only shows 3. The drive I've been trying to use bounces from /dev/sdd to
> sde to sdh dependin on which controller it is curently plugged into.
>
> And I've since tried cp in addition
gene heskett composed on 2024-01-16 20:08 (UTC-0500):
> Felix Miata wrote:
>> I straightened out the wrapping mess, and gave each entry a line number. I
>> see
>> nothing I recognize as representing serial number duplication among /dev/sdX
>> (physical device) names:
>> /dev/sda 9 /dev/dis
Hi Felix,
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 04:50:01PM -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> What can I use to test what its write speed is? I'm not seeing any option to
> do so
> in hdparm.
The king of storage performance testing is "fio". It's packaged in
Debian. It's really worth learning a bit about.
What sort
Hi Jeff,
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 10:25:40PM +, Jeff Jennings wrote:
> Please find a way to restore the integrity of open-source software
> distribution.
Firmware updates are required for almost every general purpose
computing device in existence and at this time those are non-free.
You have
On 1/16/24 11:08, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
ls -l /dev/sd[ij]*
oot@coyote:~# ls -l /dev/sd[ij]*
brw-rw 1 root disk 8, 128 Jan 16 05:01 /dev/sdi
brw-rw 1 root disk 8, 129 Jan 16 05:01 /dev/sdi1
brw-rw 1 root disk 8, 144 Jan 16 05:01 /dev/sdj
brw-rw 1 root disk 8, 145 Jan 16 05:01 /
On 1/16/24 06:09, Felix Miata wrote:
Tom Furie composed on 2024-01-16 08:18 (UTC):
Felix Miata writes:
/dev/sdc 18 /dev/disk/by-id/usb-Brother_MFC-J6920DW_BROG5F229909-0:0 #
How does a printer get a storage device assignment???
By having some kind of SD card slot or similar.
So this pol
On Tue 16 Jan 2024 at 20:08:12 (-0500), gene heskett wrote:
> On 1/16/24 00:56, Felix Miata wrote:
> > gene heskett composed on 2024-01-15 17:56 (UTC-0500):
> >
> > > Thanks for that composition: but it will be word wrapped:
> > > root@coyote:~# for j in /dev/disk/by-id/* ; do printf '%s\t%s\n'
>
On 1/16/24 01:18, Felix Miata wrote:
Felix Miata composed on 2024-01-16 01:05 (UTC-0500):
gene heskett composed on 2024-01-15 18:37 (UTC-0500):
Ah,but I finally glombed onto the bug tan memory bar in htop as it was
runniing, someplace in the data chain is a huge memory leak, my crash is
caus
On 1/16/24 01:05, Felix Miata wrote:
gene heskett composed on 2024-01-15 18:37 (UTC-0500):
Ah,but I finally glombed onto the bug tan memory bar in htop as it was
runniing, someplace in the data chain is a huge memory leak, my crash is
caused by the OOM daemon killing things. And it only occurs
On 1/16/24 00:56, Felix Miata wrote:
gene heskett composed on 2024-01-15 17:56 (UTC-0500):
Thanks for that composition: but it will be word wrapped:
root@coyote:~# for j in /dev/disk/by-id/* ; do printf '%s\t%s\n'
"$(realpath "$j")" "$j" ; done
/dev/sr0/dev/disk/by-id/ata-ATAPI_iHAS424_
On Mon 15 Jan 2024 at 21:41:15 (-0800), David Christensen wrote:
> On 1/15/24 20:05, David Wright wrote:
> > And I've never created any mount point under /mnt. For a one time
> > copy, /mnt is handy; always there, I don't have to mkdir at all.
>
> What about when you have an portable backup drive
On Tue 16 Jan 2024 at 06:08:35 (-0500), Felix Miata wrote:
> Tom Furie composed on 2024-01-16 08:18 (UTC):
> > Felix Miata writes:
>
> >> /dev/sdc 18 /dev/disk/by-id/usb-Brother_MFC-J6920DW_BROG5F229909-0:0 #
> >> How does a printer get a storage device assignment???
>
> > By having some kind of
On Tue 16 Jan 2024 at 09:40:19 (-0500), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 09:31:54AM -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> > David Wright composed on 2024-01-16 08:05 (UTC-0600):
> > > On Tue 16 Jan 2024 at 00:55:52 (-0500), Felix Miata wrote:
> > >> gene heskett composed on 2024-01-15 17:56 (UT
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 10:25:40PM +, Jeff Jennings wrote:
> Recently, I decided to download Debian 12.4 and was alarmed to notice that
> Debian 12 downloads are no longer through https connections.
Do you mean, the initial download of the installer image?
Do you mean, the repository that's
Greetings,
After a couple of decades of using various Linux distributions, I've been on
Debian 10 for some years. I like it a lot!
Recently, I decided to download Debian 12.4 and was alarmed to notice that
Debian 12 downloads are no longer through https connections.
In addition, I installed 12
Greetings,
After a couple of decades of using various Linux distributions, I've been on
Debian 10 for some years. I like it a lot!
Recently, I decided to download Debian 12.4 and was alarmed to notice that
Debian 12 downloads are no longer through https connections.
In addition, I installed 12
David Christensen composed on 2024-01-16 13:01 (UTC-0800):
> STFW and RTFM I have seen recommendations for and against using whole
> disks for RAID and for and against using partitions for RAID. And, as
> this in the Internet, there are countless rumors and speculation. As I
> switched from m
Hello,
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 01:01:02PM -0800, David Christensen wrote:
> On 1/16/24 11:51, Franco Martelli wrote:
> > I thought it was mandatory for a RAID to partition drives with this
> > partition type, am I wrong?
In the ancient past it was required, because that was one of the
ways that m
On 1/16/24 11:51, Franco Martelli wrote:
On 15/01/24 at 08:43, David Christensen wrote:
When I built and ran a Debian 2 @ HDD RAID1 using mdadm(8), I did not
partiton the HDD's -- I gave mdadm(8) the whole drives.
I don't know if it is a good idea, in fact it exists a special partition
type f
On 15/01/24 at 08:43, David Christensen wrote:
This I am still trying to do, the first pass copied all 350G of /home
but went to the wrong drive, and I had mounted the drive by its label.
It is now /dev/sdh and all labels above it are now wrong. Crazy.
These SSD's all have an OTP serial number.
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 10:16:12PM +0700, Max Nikulin wrote:
> On 16/01/2024 13:04, Maureen Thomas wrote:
> > My sound has been working just fine the day before that. Now nothing.
>
> Have a look into PipeWire articles in ArchLinux and Debian wiki.
>
This certainly. It's also relatively easy to
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 05:48:27PM +0100, Marco Moock wrote:
> Am 16.01.2024 um 11:30:09 Uhr schrieb Thomas George:
>
> > The result was bookworm InRelease, bookworm-updates InRelease,
> > bookworm-secutity Relesse 404 Not Found [IP: 146.75.30.132 80]
> ^
>
> There seems to be a ty
Am 16.01.2024 um 11:30:09 Uhr schrieb Thomas George:
> The result was bookworm InRelease, bookworm-updates InRelease,
> bookworm-secutity Relesse 404 Not Found [IP: 146.75.30.132 80]
^
There seems to be a typo!
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 11:30:09AM -0500, Thomas George wrote:
> I commented out the dvd and added to sources.list lines for bookworm,
> bookworm-updates and bookworm-security.
What lines did you add?
> Ran apt-get update
>
> The result was bookworm InRelease, bookworm-updates InRelease,
> book
* 2024-01-15 15:20:51-0600, Nicholas Geovanis wrote:
> In your dd commands that moved these filesystems, did you specify ibs=
> and/or obs=
> ?
> If so, what values did you use?
"dd" is not a special tool for accessing device files. It's a simple
file copy tool: like "cat" or "cp" but with differ
Hello,
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 01:17:42AM -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> If rsync really is bugged, maybe a change of options would avoid the bug. Try
> instead of -av, -rlptgoDAXUNH. Could it be that verbosity is the OOM
> crippler, and
> not necessarily from rsync itself, but possibly from the xte
My system is Bookworm installed from the first DVD which was downloaded
with the checksums and successfully checked.
I commented out the dvd and added to sources.list lines for bookworm,
bookworm-updates and bookworm-security.
Ran apt-get update
The result was bookworm InRelease, bookworm-u
I wrote:
> You may be able to prevent Firefox from getting increased priority by
> using polkit.
hw writes:
> How would I do that? All the freedektop stuff always has been a big
> mystery, and polkit is part of it, or isn't it?
I don't know, but it at least has a man page and I think that this
Hi,
i, too, wondered where there should be a duplicate serial number.
But indeed:
David Wright wrote:
> > /dev/sdi53 /dev/disk/by-id/ata-Gigastone_SSD_GST02TBG221146
> > /dev/sdj1 54 /dev/disk/by-id/ata-Gigastone_SSD_GST02TBG221146-part1
> ↑ that is /really/ bad!
Does the numbe
On 16/01/2024 13:04, Maureen Thomas wrote:
My sound has been working just fine the day before that. Now nothing.
Have a look into PipeWire articles in ArchLinux and Debian wiki.
hw writes:
> /tmp is volatile nowadays and not temporary. That's particularly
Volatile storage is, by definition, temporary.
> braindead when you want Libreoffice to be able to recover files after
> a crash, which, by default, autosaves in /tmp.
/tmp is a terrible place to store recovery data
On 16/01/2024 12:36, David Christensen wrote:
My Debian, Thunderbird, and message filters are working very well. :-)
My experience is that enough garbage appears in thunderbird profiles
after several years of usage. Unsubscribed NNTP groups, IMAP caches that
thunderbird considered corrupted,
On 16/01/2024 15:18, Tom Furie wrote:
/dev/sdc 18 /dev/disk/by-id/usb-Brother_MFC-J6920DW_BROG5F229909-0:0 #
How does a printer get a storage device assignment???
By having some kind of SD card slot or similar.
I have heard that some devices expose a USB mass storage interface out
of the box
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 09:31:54AM -0500, Felix Miata wrote:
> David Wright composed on 2024-01-16 08:05 (UTC-0600):
>
> > On Tue 16 Jan 2024 at 00:55:52 (-0500), Felix Miata wrote:
>
> >> gene heskett composed on 2024-01-15 17:56 (UTC-0500):
>
> >>> Thanks for that composition: but it will be w
David Wright composed on 2024-01-16 08:05 (UTC-0600):
> On Tue 16 Jan 2024 at 00:55:52 (-0500), Felix Miata wrote:
>> gene heskett composed on 2024-01-15 17:56 (UTC-0500):
>>> Thanks for that composition: but it will be word wrapped:
>>> root@coyote:~# for j in /dev/disk/by-id/* ; do printf '%s\
On Tue 16 Jan 2024 at 00:55:52 (-0500), Felix Miata wrote:
> gene heskett composed on 2024-01-15 17:56 (UTC-0500):
>
> > Thanks for that composition: but it will be word wrapped:
> > root@coyote:~# for j in /dev/disk/by-id/* ; do printf '%s\t%s\n'
> > "$(realpath "$j")" "$j" ; done
> > /dev/sr0
On Mon, 2024-01-15 at 21:41 -0800, David Christensen wrote:
> On 1/15/24 20:05, David Wright wrote:
> > And I've never created any mount point under /mnt. For a one time
> > copy, /mnt is handy; always there, I don't have to mkdir at all.
>
>
> What about when you need multiple temporary mount
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 02:17:05PM +0100, hw wrote:
> On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 08:03 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 01:43:23PM +0100, hw wrote:
> > > There's only a bunch of links in that directory, apparently all
> > > pointing to files that don't exist. Don't you have that?
On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 14:17 +0100, hw wrote:
> On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 08:03 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 01:43:23PM +0100, hw wrote:
> > > There's only a bunch of links in that directory, apparently all
> > > pointing to files that don't exist. Don't you have that?
> >
>
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 6:07 AM David Christensen
wrote:
>
> On 1/15/24 20:05, David Wright wrote:
> > And I've never created any mount point under /mnt. For a one time
> > copy, /mnt is handy; always there, I don't have to mkdir at all.
>
> What about when you need multiple temporary mount poin
On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 08:03 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 01:43:23PM +0100, hw wrote:
> > There's only a bunch of links in that directory, apparently all
> > pointing to files that don't exist. Don't you have that?
>
> unicorn:~$ ls -l /run/user/1000/systemd/units
> total
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 01:43:23PM +0100, hw wrote:
> There's only a bunch of links in that directory, apparently all
> pointing to files that don't exist. Don't you have that?
unicorn:~$ ls -l /run/user/1000/systemd/units
total 0
lrwxrwxrwx 1 greg greg 32 Jan 4 10:33 invocation:at-spi-dbus-bus.
On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 12:15 +, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
> hw wrote:
> > On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 11:27 +0100, Arno Lehmann wrote:
> > > I don't know anything about rtkit, but I may be able to parse
> > > English :-)
> > >
> > > Am 16.01.2024 um 10:42 schrieb hw:
> > > ...
> > > > The
On 1/16/24, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 15, 2024 at 09:41:15PM -0800, David Christensen wrote:
>> On 1/15/24 20:05, David Wright wrote:
>> > And I've never created any mount point under /mnt. For a one time
>> > copy, /mnt is handy; always there, I don't have to mkdir at all.
>>
>>
>> Wh
On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 07:05 -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 11:27:43AM +0100, hw wrote:
> > systemd[2241]: Started cgroupify@app-gnome-firefox-152280.scope.service.
> > systemd[2241]: Started app-gnome-firefox-152280.scope - Application
> > launched by gnome-shell.
> >
> >
Il 16/01/2024 12:08, Felix Miata ha scritto:
Tom Furie composed on 2024-01-16 08:18 (UTC):
Felix Miata writes:
/dev/sdc 18 /dev/disk/by-id/usb-Brother_MFC-J6920DW_BROG5F229909-0:0 #
How does a printer get a storage device assignment???
By having some kind of SD card slot or similar.
So
hw wrote:
> On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 11:27 +0100, Arno Lehmann wrote:
> > I don't know anything about rtkit, but I may be able to parse
> > English :-)
> >
> > Am 16.01.2024 um 10:42 schrieb hw:
> > ...
> > > The messages in the journal are actually weird:
> > >
> > >
> > > rtkit-daemon[132284]:
On Tue, Jan 16, 2024 at 11:27:43AM +0100, hw wrote:
> systemd[2241]: Started cgroupify@app-gnome-firefox-152280.scope.service.
> systemd[2241]: Started app-gnome-firefox-152280.scope - Application launched
> by gnome-shell.
>
>
> in the journal. That service is a file that doesn't seem to exist
On 2024-01-15, Tom Furie wrote:
> There doesn't seem to be an overwhelming need for it once you step away
> from the DE's.
I don't use DE but bluez clementine gnumeric sound-juicer and a lots more
which need dbus
hw writes:
>> >
> It says 'made thread ... (at nice level 0) owned by 1000'. This is
> inconclusive at best: The thread is obviously _at_ some nice level or
> _at_ some priority and was made owned by 1000.
>
> If it had changed the priority it should say that, but it doesn't.
It does say that.
Tom Furie composed on 2024-01-16 08:18 (UTC):
> Felix Miata writes:
>> /dev/sdc 18 /dev/disk/by-id/usb-Brother_MFC-J6920DW_BROG5F229909-0:0 #
>> How does a printer get a storage device assignment???
> By having some kind of SD card slot or similar.
So this pollution only results from a USB-conn
On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 11:27 +0100, Arno Lehmann wrote:
> I don't know anything about rtkit, but I may be able to parse English :-)
>
> Am 16.01.2024 um 10:42 schrieb hw:
> ...
> > The messages in the journal are actually weird:
> >
> >
> > rtkit-daemon[132284]: Successfully made thread 145442 of
On Mon, 2024-01-15 at 20:32 +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 15, 2024 at 08:08:36PM +0100, hw wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > I don't understand why you involve a terminal emulator in the process.
> > Do you need to see the data that goes through the COM port displayed
> > in a terminal (like m
On Tue, 2024-01-16 at 06:52 +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 15, 2024 at 09:37:34PM +0100, hw wrote:
> [...]
> > And it turned out that it's apparently not rtkit-daemon but firefox
> > itself that makes it assume a higher priority.
>
> Firefox itself can't (unless it is started with ex
I don't know anything about rtkit, but I may be able to parse English :-)
Am 16.01.2024 um 10:42 schrieb hw:
...
The messages in the journal are actually weird:
rtkit-daemon[132284]: Successfully made thread 145442 of process 145185
(/usr/lib64/firefox/firefox) owned by '1000' RT at priority
Tom Furie writes:
> Fewer than when things don't work when you *do* have dbus, apparently ;)
> There doesn't seem to be an overwhelming need for it once you step away
> from the DE's.
I don't have a DE on my main desktop but still it looks like I have five
dbus-daemons and one dbus-launch runnin
On Mon, 2024-01-15 at 15:24 -0600, John Hasler wrote:
> You may be able to prevent Firefox from getting increased priority by
> using polkit.
How would I do that? All the freedektop stuff always has been a big
mystery, and polkit is part of it, or isn't it?
On Mon, 2024-01-15 at 21:02 +0100, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> > [...]
> > I have --- at least temporarily --- disabled rtkit-daemon by masking
> > the service and renaming
> > /usr/share/dbus-1/system-services/org.freedesktop.RealtimeKit1.service
> > so dbus doesn't try to start it anymore.
> >
> >
Felix Miata writes:
> /dev/sdc 18 /dev/disk/by-id/usb-Brother_MFC-J6920DW_BROG5F229909-0:0 #
> How does a printer get a storage device assignment???
By having some kind of SD card slot or similar.
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