Hi,
we are running VM as guest on Windows (on Win 10, 11 Enterprise, as
required by employer) and recently are facing laggy console output:
often the console screen update takes quite some time, instead of a
fraction of a second it takes one second, during which only a half
(right side) get
пн, 21 окт. 2024 г. в 09:43, Timothy M Butterworth
:
> I have the following device:
> Bus 003 Device 010: ID 0403:6001 Future Technology Devices International, Ltd
> FT232 Serial (UART) IC
>
> I expect the device to show up as: /dev/ttyUSB0 but i am not finding any
> ttyUSB devices in /dev.
Do
On Mon, Oct 21, 2024 at 12:25 AM Jeffrey Walton wrote:
> On Sun, Oct 20, 2024 at 11:33 PM Timothy M Butterworth
> wrote:
> >
> > I have the following device:
> > Bus 003 Device 010: ID 0403:6001 Future Technology Devices
> International, Ltd FT232 Serial (UART) IC
> >
> > I expect the device to
On Sun, Oct 20, 2024 at 11:33 PM Timothy M Butterworth
wrote:
>
> I have the following device:
> Bus 003 Device 010: ID 0403:6001 Future Technology Devices International, Ltd
> FT232 Serial (UART) IC
>
> I expect the device to show up as: /dev/ttyUSB0 but i am not finding any
> ttyUSB devices i
I have the following device:
Bus 003 Device 010: ID 0403:6001 Future Technology Devices International,
Ltd FT232 Serial (UART) IC
I expect the device to show up as: /dev/ttyUSB0 but i am not finding any
ttyUSB devices in /dev.
I Googled around some and found that the drivers for this device have
Harald Dunkel:
>
> trying to change console keymaps using standard localectl I
> stumbled over https://bugs.debian.org/790955 and the
> recommendation on
>
> https://www.claudiokuenzler.com/blog/1257/how-to-fix-missing-keymaps-debian-ubuntu-localectl-failed-read-list
>
>
Hi folks,
trying to change console keymaps using standard localectl I
stumbled over https://bugs.debian.org/790955 and the
recommendation on
https://www.claudiokuenzler.com/blog/1257/how-to-fix-missing-keymaps-debian-ubuntu-localectl-failed-read-list
to install the missing keymaps using
l a
>>>> GUI (though I realize they have a VGA port so it *is* possible to do
>>>> so) for fear of running out of available RAM.
>>>>
>>>> I'd like to install CUPS to interface the OpenRDs to my HP laser
>>>> printer, but I haven't found
but I haven't found any way to configure CUPS with only a CLI
> text console. The recommended way in the CUPS docs is to point a web
> browser at "localhost:631" but that doesn't work if you don't have a
> web browser on the machine. The way I've done it b
Ds to my HP laser
printer, but I haven't found any way to configure CUPS with only a
CLI
text console. The recommended way in the CUPS docs is to point a web
browser at "localhost:631" but that doesn't work if you don't have a
web browser on the machine. The way I
27;d like to install CUPS to interface the OpenRDs to my HP laser
>> printer, but I haven't found any way to configure CUPS with only a CLI
>> text console. The recommended way in the CUPS docs is to point a web
>> browser at "localhost:631" but that doesn't wor
. So I'm reluctant to install a
GUI (though I realize they have a VGA port so it *is* possible to do
so) for fear of running out of available RAM.
I'd like to install CUPS to interface the OpenRDs to my HP laser
printer, but I haven't found any way to configure CUPS with only a
On 24 Jul 2024 03:09 -0700, from rick.tho...@pobox.com (Rick Thomas):
> I'd like to install CUPS to interface the OpenRDs to my HP laser
> printer, but I haven't found any way to configure CUPS with only a
> CLI text console. The recommended way in the CUPS docs is to point
GUI (though I realize
they have a VGA port so it *is* possible to do so) for fear of running out of
available RAM.
I'd like to install CUPS to interface the OpenRDs to my HP laser printer, but I
haven't found any way to configure CUPS with only a CLI text console. The
recommended way
On Sat, May 11, 2024 at 08:57:24PM -0400, Paul M Foster wrote:
[...]
> Excellent advice. Thanks.
>
> Here's an oddity. The following commands are equivalent, according to the
> dmesg(1) man page:
>
> dmesg -n 1 and dmesg -n emerg
>
> But according to every document I've viewed, "emerg" is code
On Sat, May 11, 2024 at 07:54:28AM +0200, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Fri, May 10, 2024 at 05:30:44PM -0400, Paul M Foster wrote:
> > Folks:
> >
> > I've installed Debian (latest) without X on a small form factor PC, and
> > typically SSH into it, though I also have a keyboard and monitor
> > te
On 2024-05-10, Paul M Foster wrote:
> [76056.389126] pcieport :00:1c.0: PCIe Buss Error: severity=Corrected,
> type=Physical Layer, (Reciever ID)
Use lspci (from package pciutils) to find which device it is
On Fri, May 10, 2024 at 05:30:44PM -0400, Paul M Foster wrote:
> Folks:
>
> I've installed Debian (latest) without X on a small form factor PC, and
> typically SSH into it, though I also have a keyboard and monitor
> temporarily connected to it.
>
> I'm getting spurious error messages in groups o
Folks:
I've installed Debian (latest) without X on a small form factor PC, and
typically SSH into it, though I also have a keyboard and monitor
temporarily connected to it.
I'm getting spurious error messages in groups on the monitor connected to
it. They look like:
[76056.389126] pcieport :
Hi Andy!
On Sat, Feb 24, 2024 at 5:58 PM Andy Smith wrote:
> HI Matt,
>
> On Sat, Feb 24, 2024 at 05:40:31PM -0600, Matt Zagrabelny wrote:
> > Does anyone know how to switch to a different virtual console (tty) over
> a
> > network console on a debian install?
>
>
HI Matt,
On Sat, Feb 24, 2024 at 05:40:31PM -0600, Matt Zagrabelny wrote:
> Does anyone know how to switch to a different virtual console (tty) over a
> network console on a debian install?
I haven't tested this but when doing an install over serial console,
the installer runs in GN
Greetings,
I use the network-console for the debian installer - it's great.
There are times when I would like to use the console (tty - Ctrl + Alt +
F2) to perform some ad-hoc sysadmin'ing during the install.
Does anyone know how to switch to a different virtual console (tty) over
hen I press
>> Ctrl-Alt-F1 it goes to sleep, and with F2/F3 there were no reaction as
>> these keys have no other meaning.
>> When I press Ctrl-"fn switch"-Alt+F1 I got console.
>> Thanks for everyone for ensuring me that consoles are still in Debian
>> and
and with F2/F3 there were no reaction as
> these keys have no other meaning.
> When I press Ctrl-"fn switch"-Alt+F1 I got console.
> Thanks for everyone for ensuring me that consoles are still in Debian
> and sorry for the noise.
On some laptops, the BIOS can switch between treat
s Ctrl-"fn switch"-Alt+F1 I got console.
Thanks for everyone for ensuring me that consoles are still in Debian
and sorry for the noise.
KJ
--
http://wolnelektury.pl/wesprzyj/teraz/
Enter on
a console if you don't see a login prompt immediately.
Le 04/08/2023 à 10:10, Nicolas George a écrit :
Kamil Jońca (12023-08-04):
Where text console can be configured?
Recently I got laptop with debian installed. I wanted to log in into
text console but Ctrl-Alt-F1 does nothing - it seems that lightdm(?)
started at first console.
Have you tried
Kamil Jońca (12023-08-04):
> Where text console can be configured?
> Recently I got laptop with debian installed. I wanted to log in into
> text console but Ctrl-Alt-F1 does nothing - it seems that lightdm(?)
> started at first console.
Have you tried Ctrl-Alt-F2?
Regards,
--
Nicolas George
Where text console can be configured?
Recently I got laptop with debian installed. I wanted to log in into
text console but Ctrl-Alt-F1 does nothing - it seems that lightdm(?)
started at first console.
KJ
--
http://wolnelektury.pl/wesprzyj/teraz/
On 23 Jul 2023 20:32 +, from 2695bd53d...@ewoof.net (Michael Kjörling):
> I upgraded from current Debian 11 to 12.1 today. Almost everything
> worked great, but during early boot I'm now getting the following
> message:
>
> unknown keysym 'dead_abovering'
&
On 25 Jul 2023 17:09 +0100, from robbied...@gmail.com (Robbie Dinn):
> I used dpkg-query to check what package the file
> /etc/console-setup/cached_UTF-8_del.kmap might belong to.
>
> freon@debian:~$ dpkg-query -S
> /etc/console-setup/cached_UTF-8_del.kmap.gz
> d
Hello Michael
On 25/07/2023 16:17, Michael Kjörling wrote:
> On 25 Jul 2023 09:17 -0500, from deb...@lionunicorn.co.uk (David Wright):
>>> unknown keysym 'dead_abovering'
>>> /etc/console-setup/cached_UTF-8_del.kmap:27: syntax error
>>> syntax error
On 25 Jul 2023 09:17 -0500, from deb...@lionunicorn.co.uk (David Wright):
>> unknown keysym 'dead_abovering'
>> /etc/console-setup/cached_UTF-8_del.kmap:27: syntax error
>> syntax error in map file
>> key bindings not changed
>
> Anyway, my MO, probably in
On Sun 23 Jul 2023 at 20:32:28 (+), Michael Kjörling wrote:
> I upgraded from current Debian 11 to 12.1 today. Almost everything
> worked great, but during early boot I'm now getting the following
> message:
>
> unknown keysym 'dead_abovering'
> /etc/conso
On 23 Jul 2023 20:32 +, from 2695bd53d...@ewoof.net (Michael Kjörling):
> unknown keysym 'dead_abovering'
> /etc/console-setup/cached_UTF-8_del.kmap:27: syntax error
> syntax error in map file
> key bindings not changed
No suggestions from anyone for anything to check
Hello everyone.
Long time Debian user, newly subscribed to the mailing list.
I upgraded from current Debian 11 to 12.1 today. Almost everything
worked great, but during early boot I'm now getting the following
message:
unknown keysym 'dead_abovering'
/etc/console-setup/cached_UT
On 15.05.2023 15:19, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
On 2023-05-15 10:25:45 +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
I see. That explains why I can request source package
"golang-github-xenolf-lego/testing" directly and get the right one.
So, in my case, I won't be able to reliably get a source package(-s)
On 2023-05-15 10:25:45 +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
> On 15.05.2023 05:43, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
> > But my point is that your database is obsolete, because if you ask
> > the version from testing, apt thinks that it is 3.2.0-3.1, while it
> > should be 4.9.1-1. You need to fix that.
> Wha
On 15.05.2023 05:43, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
On 2023-05-14 14:17:05 +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
[...]
I think you haven't noticed that I requested for "4.9.1-1" version from
"testing" specifically,
You can't. You can either request some given version, e.g. 4.9.1-1
(but this will work on
rt of a package, I sometimes find it
> > > difficult
> > > to obtain actual source package(-s) from Debian repos using console.
> > > Following advice from a wiki page [1], after "apt update", doesn't do it:
> > >
> > > $ apt source lego/testing
On Sun, May 14, 2023 at 02:17:05PM +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
> hence why the command was "$ apt source lego/testing" not just "$ apt source
> lego".
> There is no reason for building a backport package for "stable" using a
> source package from "stable"...
If you're trying to build a ba
On 14.05.2023 10:06, Vincent Lefevre wrote:
On 2023-05-14 00:15:39 +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
Hello, fellow Debian users.
When I need to build a backport of a package, I sometimes find it difficult
to obtain actual source package(-s) from Debian repos using console.
Following advice
On 2023-05-14 00:15:39 +0500, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
> Hello, fellow Debian users.
>
> When I need to build a backport of a package, I sometimes find it difficult
> to obtain actual source package(-s) from Debian repos using console.
> Following advice from a wiki page
Hello, fellow Debian users.
When I need to build a backport of a package, I sometimes find it
difficult to obtain actual source package(-s) from Debian repos using
console.
Following advice from a wiki page [1], after "apt update", doesn't do it:
$ apt source lego/tes
Pipewire is now on this machine since this didn't work with pulseaudio
either.
-- Jude "There are four boxes to be used in
defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that
order." Ed Howdershelt 1940.
On Thu, 13 Apr 2023, Dan Ritter wrote:
> Jude DaShiell wrote:
> > Here's
Jude DaShiell wrote:
> Here's one script that works that way. Standard package install choices
> were done desktop environment, mate, and standard utilities.
> An install with only standard utilities and no desktop environment and no
> mate prevents this script from playing at all.
> #!/usr/bin/
Here's one script that works that way. Standard package install choices
were done desktop environment, mate, and standard utilities.
An install with only standard utilities and no desktop environment and no
mate prevents this script from playing at all.
Mpv is already installed on this machine too
Am Sonntag, 12. März 2023, 11:47:23 CET schrieb davidson:
> On Sat, 11 Mar 2023 digital...@gmx.de wrote:
> > Hello,
> > i have installed (alpha 2 release) Debian 12 (with KDE) on two machines
> > and on both the sddm session crashes when i switch the virtual console.
>
On Sat, 11 Mar 2023 digital...@gmx.de wrote:
Hello,
i have installed (alpha 2 release) Debian 12 (with KDE) on two machines and on
both
the sddm session crashes when i switch the virtual console.
If i am logged in an active KDE session and i switch to the virtual console
with: strg alt f2
and
On Sat, 11 Mar 2023 digital...@gmx.de wrote:
Hello,
i have installed (alpha 2 release) Debian 12 (with KDE) on two machines
So you decided stable was too boring, and chose to install testing.
and on both the sddm session crashes when i switch the virtual
console. If i am logged in an active
Am Samstag, 11. März 2023, 22:14:52 CET schrieb Timothy M Butterworth:
> On Sat, Mar 11, 2023 at 4:06 PM wrote:
> > Hello,
> >
> > i have installed (alpha 2 release) Debian 12 (with KDE) on two machines
> > and on both the sddm session crashes when i switch the virtua
On Sat, Mar 11, 2023 at 4:06 PM wrote:
> Hello,
>
> i have installed (alpha 2 release) Debian 12 (with KDE) on two machines
> and on both the sddm session crashes when i switch the virtual console.
>
> If i am logged in an active KDE session and i switch to the virtual
> c
Hello,
i have installed (alpha 2 release) Debian 12 (with KDE) on two machines and on
both
the sddm session crashes when i switch the virtual console.
If i am logged in an active KDE session and i switch to the virtual console
with: strg alt f2
and switch back i am logged out of my active
On Mon 21 Nov 2022 at 13:02:13 (-0500), jeanrocco jr wrote:
> Hello, I just installed debian-11.5.0-amd64-netinst.iso on my APU2E4, which
> does not have a vga display but only a serial console.
>
> I could not find any documentation in Debian regarding the "Debian
> GNU/Linux
Hello, I just installed debian-11.5.0-amd64-netinst.iso on my APU2E4, which
does not have a vga display but only a serial console.
I could not find any documentation in Debian regarding the "Debian
GNU/Linux installer boot menu" where you have to type H (help), then TAB
and type &quo
On 8/18/22 04:21, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
Hi,
is it possible to run a console on a USB port of a headless server?
The system is a Dell T20 machine
https://www.hardwareluxx.de/community/threads/dell-poweredge-t20.1031138/
(the page is in German, but I am not aware of an English version with a
On Thu, 18 Aug 2022, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
Hi,
is it possible to run a console on a USB port of a headless server?
The system is a Dell T20 machine
https://www.hardwareluxx.de/community/threads/dell-poweredge-t20.1031138/
(the page is in German, but I am not aware of an English version with
On Thu, Aug 18, 2022 at 06:28:56PM +0200, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> Ah, I see, getting USB up early might be a problem.
>
> Would a native serial interface on a PCI card be a better solution?
Same problem, different interface.
You need UART that's soldered on the motherboard. Sadly, there's no
subst
On Thu, 2022-08-18 at 16:48 +0200, Rainer Dorsch wrote:
[...]
> I am wondering if ready-made usb-to-usb solutions exist, which contain the
> conversion to serial and back to usb internally
I just googled 'usb null modem cable' and got this:
https://ftdichip.com/products/usb-nmc-2-5m/
which is ava
.
The main problems of such setup are:
- overcomplicated setup of GRUB's USB stack.
I.e. forget about seeing GRUB's menu.
- unless you're using self-built Linux kernel - forget about seeing
those boot messages.
Because to convince the kernel to use that "console=ttyUSB0"
Rainer Dorsch wrote:
> is it possible to run a console on a USB port of a headless server?
Yes and no.
The T20 doesn't seem to have iDRAC (IPMI) support, so BIOS/UEFI
is not available through a serial console.
The first time you have an opportunity for a serial console is in GRUB;
th
Hello Debian Users,
I am playing with jupyter-qtconsole in Xfce. Debian is Debain version 11.4.
When I launch a turple from the jupyter-qtconsole, I get a turtle console as
expected.
And I can move the turtle around. However, when I switch to another workspace
and
then come back to the
On Mon 13 Jun 2022 at 10:14:36 (-0400), Felix Miata wrote:
> Jeremy Ardley composed on 2022-06-13 15:49 (UTC+0800):
>
> > I have a Debain (Armbian) server that does not boot to any form of
> > window manager, so what is seen on the screen is just the command console.
>
>
Jeremy Ardley composed on 2022-06-13 15:49 (UTC+0800):
> I have a Debain (Armbian) server that does not boot to any form of
> window manager, so what is seen on the screen is just the command console.
> What I would like to do is have the console screen go into screen power
> sav
On 2022-06-13 03:49, Jeremy Ardley wrote:
I have a Debain (Armbian) server that does not boot to any form of
window manager, so what is seen on the screen is just the command
console.
What I would like to do is have the console screen go into screen
power save mode after some period and
I have a Debain (Armbian) server that does not boot to any form of
window manager, so what is seen on the screen is just the command console.
What I would like to do is have the console screen go into screen power
save mode after some period and recover when keyboard or mouse are used.
Is
like screen as well which I've not really used either.
I'm using because something doesn't seem to like something I've done and
so far not having problems in console so likely something in X.
cheers
mick
--
Key ID4BFEBB31
On 22.12.2021 18:59, mick crane wrote:
I'm trying to use the console to see if my editing problems go away.
Want to copy lines from one file into another.
Splitting the screen with tmux with the 2 files opened in nano the
nano buffer is not shared.
Seems can have more than one buffer in
On 2021-12-22 15:34, Markus Schönhaber wrote:
Since tmux knows how to cope with tmux' panes, what's wrong with using
the copy/paste functionality tmux provides?
OK missed that, got it now.
cheers.
mick
--
Key ID4BFEBB31
22.12.21, 14:59, +0100, mick crane:
I'm trying to use the console to see if my editing problems go away.
Want to copy lines from one file into another.
Splitting the screen with tmux with the 2 files opened in nano the nano
buffer is not shared.
Seems can have more than one buffer in nan
I'm trying to use the console to see if my editing problems go away.
Want to copy lines from one file into another.
Splitting the screen with tmux with the 2 files opened in nano the nano
buffer is not shared.
Seems can have more than one buffer in nano but the things I want are
not in the
Hi.
I am not familiar with nvidia, but I believe you need KMS/DRM mode:
(See modeset setting)
https://download.nvidia.com/XFree86/Linux-x86_64/396.51/README/kms.html
This was an idea behind the DRM/KMS: both Xorg and Framebuffer (graphical
mode linux command line console) work on top of the
Hi folks,
since some months I am looking for an issue and I hope, someone might know
more and can help.
The issue is the following: I am running plasma and Nvidia proprietrary
driver. When I change to a console with CTL+ALT+F1, and after some seconds
back with ALT+F7, then X has crashed.
It
Gui - but I could open a console and log in there.
One thing you might want to check is that the keyboard layout is the one
you expect. You can use the 'username' field to test, in particular any
special characters that might appear in your password or regular
characters that migh
anthony gennard wrote:
...
> Could someone assist me with this problem, please.
sounds like a problem with the desktop manager but
since you don't mention what that is i can't say
much more.
try reinstalling your desktop manager is my first
guess with a problem like this. kdm i think it is.
I have Debian 10.6 with Kde and Plasma installed. Everything was fine
until the 2nd of this month when my password was turned down when
I tried to install some updates and the position was the same for similar
operations in the Gui - but I could open a console and log in there.
Could someone
if working at the physical console, not
> > > granting to this
> > > user sudo permission when i.e. logged in via ssh? To keep it simple, I
> > > could imagine to even have all sudo for all users deactivated
> > > automatically as soon as
> > > a remote
Reco wrote:
> Hi.
>
> On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 09:47:24AM +0200, Marco M?ller wrote:
> > Is it possible (how?) to restrict a user to only be allowed to make use of
> > its sudo usage permission if working at the physical console, not granting
> > to this
> &
Hi.
On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 09:47:24AM +0200, Marco Möller wrote:
> Is it possible (how?) to restrict a user to only be allowed to make use of
> its sudo usage permission if working at the physical console, not granting to
> this
> user sudo permission when i.e. logged in
On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 10:24:16AM -0500, John Hasler wrote:
> tomas writes:
> > OTOH practice has shown: if you're doing sudo, you will have forgotten
> > your root password anyway when you need it (I have, it's some horrible
> > "pwgen -n 16" or something), and it' back to...
>
> It should be wr
Hi Marco,
On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 09:47:24AM +0200, Marco Möller wrote:
> Is it possible (how?) to restrict a user to only be allowed to make use of
> its sudo usage permission if working at the physical console, not granting
> to this user sudo permission when i.e. logged in via ss
Hi.
Some time ago, I explained here how to use different keyboard layouts
with X11.
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2020/02/msg00755.html
Now I will explain how to do it with the Linux console. Unfortunately,
it also relies on a non-standard tool.
The use-case I will take as an example is
tomas writes:
> OTOH practice has shown: if you're doing sudo, you will have forgotten
> your root password anyway when you need it (I have, it's some horrible
> "pwgen -n 16" or something), and it' back to...
It should be written down somewhere secure. Depending on your threat
model this can be
sed on identifying a "safe" tty won't
work on a modern system. (In the old days you could identify a trusted
tty by tracing its physical attachment. So /etc/securetty made sense
because it was those terminals whose serial cables terminated in secure
areas or which were directly at
usage permission if working at the physical console,
See pam_securetty(8) for that. Sorry I can't give you some step-by-step
account.
not granting to this user sudo permission when i.e. logged in via
ssh?
Now you have to decide: You want to *only allow root login on console*
or to *dis
usage permission if working at the physical console,
> >
> > See pam_securetty(8) for that. Sorry I can't give you some step-by-step
> > account.
> >
> > > not granting to this user sudo permission when i.e. logged in via
> > > ssh?
> >
>
The user "root"
> > shall not login nowhere, not at the physical console and not by ssh, never.
>
> Remember that this also means you can never boot in single-user ("rescue")
> mode.
Right. As someone who actually likes and uses sudo (not everyone does,
and th
nowhere, not at the physical console and not by ssh, never.
Remember that this also means you can never boot in single-user ("rescue")
mode. If you ever need to boot in quasi-rescue mode, you'll have to
go down even lower and override the init= kernel parameter.
If you don't know
On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 11:44:04AM +0200, Marco Möller wrote:
> As my root account is disabled, I do all administration as the "normal" user
> with the help of sudo for running administrative commands. The user "root"
> shall not login nowhere, not at the physical
On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 11:44:04AM +0200, Marco Möller wrote:
> On 04.08.20 10:59, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
[pam sshd]
> Sorry, I will not have been clear enough, or did not understand your
> answer clearly, ssh and pam are both new to me, and I also never
> configured sudo myself.
Ah, got it. Th
On 04.08.20 10:59, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 09:47:24AM +0200, Marco Möller wrote:
Is it possible (how?) to restrict a user to only be allowed to make
use of its sudo usage permission if working at the physical console,
See pam_securetty(8) for that. Sorry I can't
On 04.08.20 10:38, Keith bainbridge wrote:
On 4/8/20 5:47 pm, Marco Möller wrote:
I have the root account already deactivated, and am using in principal
only one main user who also has the sudo permissions for being able to
do all the system administration, exactly as Debian was setting this
u
On Tue, Aug 04, 2020 at 09:47:24AM +0200, Marco Möller wrote:
> Is it possible (how?) to restrict a user to only be allowed to make
> use of its sudo usage permission if working at the physical console,
See pam_securetty(8) for that. Sorry I can't give you some step-by-step
acco
On 4/8/20 5:47 pm, Marco Möller wrote:
I have the root account already deactivated, and am using in principal
only one main user who also has the sudo permissions for being able to
do all the system administration, exactly as Debian was setting this up
automatically during the system installati
Is it possible (how?) to restrict a user to only be allowed to make use
of its sudo usage permission if working at the physical console, not
granting to this user sudo permission when i.e. logged in via ssh? To
keep it simple, I could imagine to even have all sudo for all users
deactivated
Same behavior as above.
>
> Install some desktop environment, reboot. system boots into X no
> issues. Try a ctrl-alt-f1 to drop to console and monitor shuts off
> reporting no video output. ctrl-alt-f7 brings video and monitor back
> online.
>
> Moved on to trying t
this gpu), reboot. Same behavior as above.
Upgraded to nvidia-driver from backports, reboot. Same behavior as above.
Install some desktop environment, reboot. system boots into X no
issues. Try a ctrl-alt-f1 to drop to console and monitor shuts off
reporting no video output. ctrl-alt-f7 b
Debians,
I'm trying to troubleshoot what I'm doing rong when trying to install
Debian through serial console.
If I start a Qemu VM like so:
qemu-system-x86_64 -cdrom debian-bullseye-DI-alpha2-amd64-netinst.iso
-nographic -vga none -m 1024
At the Debian install prompt pressing the
D. R. Evans wrote:
> Nope, all just black.
>
> But I could log in via ssh, and started backing out recent changes (I'm
> not sure how long the problem had existed, as I don't normally look at the
> console screen once X has started).
>
> One of the changes was t
On 12/6/2019 10:25 PM, D. R. Evans wrote:
> Felix Miata wrote on 12/6/19 11:22 AM:
>> D. R. Evans composed on 2019-12-06 11:11 (UTC-0700):
>>
>>> I have a buster system that is failing ever to reach a login prompt on the
>>> console tty.
>>
>>> The
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