On Sb, 14 ian 12, 20:29:40, Brad Alexander wrote:
>
> 1. Do a base install of Debian. During the install, at the Software
> Selection screen where it asks what to install, *uncheck everything* --
> except for ssh server, if you want that. This will give you the absolute
> minimal install possible.
15/01/2012 00:16, Marc Auslander wrote:
From /etc/defaults/mdadm
# INITRDSTART:
# list of arrays (or 'all') to start automatically when the initial ramdisk
# loads. This list *must* include the array holding your root filesystem. Use
# 'none' to prevent any array from being started from t
On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 22:18:11 +0100
Claudius Hubig wrote:
> Hello richard,
>
> richard wrote:
> >You end up filling in a form sending it off , only to get an answer the form
> >was blank.
> >Always worth checking a file exported as a pdf, is what you think you want.
> >Xpdf tells the truth, but
On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 16:15:25 -0500, John Lindsay wrote:
> Does anyone use Reciva to access some internet radio stations? If so,
> how does one get WMA and MP3 formats to play. AAC format allows a
> selection and allows movie player to open and receive the selected
> station (only one I've run acro
on 14 Jan 2012 15:39:44 -0500
"John A. Sullivan III" wrote:
> On Sat, 2012-01-14 at 20:10 +, richard wrote:
> > On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 19:48:43 + (UTC)
> > Curt wrote:
> >
> > > On 2012-01-14, Siard wrote:
> > > >
> > > > Acroread should be able to do it, it's in the non-free repository.
On Fri, 13 Jan 2012 22:50:59 +0100, Lars Callenbach wrote:
> last December I have burned some backup DVDs on my box with growisofs.
> It was possible to read the content (also under windows, other Linux
> installations, ...). This week I tried to make another backup. Growisofs
> complains with som
> On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 22:18:11 +0100
> Claudius Hubig wrote:
>
>> Hello richard,
>>
>> richard wrote:
>> >You end up filling in a form sending it off , only to get an answer the
>> form
>> >was blank.
>> >Always worth checking a file exported as a pdf, is what you think you
>> want.
>> >Xpdf tel
On Sat, Jan 14, 2012 at 6:00 PM, Marc Auslander wrote:
> Tom H writes:
>>
>> Can you unpack your initrd and check whether you have an "mdadm"
>> script in the "scripts" directory, an mdadm rule in the "udev"
>> directory, and an "/etc/mdadm/mdadm.conf"? (I can't access a Debian
>> box at the mome
John Hasler (jhas...@newsguy.com on 2012-01-14 12:25 -0600):
> Panayiotis writes:
> > I have another computer running Wheezy with lvm and it's working
> > fine. Maybe it's the sum of the md driver + lvm driver that is too
> > big to fit in the gap?
>
> Use Lilo. It doesn't use the "gap" at all.
T
On Fri, 13 Jan 2012 13:23:23 -0700, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
> I've got a very strange virtualbox problem: I have two hosts sharing
> /home with NFS. The two machines are very close to identical: same
> CPU, same motherboard, same amount of memory. Same kernel version, same
> virtualbox version, sa
Weaver wrote at 2012-01-15 05:44 -0600:
> You can scan it back in at your end and attach it.
Or fill it out, print it to cups-pdf, then attach the resulting PDF.
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature
Good time of the day, Camaleón.
Thank You for Your time and answer. You worte:
>> I can not scale (reduce) a page in preview in .ods file in localc in
>> order to fit it on paper when printing.
>
>I think the print preview page is not the right place to control this.
Well. So I did always befor
I wrote:
> IMHO putting critical boot software in an "unallocated" area that
> other software will (not unreasonably) assume contains nothing
> important is a loony idea.
Arno Schuring writes:
> It's not any more loony than hardcoding the disk sectors in which the
> kernel file resides.
Like Gru
richard wrote:
>On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 22:18:11 +0100
>Claudius Hubig wrote:
>
>> Hello richard,
>>
>> richard wrote:
>> >You end up filling in a form sending it off , only to get an answer the form
>> >was blank.
>> >Always worth checking a file exported as a pdf, is what you think you want.
>> >
Curt:
> Siard:
> > Curt:
> > > Siard:
> > > > Acroread should be able to do it, it's in the non-free
> > > > repository.
> > >
> > > It is?
> >
> > In Wheezy:
> >
> > $ apt-cache policy acroread
> > acroread:
> > Installed: 9.4.6-0.1
> > ...
> > http://www.debian-multimedia.org/ wheezy/non-f
Greetings,
It may seem a daft question, BUT, what is the exact process when suspending ?
On a laptop it doesn't matter as power is kept on when either the lid is shut
or suspended, the same action.
However, on a mains powered machine suspend will power off, I'm guessing a write
to ram and umount
Jude DaShiell wrote:
> can acroread and acroread-plugins work in a command line environment
> or is this strictly gui?
Not sure what you want. You can do a 'acroread filename.pdf', but
of course you will need X for a PDF viewer.
There are a few things you can do on the command line using acroread
On Sun, 15 Jan 2012 08:24:40 -0500 (EST), Arno Schuring wrote:
> John Hasler (jhas...@newsguy.com on 2012-01-14 12:25 -0600):
>> IMHO putting critical
>> boot software in an "unallocated" area that other software will (not
>> unreasonably) assume contains nothing important is a loony idea.
>
> It'
Package: bugs.debian.org
Severity: normal
The ITS requires a package to be specified to send a report. If the
reporter doesn't know which package is concerned, our documentation
about bug reporting says:
If you are unable to determine which package your bug report should be
filed against, pl
Dear list,
please let me describe a little problem.
As powerdevil changed last year, I found no way, to force the cpu to stay at
lowest clock, even when a process wants full speed.
My solution at the moment is, to use cpufreq-set, where I can set the cpu to
lowest frequency.
But there is a pro
Hi,
I'm trying to connect with a GSM USB modem ZTE MF-100 (USB ID 19d2:0039)
to a mobile broadband network (German Congstar = network of German
Telecom) with debian testing.
Using KDE NetworkManager, my problem is that pppd doesn't answer the CHAP
challenge and runs into a timeout (see log f
On Sun, Jan 15, 2012 at 2:35 PM, Stephen Powell wrote:
> On Sun, 15 Jan 2012 08:24:40 -0500 (EST), Arno Schuring wrote:
>> John Hasler (jhas...@newsguy.com on 2012-01-14 12:25 -0600):
>>>
>>> IMHO putting critical
>>> boot software in an "unallocated" area that other software will (not
>>> unreaso
"Weaver" writes:
>> On Sat, 14 Jan 2012 22:18:11 +0100
>> Claudius Hubig wrote:
>>
>>> Hello richard,
>>>
>>> richard wrote:
>>> >You end up filling in a form sending it off , only to get an answer the
>>> form
>>> >was blank.
>>> >Always worth checking a file exported as a pdf, is what you thi
On Sun, Jan 15, 2012 at 08:36:58PM +0100, Hans-J. Ullrich wrote:
> Dear list,
> please let me describe a little problem.
>
> As powerdevil changed last year, I found no way, to force the cpu to stay at
> lowest clock, even when a process wants full speed.
>
> My solution at the moment is, to use
Camaleón writes:
>
> Check out this recent VB forum thread:
>
> [Solved] VBox 4.1.8 fails as non-root user
> https://forums.virtualbox.org/viewtopic.php?f=7&t=47199
I have to confess to being a little bit mystified by the description
there (I'll note that the user was having exactly the same deb
On Thu, 12 Jan 2012 11:51:19 +0200, Andrei Popescu wrote:
>> Moreover, I'll throw in /var/log as well, because I don't care about
>> the logs either.
>
> You might benefit from putting it on tmpfs then ;)
That brings up an interesting topic. -- No, I didn't put /var/log on
tmpfs, but /tmp, /var
is it possible to exclude directories/folders from a rsync command
please? i know you can do files using a wildcard like *.avi, but is it
possible to exclude e.g. /home/boztu/videos ?
Sharon.
--
A taste of linux = http://www.sharons.org.uk/taste/index.html
efever = http://www.efever.blogspot.com/
Sharon Kimble wrote:
> is it possible to exclude directories/folders from a rsync command
> please? i know you can do files using a wildcard like *.avi, but is it
> possible to exclude e.g. /home/boztu/videos ?
>
> Sharon.
man rsync?
--
Roel Wagenaar,
Linux-User #469851 wi
> is it possible to exclude directories/folders from a rsync command
> please? i know you can do files using a wildcard like *.avi, but is it
> possible to exclude e.g. /home/boztu/videos ?
You can use the --exclude option if you want to specifiy the directory from the
commandline. If you want to
PolicyKit
--
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On Du, 15 ian 12, 21:38:53, T o n g wrote:
>
> That brings up an interesting topic. -- No, I didn't put /var/log on
> tmpfs, but /tmp, /var/run & /var/lock instead, because I was worrying
> about wasting tmpfs with big logs, since my box might be up for months.
>
> I think staled tmpfs file mi
On Du, 15 ian 12, 18:23:22, richard wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> It may seem a daft question, BUT, what is the exact process when suspending ?
>
> On a laptop it doesn't matter as power is kept on when either the lid is shut
> or suspended, the same action.
> However, on a mains powered machine suspen
On Sun, Jan 15, 2012 at 09:38:53PM +, T o n g wrote:
> On Thu, 12 Jan 2012 11:51:19 +0200, Andrei Popescu wrote:
>
> >> Moreover, I'll throw in /var/log as well, because I don't care about
> >> the logs either.
> >
> > You might benefit from putting it on tmpfs then ;)
>
> That brings up an
On Sun, 2012-01-15 at 20:52 +0100, Stefan Rutzinger wrote:
> Dec 31 17:18:11 stefano NetworkManager[1725]:SCPlugin-Ifupdown: device
> added (path: /sys/devices/virtual/net/ppp0, iface: ppp0): no ifupdown
> configuration found.
On Arch I had such an issue, can't remember what my Debian settings
And the actual problem with virtualbox, alsaplayer, gxine, and
presumably more programs I hadn't found yet was:
Somehow, at some point in the past, a bunch of opengl-related files
landed in my /usr/lib (only on the machine where things were failing, of
course):
snowball:511$ ls /usr/lib/libGL*
/u
On Sun, 2012-01-15 at 23:11 +0100, Ralf Madorf wrote:
> On Sun, 2012-01-15 at 20:52 +0100, Stefan Rutzinger wrote:
> > Dec 31 17:18:11 stefano NetworkManager[1725]:SCPlugin-Ifupdown: device
> > added (path: /sys/devices/virtual/net/ppp0, iface: ppp0): no ifupdown
> > configuration found.
>
> O
On Du, 15 ian 12, 14:35:17, Filipus Klutiero wrote:
>
> debian-user's topic is user support.
>
> For technical discussions about development, the default group is
> debian-de...@lists.debian.org.
> Reference:
> http://anonscm.debian.org/viewvc/webwml/webwml/english/Bugs/Reporting.wml?r1=1.18&r2=
On Du, 15 ian 12, 22:22:22, T o n g wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I've actually found the solution to start a VirtualBox VM as a Service,
> My question is the next step. How can different users "see" that vm, be
> it Windows or Linux, etc.
Could you please expand on the "see" part? It's not very clear what
I note you say you have not had any other comment. I get the same
error. I still get the standard red gear wheel on the application bar,
updates are downloaded and installed without problem and the programme
reports my system is up to date but I still get an orange triangle with
an exclamation
Look at "phpvirtualbox"
It lets you configure things -- configure user, and more.
You also get nice Web GUI.
But to to have actual display rendering (to "see") the VM, you must
install non-free Oracle ext.pack, which provides RDP server for VBox.
"phpvirtualbox" uses this RDP server.
If you want
On 2012-01-15 22:22:22, T o n g wrote:
> I've actually found the solution to start a VirtualBox VM as a Service,
> My question is the next step. How can different users "see" that vm, be
> it Windows or Linux, etc.
ssh, vnc, or whatever protocol you need to interact with your vm.
You may need
Jörg-Volker Peetz writes:
> What is the output of the following commands?
> $ grep -A 9 -B 2 -i touch /proc/bus/input/devices
> [To see if the touchpad is still recognized by the kernel]
> $ grep -iE '(synaptic|option)' /var/log/Xorg.?.log
> [To see what the X server does with the touchpad]
> And
where do I change the file output of the boot screen messages that
scroll by so fast and are so small as to be unreadable before you get
to the logon screen please? i want to make them bigger and brighter so
that they are readable, like in RHEL, Fedora or Centos. this is during
bootup and before th
No point in doing that at all. If you want to see those messages after
login as root or as sudo root do dmesg >dmesg.log. Then less dmesg.log
will let you view those messages one screen at a time. Also for a
particular issue of interest, dmesg | grep -in "search_string" will show
specific l
On 16/01/2012, Jude DaShiell wrote:
> No point in doing that at all. If you want to see those messages after
> login as root or as sudo root do dmesg >dmesg.log. Then less dmesg.log
> will let you view those messages one screen at a time. Also for a
> particular issue of interest, dmesg | grep
Hi,
I did a netinstall of Debian and installed the 4 modules (Squid,
iptables, Snort and VPN). All seem tobe in less than 1 GB. Anything
else i should look out for?
Thanks
On Sun, Jan 15, 2012 at 2:28 PM, Andrei Popescu
wrote:
> On Sb, 14 ian 12, 20:29:40, Brad Alexander wrote:
>>
>> 1. Do a b
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