Am 01.04.2014 um 04:00 schrieb Charles Kroeger :
> On Mon, 31 Mar 2014 10:30:03 +0200
> François Patte wrote:
>
>> # lshw -class network
>
> root@mundo:/home/charles# lshw -class network
> bash: lshw: command not found
root@dev:/home/helmutw# apt-cache search lshw
lshw-gtk - graphical inform
> Works For Me (tm).
Thanks! It Worked! :)
--
Regards,
Anubhav Yadav
Imperial College of Engineering and Research,
Pune.
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On Tue 01 Apr 2014 at 01:45:59 +0530, Anubhav Yadav wrote:
> > Lightdm also uses /etc/X11/Xsession, which does a lot more than starting
> > a window manager. However, it does source ~/.xsession.
>
> I created an .xsession and the contents were as follows:
>
> #!/bin/bash
> # Set PATH
> PATH=$HOM
On Mon 31 Mar 2014 at 20:47:56 -0400, Stephen Powell wrote:
> Did you do anything that might have changed a MAC address? Like changing
> PC card Ethernet adapters, for example? Or replacing a motherboard that
> has a built-in Ethernet adapter? The correspondence between
> MAC addresses and inte
On Mon 31 Mar 2014 at 20:47:56 -0400, Stephen Powell wrote:
>> Did you do anything that might have changed a MAC address? Like
>> changing PC card Ethernet adapters, for example? Or replacing a
>> motherboard that has a built-in Ethernet adapter? The correspondence
>> between MAC addresses a
On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 7:31 AM, Robert Holtzman wrote:
> I seem to remember this happening after an update but I'm not positive.
> It did work before. My wireless connection continues to work.
>
> Looked at the usual suspects, /etc/ network/interfaces, /etc/resolv.conf,
> etc but everything looke
On Mon 31 Mar 2014 at 18:47:05 -0400, Stephen Allen wrote:
> On Mon, Mar 31, 2014 at 02:56:09PM -0300, Bruno Schneider wrote:
> >
> > You probably just need some non free firmware.
> >
> > For instance, if your hardware is realtek, just install
> > firmware-realtek and it should work.
>
>
> No
On Mon 31 Mar 2014 at 08:13:17 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> I install from purchased DVD sets as I am on dialup.
> I am also experimenting with how/what I install.
> When in experiment mode I may make several installs in a day.
> As there are only small differences between installs, I use
> pres
On Tuesday, 01 April, 2014 09:08:47 debian-user-digest-
requ...@lists.debian.org wrote:
> > > In the same mail an observation was made. It implied that the file
> > > cron-spamassassin-rules was put in /etc/cron.daily by you and not by a
> > > Debian package. Do you have a response to that too?
> >
On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 09:52:12AM +0200, Helmut Wollmersdorfer wrote:
>
> Am 01.04.2014 um 04:00 schrieb Charles Kroeger :
>
> > On Mon, 31 Mar 2014 10:30:03 +0200
> > François Patte wrote:
> >
> >> # lshw -class network
> >
> > root@mundo:/home/charles# lshw -class network
> > bash: lshw: c
31.03.2014 20:22, David Nelson:
> I have configured mrtg to log network traffic for our organization. This is
> working nicely except at some point while I was fiddling with the scripts
> under /etc/cron.d, which run every 5 minutes to collect snmp data I started
> getting emails to root from cron
In my opinion no - expecting new users to Debian to read an install
report is problematic. Using the net-install I wasn't prompted for what I
wanted in terms of a Desktop Environment. Xfce4 isn't what most
users with modern hardware would want in my opinion - it's a Luddite DE.
But not having wir
Am 01.04.2014 um 11:58 schrieb Chris Bannister :
> On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 09:52:12AM +0200, Helmut Wollmersdorfer wrote:
>>
>>
>> root@dev:/home/helmutw# apt-cache search lshw
>> lshw-gtk - graphical information about hardware configuration
>> lshw - information about hardware configuration
>
On Mon, 31 Mar 2014 18:51:59 -0400
Stephen Allen wrote:
Hello Stephen,
>better although slower. At one time it was the go to, but since I've
>gathered that apt-get has been improved.
Also, IIRC, mixing aptitude, apt-get & Synaptic for upgrades and
package installation, was considered a bad idea
On Mon, 31 Mar 2014 21:42:41 +0100
Lisi Reisz wrote:
Hello Lisi,
>Also for the record, when I set my system time to Europe/London/ (my
>hardware clock is set to UTC), my system, for some obscure reason,
>determinedly changes it to /Europe/Guernsey. As this is the same, it
>doesn't matter, bu
Hello,
I am using PuTTY, Maybe it's not a new software but it works properly with
other distributions (CentOS/Fedora etc.) that uses Unicode by default.
I noticed that every frame in default Debian configuration in PuTTY is
displayed as the rows of p and qq instead of those
Lisi Reisz writes:
> For the archives: Note, BST was the correct *result*, *not* the
> *solution*. The solution was to chose /Europe/London time which will
> correctly switch from GMT to BST and back again as appropriate.
Correct.
> Also for the record, when I set my system time to Europe/Londo
MKS,
Thank you ! That clears that up for me. I used tee because the crontab I
was using as a model was generated by the default install on Debian. I
checked the man page for tee because I had never seen it before, but it
still didn't register in my mind what it was doing exactly. Thank you again
f
> The basic problem is that lightdm in Debian hard-codes the path
>
> https://launchpadlibrarian.net/94971962/01_set-default-path.patch
Yes now I know why this is happening. Thanks!
>
> and there appears to be no system-wide way to alter it from within
> lightdm. It doesn't matter what WM is use
Brian wrote:
On Mon 31 Mar 2014 at 08:13:17 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
I install from purchased DVD sets as I am on dialup.
I am also experimenting with how/what I install.
When in experiment mode I may make several installs in a day.
As there are only small differences between installs, I us
Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Lu, 31 mar 14, 08:13:17, Richard Owlett wrote:
I install from purchased DVD sets as I am on dialup.
I am also experimenting with how/what I install.
When in experiment mode I may make several installs in a day.
As there are only small differences between installs, I use
Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
> Running Sid. Right now accented characters on the console show up as
> blobs. How do I change that with console-setup?
> CHARMAP="UTF-8"
> CODESET="Lat15"
> FONTFACE="TerminusBold"
> FONTSIZE="8x16"
I've got FONTFACE="Fixed" for wheezy, and that shows UTF-8 characters f
On 01/04/2014 12:14, Aleksander Kurczyk wrote:
Hello,
I am using PuTTY, [...]
I noticed that every frame in default Debian configuration in PuTTY
is displayed as the rows of p and qq instead of
those frame ASCII characters. PuTTY and every of my Debian
installation is set to
On Tuesday 01 April 2014 11:58:30 Brad Rogers wrote:
> On Mon, 31 Mar 2014 21:42:41 +0100
> Lisi Reisz wrote:
>
> Hello Lisi,
>
> >Also for the record, when I set my system time to Europe/London/
> > (my hardware clock is set to UTC), my system, for some obscure
> > reason, determinedly changes it
Is there a tool that would take down and disable a service based on a
configurable criteria?
Thanks in advance
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Hi Theodore*,*
Why fsck does not check hard disk, even when unconditional power
loss, for both debian 6 and debian 7.
Can I mark that as the disk data is safe and no need to fsck?
Thanks
Cong Zhang
On Tue 01 Apr 2014 at 06:57:03 -0400, Stephen Allen wrote:
> In my opinion no - expecting new users to Debian to read an install
> report is problematic. Using the net-install I wasn't prompted for what I
> wanted in terms of a Desktop Environment. Xfce4 isn't what most
> users with modern hardwar
On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 09:50:49AM -0400, Roman Gelfand wrote:
> Is there a tool that would take down and disable a service based on a
> configurable criteria?
Depending what your "configurable criteria" are, there are probably
several tools that could be used.
Cheers,
Tom
--
Hand, n.:
Am Mon, 31 Mar 2014 23:13:30 -0800
schrieb Greg Madden :
> On Monday 31 March 2014 10:48:51 you wrote:
> > Am Montag, 31. März 2014, 19:35:05 schrieb Ron Leach:
> > > On 31/03/2014 19:22, Hans wrote:
> > > > Hmm, I guess, you are right. It has something to do with
> > > > "bounced", as I remember
On Tue, 1 Apr 2014 14:38:02 +0100
Lisi Reisz wrote:
Hello Lisi,
>TDE, and previously KDE 3; and yes the drop list is there, and yes it
>is also in KControl, and yes I choose Europe/London whenever or
>whereever I set it, and it sets itself to Europe/Guernsey. Where a
Okay, so not what I was
On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 09:50:49AM -0400, Roman Gelfand wrote:
> Is there a tool that would take down and disable a service based on a
> configurable criteria?
Are you after something more than:
#!/bin/sh
service $1 stop
update-rc.d $1 disable
with possibly, some detectio
SyncDrive is, from what little I've read, just thin wrapper of a GUI around
the GRIVE project, and built specifically fro the ubuntu repos. That's
what got me thinking that it might be a good fit for debian.
Of course, the official linux client from google should probably drop one
of these months
On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 09:36:22PM +0800, Zhang Cong wrote:
> Hi Theodore*,*
>
>Why fsck does not check hard disk, even when unconditional power
> loss, for both debian 6 and debian 7.
>Can I mark that as the disk data is safe and no need to fsck?
It's up to each file system to de
On Tue 01 Apr 2014 at 16:06:19 +, root wrote:
> Hmm, it looks, I made a mistake. When I receive a mail from the list, I
> always reply to all, not to the list. I suppose, due to this behaviour,
> I was unsubsribed whatever.
Very, very unlikely. I'm inclined to say it is impossible.
> Besides
On Tue, 1 Apr 2014 17:09:42 +0100
Brian wrote:
Hello Brian,
>there would have been nothing for the list software to do because
>it already knew about the address you subscribed with.
The list software should send out a notice saying "This address is
already subscribed", or words to that effect.
On 20140401_160619, root wrote:
> Am Mon, 31 Mar 2014 23:13:30 -0800
> schrieb Greg Madden :
>
> > On Monday 31 March 2014 10:48:51 you wrote:
> > > Am Montag, 31. März 2014, 19:35:05 schrieb Ron Leach:
> > > > On 31/03/2014 19:22, Hans wrote:
> > > > > Hmm, I guess, you are right. It has somethin
On Tue 01 Apr 2014 at 17:28:29 +0100, Brad Rogers wrote:
> On Tue, 1 Apr 2014 17:09:42 +0100
> Brian wrote:
>
> Hello Brian,
>
> >there would have been nothing for the list software to do because
> >it already knew about the address you subscribed with.
>
> The list software should send out a
On Tue, 1 Apr 2014 17:41:37 +0100
Brian wrote:
Hello Brian,
>Do you mean "should" as in "that is its designed behaviour" or
My apologies, I meant 'designed behaviour'.
>"ought to"? I did test resubscribing and got nothing back.
That doesn't eliminate non-delivery of your test subscription req
On Tue 01 Apr 2014 at 08:08:40 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> It's not so much that the information isn't recorded, but that it's
> difficult to find. I've flagged over 300 posts and personal emails
> addressing various aspects of installing Debian. They are responses
> not only to my questions bu
On Tue 01 Apr 2014 at 12:47:32 +0300, David Baron wrote:
> Have removed it. The whole spamassassin thing seems broken right now.
> How do I tell if locate script actually had run on today's startup?
I give up:
ls -l /var/lib/mlocate/mlocate.db
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Hi,
this isn't an April Fools' joke. The last mail I received is from Sun,
30 Mar 2014 00:18:46 -0400 (03/30/2014 06:18:46 AM), the archive
documents that there was traffic after this date. Anybody experiencing
the same? I tested my email address, it does receive emails.
How can I find out, if I'
On Tue, 01 Apr 2014 20:00:12 +0200
Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> Anybody experiencing the same?
9 threads prior to yours:
From: Hans
To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Subject: Was I deleted?
Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2014 19:26:48 +0200
User-Agent: KMail/4.11.5 (Linux/3.13-1-amd64; KDE/4.11.3; x86_64; ; )
Ch
On Tue, Apr 1, 2014 at 11:30 PM, Ralf Mardorf
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> this isn't an April Fools' joke. The last mail I received is from Sun,
> 30 Mar 2014 00:18:46 -0400 (03/30/2014 06:18:46 AM), the archive
> documents that there was traffic after this date. Anybody experiencing
> the same? I tested my
On Tue, 2014-04-01 at 20:03 +0200, somebody off-list wrote:
> I answer privately since you do not recieve the list :
>
> did you try subscribing again at
> http://www.debian.org/MailingLists/subscribe ?
Right now, at 20:07 +0200 I did it at
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/ .
"Subscription r
Ron Leach wrote:
> And London is going to shift from UTC to its local daylight saving time,
> British summer Time, BST, sometime in the next week or so.
Pendantically speaking, not really. We were on GMT and are now on BST. UTC
is invariant, and although it just so happens that GMT is the same as
On Tue 01 Apr 2014 at 18:05:21 +0100, Brad Rogers wrote:
> On Tue, 1 Apr 2014 17:41:37 +0100
> Brian wrote:
>
> Hello Brian,
>
> >Do you mean "should" as in "that is its designed behaviour" or
>
> My apologies, I meant 'designed behaviour'.
No need for an apology. especially when you are deal
Aimed primarily at Ralf and Hans, but may be of interest to other
parties.
MX lookups for loop.de and alice-dsl.de both resolve to
megamailservers.eu, I would suggest that your mail problems lie there.
Cheers,
Tom
--
Finally, Zippy drives his 1958 RAMBLER METROPOLITAN into the faculty
dining ro
On Tue, 1 Apr 2014 19:46:58 +0100
Brian wrote:
Hello Brian,
>No need for an apology. especially when you are dealing with
>pedantism. :)
Not a problem. I can just as easily wear my pedant's hat when I feel
the urge. ;-)
>> That doesn't eliminate non-delivery of your test subscription
>> req
On Tue 01 Apr 2014 at 17:53:38 +0530, Anubhav Yadav wrote:
> I used my ~/.profile to export path variable. Here are the contents of
> my ~/.profile:
>
>
> # if running bash
> if [ -n "$BASH_VERSION" ]; then
> # include .bashrc if it exists
> if [ -f "$HOME/.bashrc" ]; then
> . "$
On Tue, 25 Mar 2014 18:05:39 -0300
André Nunes Batista wrote:
> On Tue, 2014-03-25 at 14:15 -0300, André Nunes Batista wrote:
> > On Mon, 2014-03-24 at 12:36 +, Darac Marjal wrote:
> > > On Mon, Mar 24, 2014 at 12:17:17PM +, Joe wrote:
> > > > On Mon, 24 Mar 2014 11:17:53 +
> > > > Da
Hello,
Thanks for your replay. Unfortunately it doesn't work :(
Could you check these screenshots?
http://screencloud.net/v/jL6o
http://screencloud.net/v/kp3E
http://screencloud.net/v/1MR1
With and without the option you mentioned mc and other ncurses programs works
fine but the dpkg-reconfigur
On Fri, Mar 28, 2014 at 11:49 AM, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
> Hi,
> Running Sid. Right now accented characters on the console show up as
> blobs.
Substitution characters.
I get the same thing when I work on a virtual console (ctrl-alt-Fn, not a
shell window) with LANG=ja_JP.UTF-8. Except that, sin
> $HOME/.bashrc is executed when you log into X. Then its contents are
> sourced once agiain in your .xsessionrc. A double invocation seems a
> trifle inelegant.
>
>> # set PATH so it includes user's private bin if it exists
>> if [ -d "$HOME/bin" ] ; then
>> PATH="$HOME/bin:$PATH"
>> fi
>>
>>
Hi, I am using i3 windows manager and I need nm-applet to show in
i3status bar. I have added this line in my ~/.i3/config
exec --no-startup-id nm-applet
Also NetworkManager is running in the background.
If I start nm-applet as a normal user, I get lot of gtk theme warnings
regarding px, and then
Hi, I am using i3 windows manager and I need nm-applet to show in
i3status bar. I have added this line in my ~/.i3/config
exec --no-startup-id nm-applet
Also NetworkManager is running in the background.
If I start nm-applet as a normal user, I get lot of gtk theme warnings
regarding px, and then
On Wed 02 Apr 2014 at 03:30:20 +0530, Anubhav Yadav wrote:
> > Is your entry a locale or an environment variable?
>
> My entry is an environment variable. So you suggest that I should
It is neither. Environment variables look like this
SOMETHING=
> use .xsessionrc to export my $PATH by not m
Hi Debian,
We are a venture capital-backed, California-based tech company.
We are in the process of recruiting websites such as debianhelp.co.uk for our
beta program.
Based on data collected from over 600 participating sites, our scientifically
optimized websites earn 2-3x more revenue and u
> Solution No. 1: Source ~/.profile in ~/.xsessionrc.
> Solution No. 2: Put 'export PATH=$HOME/bin:$PATH' in ~/.xsessionrc.
>
> The first solution gives a path including ~/bin. It also reloads an
> already loaded file, which is a waste of time, and loads other things
> which may or not be wanted. I
On Tuesday 01 April 2014 11:57:03 Stephen Allen wrote:
> In my opinion no - expecting new users to Debian to read an install
> report is problematic. Using the net-install I wasn't prompted for
> what I wanted in terms of a Desktop Environment. Xfce4 isn't what
> most users with modern hardware wou
On Ma, 01 apr 14, 20:37:40, Brian wrote:
>
> $HOME/.bashrc is executed when you log into X. Then its contents are
> sourced once agiain in your .xsessionrc. A double invocation seems a
> trifle inelegant.
Could you please provide a reference for the double invocation? As far
as I remember this
On Apr 1, 2014 5:24 PM, "Anubhav Yadav" wrote:
> Any help. Sorry for the incomplete first message in the thread.
If you don't need the VPN support that nm has, take a look at wicd. Wicd
has the advantage of also having a cli and a curses interface.
> If you don't need the VPN support that nm has, take a look at wicd. Wicd
> has the advantage of also having a cli and a curses interface.
Hi, thanks for helping me out, I tried wicd.
But wicd only contained a gui to manage wireless networks, not wireless.
And I am looking an alternative for so
Aranda is not available but xandr is:
xrandr: Failed to get size of gamma for output default
Screen 0: minimum 640 x 400, current 1920 x 1080, maximum 1920 x 1080
default connected 1920x1080+0+0 0mm x 0mm
1920x1080 0.0*
The system tool monitor still only shows one monitor.
So I ran:
The URL in the default source.list doesn't seem correct:
/etc/apt/sources.list ->
deb http://http.debian.net/debian/ wheezy main contrib non-free
The above path is to a directory with other folders. But Wheezy is a
subdirectory of dists, not debian. So it seems the URL should be:
deb http://
My recent and first build of Debian 7.4 has just started cycling during the
boot. It has been doing this for an hour. It does it each time I start up.
When it first started, it was going almost too fast to read, after an hour, it
is much slower. Some of the content that is cycling is:
udevd
On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 03:05:57PM +0100, Brian wrote:
> On Tue 01 Apr 2014 at 06:57:03 -0400, Stephen Allen wrote:
>
> > In my opinion no - expecting new users to Debian to read an install
> > report is problematic. Using the net-install I wasn't prompted for what I
> > wanted in terms of a Deskt
On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 11:49:07PM +0100, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Tuesday 01 April 2014 11:57:03 Stephen Allen wrote:
> > In my opinion no - expecting new users to Debian to read an install
> > report is problematic. Using the net-install I wasn't prompted for
> > what I wanted in terms of a Desktop
On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 11:38:54AM +0100, Brad Rogers wrote:
> On Mon, 31 Mar 2014 18:51:59 -0400
> Stephen Allen wrote:
>
> Hello Stephen,
>
> >better although slower. At one time it was the go to, but since I've
> >gathered that apt-get has been improved.
>
> Also, IIRC, mixing aptitude, apt-
On Tue, 01 Apr 2014 07:14:24 -0400 (EDT), Aleksander Kurczyk wrote:
>
> Hello,
>
> I am using PuTTY, Maybe it's not a new software but it works properly
> with other distributions (CentOS/Fedora etc.) that uses Unicode by
> default.
>
> I noticed that every frame in default Debian configuration
On Tue, 01 Apr 2014 05:08:12 -0400 (EDT), Brian wrote:
>
> On Mon 31 Mar 2014 at 20:47:56 -0400, Stephen Powell wrote:
>>
>> Did you do anything that might have changed a MAC address? Like changing
>> PC card Ethernet adapters, for example? Or replacing a motherboard that
>> has a built-in Ethe
On Tue, Apr 01, 2014 at 09:32:22AM -0600, ChadDavis wrote:
> SyncDrive is, from what little I've read, just thin wrapper of a GUI around
> the GRIVE project, and built specifically fro the ubuntu repos. That's
> what got me thinking that it might be a good fit for debian.
>
> Of course, the offic
On 04/01/2014 05:27 PM, ray wrote:
The URL in the default source.list doesn't seem correct:
/etc/apt/sources.list ->
deb http://http.debian.net/debian/ wheezy main contrib non-free
The above path is to a directory with other folders. But Wheezy is a
subdirectory of dists, not debian. So it
ray writes:
> The URL in the default source.list doesn't seem correct:
>
> /etc/apt/sources.list ->
> deb http://http.debian.net/debian/ wheezy main contrib non-free
>
> The above path is to a directory with other folders. But Wheezy is a
> subdirectory of dists, not debian. So it seems the
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