FWIW I have been suffering screenn flickering in Debian 9 since 1 or 2
weeks ago.
The flickering is _very_ serious: it makes my box almost unusable.
Booting with kernel option:
i915.enable_rc6=0
significantly reduces the problem but it doesn't completely fix it.
Instead the following fix works:
Hi Boudewijn,
this is getting a bit old, but I recently moved to Debian Stretch, and gave
a little more time to this problem. I noticed that udev raises an error saying
"... was not an MTP device", and after some search on the net I managed to make
VueScan work by adding a specific udev rule :
r
Greetings and Merry Christmas / Happy Hannukah / insert appropriate
greeting here
There's no way to describe this with all the relevant info in a short
way, so I'll try instead to make this as entertaining a read as I can.
For the first time ever I have tried to introduce a machine with a
stat
On Tue, Dec 26, 2017 at 12:23:41AM +0900, Mark Fletcher wrote:
> Greetings and Merry Christmas / Happy Hannukah / insert appropriate
> greeting here
>
> There's no way to describe this with all the relevant info in a short
> way, so I'll try instead to make this as entertaining a read as I can.
The safest way to fix an ip address in a dhcp served network is to tell
the dhcp server to associate that address with the mac of the unit. The
address should be outside the dhcp range you set up. I normall pin down
all my connected devices that way, leaving the dhcp assignment for
guests etc. I
Marc Auslander wrote:
> The safest way to fix an ip address in a dhcp served network is to tell
> the dhcp server to associate that address with the mac of the unit. The
> address should be outside the dhcp range you set up. I normall pin down
> all my connected devices that way, leaving the dh
Henning Follmann wrote:
> 1) You talk too much.
> Solution: be precise but not chatty. Get to the point.
>
> 2) Your network setup is overly complicated.
> Solution: simplify! Also very important: complexity is the enemy of
> security. Your set up should be straight forward that any issue becomes
2017-12-25 16:23 keltezéssel, Mark Fletcher írta:
> Can anyone guess what might be wrong with the setup that is preventing
> me from being able to reach 192.168.1.3 from inside the AirStation LAN?
> And how I could fix it? Google turned up the static-routes option of
> dhcpd, which it appears co
> Henning Follmann wrote:
>
> > 1) You talk too much.
And you are rude. Solution: learn some manners. If you don't have the
attention span to read more than a few lines of prose, I'm not
interested in your attempts to make that my problem. As others have
demonstrated, plenty people do.
> >
>
On Mon, Dec 25, 2017 at 06:00:00PM +0100, deloptes wrote:
> Henning Follmann wrote:
>
> Mark can start by drawing a diagram of the setup, configuring the DHCP an
> DNS and firewall properly.
> Ad DHCP Mark, you can setup a range with static and a range with dynamic IP
> addresses. All that has sta
On Mon, Dec 25, 2017 at 11:49:17AM -0500, Marc Auslander wrote:
> The safest way to fix an ip address in a dhcp served network is to tell
> the dhcp server to associate that address with the mac of the unit. The
> address should be outside the dhcp range you set up. I normall pin down
> all my co
On Mon, Dec 25, 2017 at 05:53:42PM +0100, Sven Hartge wrote:
> Marc Auslander wrote:
>
> > The safest way to fix an ip address in a dhcp served network is to tell
> > the dhcp server to associate that address with the mac of the unit. The
> > address should be outside the dhcp range you set up.
Le 25/12/2017 à 16:23, Mark Fletcher a écrit :
There's no way to describe this with all the relevant info in a short
way
Yes there is a way. You really talk too much.
so I'll try instead to make this as entertaining a read as I can.
You failed. Ther result is just long and boring.
the in
On Monday 25 December 2017 19:54:10 Mark Fletcher wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 25, 2017 at 06:00:00PM +0100, deloptes wrote:
> > Henning Follmann wrote:
> >
> > Mark can start by drawing a diagram of the setup, configuring the
> > DHCP an DNS and firewall properly.
> > Ad DHCP Mark, you can setup a range
Hi,
I ran out of root partition disk space and can't install or remove any more
packages or even login gui window manager anymore
i spent few good hours researching for solutions and found that i can resize
root and home partitions using resize2fs and lvresize tools but they are not
even instal
On Mon, Dec 25, 2017 at 10:49 AM, Marc Auslander
wrote:
> The safest way to fix an ip address in a dhcp served network is to tell
> the dhcp server to associate that address with the mac of the unit. The
> address should be outside the dhcp range you set up. I normall pin down
> all my connecte
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/GRUB#Boot_partition . ArchWiki has
carried an introduction of GRUB , it offers a feature to decrypt your
partitions and you don't need to separate /boot . Debian also uses GRUB as its
boot loader ,but Debian still separates /boot partition and leave it u
On 12/25/2017 08:44 PM, Sarah Johnson wrote:
Hi,
I ran out of root partition disk space and can't install or remove any
more packages or even login gui window manager anymore
i spent few good hours researching for solutions and found that i can
resize root and home partitions using resize2fs
On 12/26/2017 5:04 AM, Doug wrote:
On 12/25/2017 08:44 PM, Sarah Johnson wrote:
Hi,
I ran out of root partition disk space and can't install or remove any
more packages or even login gui window manager anymore
i spent few good hours researching for solutions and found that i can
resize root
Isn't the Debian I installed wonderful!
I ended up putting in an additional drive and repartitioning to solve this.
On Tue, Dec 26, 2017, 8:34 AM john doe wrote:
> On 12/26/2017 5:04 AM, Doug wrote:
> >
> > On 12/25/2017 08:44 PM, Sarah Johnson wrote:
> >> Hi,
> >> I ran out of root partition di
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