Long Wind composed on 2019-02-13 08:05 (UTC):
> hp dx5150 has many problem with debianjessie and wheezy fail to run on
> itearly stretch seems
> OKi've just installed 9.7, hoping it perform betterbut it's worse, X
> Window(which use ati video
> driver) is very slowat first i think the problem is
Long Wind composed on 2019-02-13 08:24 (UTC):
> inxi: command not found
> which package should i install??
sudo apt install inxi
or get the latest version directly from:
https://github.com/smxi/inxi
It's only a script.
--
Evolution as taught in public schools is religion, not science.
Team
Hi all,
I persistently get "The destination does not support EFI firmware" .
Apparently the latest Converter doesn't support Debian 9 (yet?).
More details on my issue here:
https://communities.vmware.com/message/2837600
Has anybody had success tricking Converter to perform a migration?
Any
*
https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2017/08/msg01613.html
*
https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17152738
*
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=274269
* https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=17151922
Since I needed an |ifconfig| with a more BSD-like interface /a
Hi all,
I have a simple asp.net core site that runs with Postgres which works
fine if I login as root and set it to run on port 80. SSL is done by
cloudflare. I would prefer to use nginx or at least have an iptable
rule to redirect the port 80 traffic. Both have the same failure so for
now
Long Wind composed on 2019-02-13 08:45 (UTC):
> sorry! the output is in color,
> i don't know how to display them in one color
> [1;34mGraphics: [0;37m [1;34mCard:[0;37m Advanced Micro Devices [AMD/ATI]
> RS480 [Radeon Xpress 200 Series][0;37m
> [1;34m [0;37m [1;34mbus-ID:[0;37m 01:05.
On Wed, 13 Feb 2019 9:44 pm Patrick Kirk Hi all,
>
> I have a simple asp.net core site that runs with Postgres which works
> fine if I login as root and set it to run on port 80. SSL is done by
> cloudflare. I would prefer to use nginx or at least have an iptable
> rule to redirect the port 80 t
is crt or lcd relevant here?hp, using ati, is connected to lcd while lenovo,
using intel is connected to crt
i've tried switching monitor, hp seems better after switchingthis is
unbelievable, but i'm not sure, more testing is needed
my hardware is old, but my computing job isn't
demanding, leno
Le 2019-02-13 11:43, Patrick Kirk a écrit :
Hi all,
I have a simple asp.net core site that runs with Postgres which works
fine if I login as root and set it to run on port 80. SSL is done by
cloudflare. I would prefer to use nginx or at least have an iptable
rule to redirect the port 80 traffi
hello,
I have a raid6 with 4 disks. 2 of them show Current_Pending_Sector 1.
The disks has warranty till Apr. 2019 so I decide to replace them.
After I change the disk and install it on an other computer to overwrite
with zero it the Current_Pending_Sector is gone.
What should I do? Whats our exp
Le 2019-02-13 10:14, Adam Weremczuk a écrit :
Hi all,
I persistently get "The destination does not support EFI firmware" .
Apparently the latest Converter doesn't support Debian 9 (yet?).
More details on my issue here:
https://communities.vmware.com/message/2837600
Has anybody had success t
On Wed, 13 Feb 2019 11:30 pm Igor Cicimov On Wed, 13 Feb 2019 9:44 pm Patrick Kirk
>> Hi all,
>>
>> I have a simple asp.net core site that runs with Postgres which works
>> fine if I login as root and set it to run on port 80. SSL is done by
>> cloudflare. I would prefer to use nginx or at leas
On 2/12/2019 3:25 PM, Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
In response to that painful "(still installing 9.7 ...)".
You can also use these official and unofficial at the same time images
to install Debian. [1]
As a last resort you can disassemble laptop and physically remove Intel
WiFi NIC before ins
note: this is why I think top-posting is best.
People don't have to scroll through tons of crap to get to "Thanks" :-)
On 2/12/2019 3:07 PM, ghe wrote:
On 2/12/19 9:15 AM, deb wrote:
Glenn, thanks for this!
More than welcome.
For your amazement, here's the comcastRoutes.sh from my laptop,
Hello folks:
Again -- fussing with a full (not from a live .iso) 9.7 install; the
Debian GUI installer is suggesting a Swap partition on a Kingston SSD.
#1 Given that it's not great to pound the same area of a SSD with
writes; is it indeed still best practice to go with a swap partition on
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 08:41:33AM -0500, deb wrote:
#1 Given that it's not great to pound the same area of a SSD with
writes; is it indeed still best practice to go with a swap partition
on a SSD rather than a swap FILE?
That's not a thing: the SSD will balance writes physically across the
d
On Wednesday, February 13, 2019 08:32:22 AM deb wrote:
> note: this is why I think top-posting is best.
>
> People don't have to scroll through tons of crap to get to "Thanks" :-)
I vary the use of top-posting and "bottom"-posting depending on circumstances.
For thanks and similar, top posting w
On 2/13/2019 8:46 AM, Michael Stone wrote:
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 08:41:33AM -0500, deb wrote:
#1 Given that it's not great to pound the same area of a SSD with
writes; is it indeed still best practice to go with a swap partition
on a SSD rather than a swap FILE?
That's not a thing: the SS
On 2019-02-13 13:32, deb wrote:
note: this is why I think top-posting is best.
People don't have to scroll through tons of crap to get to "Thanks" :-)
A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the m
basti wrote:
> hello,
> I have a raid6 with 4 disks. 2 of them show Current_Pending_Sector 1.
> The disks has warranty till Apr. 2019 so I decide to replace them.
>
> After I change the disk and install it on an other computer to overwrite
> with zero it the Current_Pending_Sector is gone.
>
> W
On 13.02.2019 18:22, basti wrote:
> hello,
> I have a raid6 with 4 disks. 2 of them show Current_Pending_Sector 1.
> The disks has warranty till Apr. 2019 so I decide to replace them.
>
> After I change the disk and install it on an other computer to overwrite
> with zero it the Current_Pending_Sec
Le 2019-02-13 14:58, Adam Weremczuk a écrit :
Short answer - because it will take significantly longer and
potentially lead to more errors.
Especially if I have a number of servers with different structures and
purposes.
It's hard to beat 20-30 seconds it takes to click and type into VMware
Co
On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 10:49:13PM -0600, Kent West wrote:
> "The Debian Administrator's Handbook" is for version 8, and talks
> about deprecated tools like ifup/down, which aren't even installed by
> default on stretch.
The ifupdown package has priority "important" and, as far as I know, it
is in
deb wrote:
>
> On 2/13/2019 8:46 AM, Michael Stone wrote:
> > On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 08:41:33AM -0500, deb wrote:
> > > #1 Given that it's not great to pound the same area of a SSD with
> > > writes; is it indeed still best practice to go with a swap partition
> > > on a SSD rather than a swap F
deb wrote:
> note: this is why I think top-posting is best. People don't have to
> scroll through tons of crap to get to "Thanks" :-)
When I open a message on a mailing list or newsgroup and see nothing but
quoted text I usually just move on to the next message. On the other
hand I find top-pos
Short answer - because it will take significantly longer and potentially
lead to more errors.
Especially if I have a number of servers with different structures and
purposes.
It's hard to beat 20-30 seconds it takes to click and type into VMware
Converter and leave it running.
It works well f
Alexander V. Makartsev wrote:
> On 13.02.2019 18:22, basti wrote:
>
> Most hardware RAID controllers perform automatic full surface scans to
> ensure data consistency (also could be called "patrol scans") and mark
> HDDs as "Expected to Fail Soon" to warn user.
> You have to backup your data regu
Dear All,
I have an old laptop which I set up yesterday. And since it's old I only
install the packages I need.
Today I realized that I cannot login into an public hotspot.
Up to now it worked in a way that I got redirected to the login page
where I had to click on the connect button. This does
Thank you.
On 2/13/2019 9:11 AM, Dan Ritter wrote:
deb wrote:
On 2/13/2019 8:46 AM, Michael Stone wrote:
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 08:41:33AM -0500, deb wrote:
#1 Given that it's not great to pound the same area of a SSD with
writes; is it indeed still best practice to go with a swap partition
Forgot to mention the source server was up and running the entire time,
no down time.
On 13/02/19 14:06, Alexandre GRIVEAUX wrote:
It's hard to beat 20-30 seconds it takes to click and type into VMware
Converter and leave it running.
It works well for Debian 7, probably 8 as well but not 9 :(
Flo wrote:
> Dear All,
>
> I have an old laptop which I set up yesterday. And since it's old I only
> install the packages I need.
>
> Today I realized that I cannot login into an public hotspot.
>
> Up to now it worked in a way that I got redirected to the login page
> where I had to click on
On 14/02/19 2:30 AM, deb wrote:
> Thank you Alexander.
>
> I kinda like the idea of pulling the Intel wifi and just going with a
> Think Penguin free software wifi.
>
> https://www.thinkpenguin.com/gnu-linux/penguin-wireless-n-usb-adapter-gnu-linux-tpe-n150usb
>
>
The one that says: "Debian 7,
On Wed, 13 Feb 2019 15:24:43 +0100
Flo wrote:
>Dear All,
>
>I have an old laptop which I set up yesterday. And since it's old I only
>install the packages I need.
>
>Today I realized that I cannot login into an public hotspot.
>
>Up to now it worked in a way that I got redirected to the login pag
On Wed 13 Feb 2019 at 09:44:49 (-0500), Dan Ritter wrote:
> Flo wrote:
> > Dear All,
> >
> > I have an old laptop which I set up yesterday. And since it's old I only
> > install the packages I need.
> >
> > Today I realized that I cannot login into an public hotspot.
> >
> > Up to now it worked
David Wright wrote:
> On Wed 13 Feb 2019 at 09:44:49 (-0500), Dan Ritter wrote:
> > Flo wrote:
> > > Dear All,
> > >
> > > I have an old laptop which I set up yesterday. And since it's old I only
> > > install the packages I need.
> > >
> > > Today I realized that I cannot login into an public
Hi folks,
I am running into a little problem with kmail in plasma.
The problem is, that the column on the very left side (the one where the
folders like "kmail-folder" are shown) with the the definition "name" is very,
very big (more than 4000 pixels wide). But I can not get it smaller, and t
On 2/13/19 9:14 AM, John Hasler wrote:
s better not to post "Thanks" to a busy mailing list. If you must do
so please put "Thanks" in the subject line.
OR "solved", which is much more useful for the next guy. No need for
"thanks" as "solved" is the ultimate goal for posterity. It's what I
lo
> > >
> > > Try going to http://192.168.1.1
> >
> > I don't think one can assume that that's the correct address.
>
> It's better if that is *not* a correct address. What we want is
> for the browser to make a request that won't be https, so that
> the router can hijack it to redirect to the log
On Tue 12 Feb 2019 at 22:49:13 (-0600), Kent West wrote:
> stretch, 9.7
>
> I've duckduckgo'd for two days, but there seems to be no definitive answer
> as to how networking is supposed to be configured in stretch. debian.org's
> link to "The Debian Administrator's Handbook" is for version 8, and
On 2/12/19 12:48 PM, David Christensen wrote:
I had a Linux md RAID0 (mirror) ...
Correction -- RAID1 is mirror.
David
On Wed, 13 Feb 2019 06:39:14 -0800
Charlie Kravetz wrote:
> On Wed, 13 Feb 2019 15:24:43 +0100
> Flo wrote:
>
>> I have an old laptop which I set up yesterday. And since it's
>> old I only install the packages I need.
>>
>> Today I realized that I cannot login into an public hotspot.
>>
>> Up t
Hello Steve,
As some of the other responders already said, check your drives' SMART
values.
But a disk may fail without any indication in the SMART table. I've seen
this a couple of years ago and documented it here:
https://www.claudiokuenzler.com/blog/301/disk-failure-not-detected-by-smart-ata1-f
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 2:22 PM basti wrote:
> hello,
> I have a raid6 with 4 disks. 2 of them show Current_Pending_Sector 1.
>
Hi Basti
are you using mdadm for the raid-6 or a hardware raid controller?
> The disks has warranty till Apr. 2019 so I decide to replace them.
>
If there's only 1
On 2/12/19, Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 06:40:01PM -0500, Lee wrote:
>> What are people using these days to
>> 1. have dnssec enabled lookups
>> 2. filter external dns answers
>
> I use Unbound for resolvers.
>
> I understand that Unbound can do some RPZ-like things with it
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 8:10 AM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Tue, Feb 12, 2019 at 10:49:13PM -0600, Kent West wrote:
> > "The Debian Administrator's Handbook" is for version 8, and talks
> > about deprecated tools like ifup/down, which aren't even installed by
> > default on stretch.
>
> The ifupdow
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 02:13:52PM -0600, Kent West wrote:
> But, that leaves my second question unanswered:
>
> 2) What is the canonical current method in 2019 to [semi-]manually
> configure networking in stretch? And is it documented anywhere? (My two
> days of searching leads me to think "no".
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 12:08 PM David Wright
wrote:
> On Tue 12 Feb 2019 at 22:49:13 (-0600), Kent West wrote:
> > stretch, 9.7
> >
> > I've duckduckgo'd for two days, but there seems to be no definitive
> answer
> > as to how networking is supposed to be configured in stretch. debian.org
> 's
>
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 2:25 PM Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 02:13:52PM -0600, Kent West wrote:
> > But, that leaves my second question unanswered:
> >
> > 2) What is the canonical current method in 2019 to [semi-]manually
> > configure networking in stretch? And is it documente
I recently bought an intel NUC BOXNUC8i3BEH1. You can see a description of the
product at Newegg:
https://www.newegg.com/Product/Product.aspx?Item=N82E16856102213
I’m trying to install Debian Stretch on it
debian-9.7.0-amd64-DVD-1.iso
and (later)
firmware-9.6.0-amd64-DVD-1.iso
I mad
On 2/13/19 5:41 AM, deb wrote:
Again -- fussing with a full (not from a live .iso) 9.7 install; the
Debian GUI installer is suggesting a Swap partition on a Kingston
SSD.
#1 Given that it's not great to pound the same area of a SSD with
writes; is it indeed still best practice to go with a swap
I'm not sure if it's the exact same case but I had the same issue with a
more recent motherboard. Debian failed to detect the network card with the
E1000 drivers.
I tried an iso with the non free repo without success.
A base Ubuntu iso install was able to detect and configure the network
driver.
David Christensen wrote:
> On 2/13/19 6:11 AM, Dan Ritter wrote:
> > If you want maximum SSD longevity, increase the amount of space that
> > the SSD can use for remapping by never writing to some amount of
> > space. Easiest is to not fill the disk with partitions -- leave 5-10%
> > empty.
>
> A
Hello,
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 01:14:36PM -0800, David Christensen wrote:
> A swap partition is faster than a swap file.
Has something changed in this regard since kernel version 2.6 then?
http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0507.0/1690.html
Cheers,
Andy
--
https://bitfolk.com/ -- No-no
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 01:14:36PM -0800, David Christensen wrote:
AFAIK over-provisioning has no effect on longevity -- longevity is
proportional to total number of cells times rated erase/ write cycles
per cell divided by write throughput.
In the absence of trim, restricting the logical capac
Hello,
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 04:23:56PM -0500, Dan Ritter wrote:
> "Over-provisioning often takes away from user capacity, either
> temporarily or permanently, but it gives back reduced write
> amplification, increased endurance, and increased performance."
>
> Increased endurance is increased
Le 13/02/2019 à 14:59, Dan Ritter a écrit :
basti wrote:
hello,
I have a raid6 with 4 disks. 2 of them show Current_Pending_Sector 1.
(...)
A small number in CPS is fine.
No it's not fine. It means that the the host requested to read
unreadable data, so useful data has been lost.
"Offline
Le 13/02/2019 à 15:01, Alexander V. Makartsev a écrit :
IMO, it's ok for disk devices to develop unreadable blocks (bad blocks),
No it's not ok. Unreadable blocks means lost data.
Internal firmware of the disk takes care of bad blocks, marks them
internally and reallocates them. (makes sure
On Wed, 2019-02-13 at 16:17 -0500, Laurent Dumont wrote:
> I'm not sure if it's the exact same case but I had the same issue with a
> more recent motherboard. Debian failed to detect the network card with the
> E1000 drivers.
>
> I tried an iso with the non free repo without success.
>
> A base U
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
One of the things I do with an SSD is turn down "swappiness" to a
minimum.
In /etc/sysctl.d/custom.conf
I put the following lines:
vm.swappiness = 0
vm.vfs_cache_pressure = 40
vm.dirty_background_ratio = 10
vm.dirty_ratio = 40
There are also a
> On Feb 13, 2019, at 5:47 PM, Ben Hutchings wrote:
>
> On Wed, 2019-02-13 at 16:17 -0500, Laurent Dumont wrote:
>> I'm not sure if it's the exact same case but I had the same issue with a
>> more recent motherboard. Debian failed to detect the network card with the
>> E1000 drivers.
>>
>> I
On 2/13/19 1:23 PM, Dan Ritter wrote:
David Christensen wrote:
On 2/13/19 6:11 AM, Dan Ritter wrote:
If you want maximum SSD longevity, increase the amount of space that
the SSD can use for remapping by never writing to some amount of
space. Easiest is to not fill the disk with partitions -- le
On 2/13/19 1:28 PM, Andy Smith wrote:
On Wed, Feb 13, 2019 at 01:14:36PM -0800, David Christensen wrote:
A swap partition is faster than a swap file.
Has something changed in this regard since kernel version 2.6 then?
http://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0507.0/1690.html
I do not follo
Le 14/02/2019 à 03:14, Curt Howland a écrit :
I also put in ramdisk options for /tmp in /etc/fstab
You mean tmpfs, not ramdisk. Nobody sane would prefer ramdisk over tmpfs
for /tmp.
> On Feb 13, 2019, at 6:51 PM, Rick Thomas wrote:
>
>
>
>> On Feb 13, 2019, at 5:47 PM, Ben Hutchings wrote:
>>
>> On Wed, 2019-02-13 at 16:17 -0500, Laurent Dumont wrote:
>>> I'm not sure if it's the exact same case but I had the same issue with a
>>> more recent motherboard. Debian faile
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