On Sat, 2019-03-23 at 11:31 +1100, David wrote:
> Hi deb
>
> I don't know why you have a habit of editing the message
> subject to add people's names, but I ask you to stop doing it.
I second that request for the same reasons David said, also seeing
someone else's name at the start of subject lin
On Fri, Mar 22, 2019 at 08:44:46PM +0100, deloptes wrote:
> Mark Fletcher wrote:
>
> > So this turned out to be a weirdie -- if I dropped the "sudo" my
> > original command worked.
> >
> > So now, suddenly from that update that started this thread, if I run the
> > pactl command as an unprivilege
On 3/23/2019 12:48 AM, Tom Browder wrote:
> I travel often with a hefty laptop running Debian 9 and like to do casual
> programming on it remotely via a terminal app (Termius) on an iPad. In many
> situations I am able to access the laptop when on a wireless LAN by getting
> its IP address with "su
Kangry Group,
Hope you are well.
I came across your wonderful website and really appreciate the hard work
done. However never expected such simple flaws!
You won't believe these basic flaws are dampening your web performance.
Still I would like to bring few of the key points in our notic
deloptes composed on 2019-03-23 07:29 (UTC+0100):
> Felix Miata wrote:
>> IME, using net.ifnames=0, the motherboard NIC closer to an ATX power
>> supply is always eth0. With BTX I've never had two NICs, but have to
>> suppose it would be the opposite. I think PCI(e) resources flow the same
>> dir
> > Is there any reliable way to either (1) always connect via the LAN or (2)
> > make the laptop broadcast its own LAN so I can login to it wirelessly from
> > the iPad?
...
> It is unclear to me if you have one internal network (network behind
> your laptop) or if both the Ipad and the laptop are
On Fri, Mar 22, 2019 at 9:29 AM Mark Fletcher wrote:
>
> So this turned out to be a weirdie -- if I dropped the "sudo" my
> original command worked.
> So now, suddenly from that update that started this thread, if I run the
> pactl command as an unprivileged user, it works fine.
Is it possible
Tom Browder wrote:
> I travel often with a hefty laptop running Debian 9 and like to do casual
> programming on it remotely via a terminal app (Termius) on an iPad. In many
> situations I am able to access the laptop when on a wireless LAN by getting
> its IP address with "sudo ifconfig" and simpl
On Sat, Mar 23, 2019 at 5:12 AM Tom Browder wrote:
>
> > > Is there any reliable way to either (1) always connect via the LAN or (2)
> > > make the laptop broadcast its own LAN so I can login to it wirelessly from
> > > the iPad?
Solved!!
I tried using my iPhjone as a personal hotspot and connec
Hi,
I am trying to build a custom ISO from this guide:
https://willhaley.com/blog/custom-debian-live-environment/
But the ISO fails to boot, with a message that it can't find the init
system.
Then trying to understand: https://wiki.debian.org/DebianCustomCD but
the whole page is bit overki
On Fri 22 Mar 2019 at 17:45:50 (+0100), to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 21, 2019 at 07:52:33PM -0500, Martin McCormick wrote:
>
> [...]
>
> > Opening, appending and closing for each new line of
> > output made me a bit squeamish. The program is monitoring a
> > stream of data from a ra
Trevis Schiffer writes:
Hi,
I am trying to build a custom ISO from this guide:
https://willhaley.com/blog/custom-debian-live-environment/
But the ISO fails to boot, with a message that it can't find the init system.
Then trying to understand: https://wiki.debian.org/DebianCustomCD but the
Hi!
I'm running debian testing and I'm trying to use mailvelope with Firefox
in order to encrypt/sign my emails. I plan to use it with my yubikey.
I'm getting "GnuPG is not available". Any ideas how to solve it?
One solution i could try is downloading the packages from
https://www.gnupg.org/down
On Sat, Mar 23, 2019 at 10:27:01AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> On Fri 22 Mar 2019 at 17:45:50 (+0100), to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> Reading the OP's problem, I wonder how you're meant to detect
> "any whiff of a problem" [...]
Torture tests.
> The main concern raised in the OP was flushing before
Hi folks,
interesting thing, I found this little article in internet:
https://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/
PredictableNetworkInterfaceNames/
So, it looks like, since systemd v197, all devicenames are now predictable by
udev.
If so (just an idea) packagers or developers may add a
Hans writes:
> Am Freitag, 22. März 2019, 17:15:29 CET schrieb Reco:
>> Or, for instance, en0p2gibberish. They call them Unpredictable Device
>> Named for a reason.
>>
>
> Yes, thsis is another thing, which I am thinking of: The names could change
> (in case, when there are more than one networ
On Fri, 22 Mar 2019, David Wright wrote:
almost invariably up-to-date enough, and I don't have to check
for upgradesthey just appear, like mainstream updates.
what do you mean by "enough" ?
why don't use the simple command:
wget https://yt-dl.org/latest/youtube-dl -O /usr/local/bin/you
My 0.02€
It's interesting how this topic is so often resurrected. The first time we
upgraded a RedHat server and the network interfaces were renamed, our
supervisor was.angered :-)
The issue is the order of enumeration of devices on a PCI bus. Even
identical models of NIC at the same level of f
I suppose I should add this. In datacenters of a certain size, when the
network cabling leaves control of the OS administrators (yes, even the
Wintel admins), network admins aren't there to make your life easier. You
do it yourself.
I encountered the same issue with SAN admins a bit later over fibe
Lee writes:
> https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/25372/turn-off-buffering-in-pipe/
>
> Regards,
> Lee
Thank you and all others. It turns out that getting the
autoflush to work in perl is on a par with falling off of a log
for ease of execution.
There is a perl variable ca
Hi debian
Why can I not fint "en_DK.UTF-8 UTF-8" when I install a normal os from
you (it is not a server version)??
I know that I can set it after the installation, but it is not the same!!
/allan
On Sat 23 Mar 2019 at 04:39:21 (-0400), Felix Miata wrote:
> deloptes composed on 2019-03-23 07:29 (UTC+0100):
> > Felix Miata wrote:
>
> >> IME, using net.ifnames=0, the motherboard NIC closer to an ATX power
> >> supply is always eth0. With BTX I've never had two NICs, but have to
> >> suppose i
David Wright composed on 2019-03-23 23:03 (UTC-0400):
> On Sat 23 Mar 2019 at 04:39:21 (-0400), Felix Miata wrote:
>> The ATX is on the left when looking at the rear from the rear with
>> the slot openings facing up. ghe wanted a frame of reference. I gave the ATX
>> position, CPU position and PS
Felix Miata wrote:
> Time can't change motherboard components' relative physical positions.
this is true, but to conclude that the numbering of the ethernet devices
depends on the position of the ATX or whatever is a bit too much.
Naturally it is left to right when you look at the back.
regards
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