On 2021-07-31 12:11, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Hi,
mick crane wrote:
looking at those informative pages I think /dev/sg2 is the scanner
should that not be in group scanner ?
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 3 Jul 30 17:36 cdrom -> sr0
crw-rw+ 1 root cdrom21, 2 Jul 30 17:36 sg2
brw-rw
Le lundi 2 août 2021 à 06:00:05 UTC+2, Ratan Gupta a écrit :
[...]
> In my case it is not at all complaining as it is because the process is
> unconfined.
[...]
If I am not mistaken, the purpose of the complain mode is precisely to inform
about policy violations without forbidding them (forbiddi
Hi,
i wrote:
> > /dev/sg2 might be the generic SCSI device to which /dev/sr0 is connected.
mick crane wrote:
> Drive type : vendor 'PLDS' product 'DVD+-RW DS-8A9SH' revision 'ED11'
So it's clearly the DVD burner which is at sg2.
Do you have any sg device left as suspect for the scanner's devi
On 2021-08-02 08:55, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Hi,
i wrote:
> /dev/sg2 might be the generic SCSI device to which /dev/sr0 is connected.
mick crane wrote:
Drive type : vendor 'PLDS' product 'DVD+-RW DS-8A9SH' revision
'ED11'
So it's clearly the DVD burner which is at sg2.
Do you have any sg
> So really think hard before splitting off a filesystem outside of
> volume management. I believe it is more likely to cause problems
> than it is to avoid problems.
All my machines have a separate /boot partition (and everything
else in LVM). These are all "historical accidents", because at the
Thomas Schmitt (12021-08-02):
> Do you have any sg device left as suspect for the scanner's device file,
> after you subtracted one for each hard disk and each optical drive ?
> (I.e. are there two hard disks to occupy sg0 and sg1 and no other sgX left ?)
Have SCSI scanners been spotted since the
On 8/1/21 1:30 AM, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Sat, Jul 31, 2021 at 06:42:50PM +0200, Hans wrote:
Am Samstag, 31. Juli 2021, 14:05:59 CEST schrieb Nicolas George:
Gunnar Gervin (12021-07-31):
Just:
cp /path/to/file.iso /dev/sdX
Hi,
isn't it just2 :
dd if=whatever.iso of=/dev/sdX
It's
On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 09:55:17 +0200, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Hi,
>
> i wrote:
> > > /dev/sg2 might be the generic SCSI device to which /dev/sr0 is connected.
>
> mick crane wrote:
> > Drive type : vendor 'PLDS' product 'DVD+-RW DS-8A9SH' revision 'ED11'
>
> So it's clearly the DVD burner whi
On Tuesday, 27 July 2021 18:07:53 CEST Gareth Evans wrote:
> Given that these are all fixed in Bullseye (and at least the grave
> apt-listbugs issue has been fixed in eg Ubuntu since March 2020 [1]) why
> not also Buster?
According to runc security tracker, a fixed runc is available for buster,
a
Hi,
Brian wrote:
> Isn't /dev/sg0 the block device?
/dev/sgX are character devices.
https://tldp.org/HOWTO/SCSI-Generic-HOWTO/intro.html
says
"The driver's purpose is to allow SCSI commands to be sent directly to
SCSI devices. [...] Various specialized applications for writing
CD-Rs an
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 01:20:13AM -0400, Felix Miata wrote:
> David Christensen composed on 2021-08-01 15:29 (UTC-0700):
>
> > 2021-08-01 14:10:24 root@dipsy /tmp/initrd.img-4.19.0-17-amd64
> > # gunzip -c /boot/initrd.img-4.19.0-17-amd64 | cpio -i -d -H newc
> > --no-absolute-filenames
> > 2467
On 2021-08-02 at 07:25, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> unicorn:~$ lsinitrd /boot/initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64 | wc -l
> 1646
> unicorn:~$ lsinitramfs /boot/initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64 | wc -l
> 1635
>
> Curious.
Try a diff between the lsinit* outputs? I don't have dracut-core
installed, or I'd run the test m
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 07:41:03AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
> On 2021-08-02 at 07:25, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>
> > unicorn:~$ lsinitrd /boot/initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64 | wc -l
> > 1646
> > unicorn:~$ lsinitramfs /boot/initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64 | wc -l
> > 1635
> >
> > Curious.
>
> Try a diff betw
On 2021-08-02 at 07:51, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 07:41:03AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
>
>> On 2021-08-02 at 07:25, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>>
>> > unicorn:~$ lsinitrd /boot/initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64 | wc -l
>> > 1646
>> > unicorn:~$ lsinitramfs /boot/initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64
On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 13:21:22 +0200, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Brian wrote:
> > Isn't /dev/sg0 the block device?
>
> /dev/sgX are character devices.
>
> https://tldp.org/HOWTO/SCSI-Generic-HOWTO/intro.html
> says
> "The driver's purpose is to allow SCSI commands to be sent directly t
Mac 2.1 2007. Version: 3.O, PVT
Vesa Bios, Intel 82945 GM
Notebook Mac 4208 VAA
Software Rev: 256 Modes: 36
Bootloader: Isolinux
2 Core 64 bit Mem: 3055 MB
Needs now:
VM builder alternatives to CHEF.
BR,
Geg.
On Sat, 31 Jul 2021, 16:02 Gunnar Gervin, wrote:
> Tried Virtual Machine it, but the DV
Are there alternatives to VM, & does it help w/external ssd 1tb?
Are external RAM available?
Geg
On Mon, 2 Aug 2021, 15:11 Gunnar Gervin, wrote:
> Mac 2.1 2007. Version: 3.O, PVT
> Vesa Bios, Intel 82945 GM
> Notebook Mac 4208 VAA
> Software Rev: 256 Modes: 36
> Bootloader: Isolinux
> 2 Core 64
Can't I just build VM/Docker & websites in the 3gb memory computer, & host
it all in Cloud?
Geg
On Mon, 2 Aug 2021, 15:11 Gunnar Gervin, wrote:
> Mac 2.1 2007. Version: 3.O, PVT
> Vesa Bios, Intel 82945 GM
> Notebook Mac 4208 VAA
> Software Rev: 256 Modes: 36
> Bootloader: Isolinux
> 2 Core 64 b
Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> Mac 2.1 2007. Version: 3.O, PVT
> Vesa Bios, Intel 82945 GM
> Notebook Mac 4208 VAA
> Software Rev: 256 Modes: 36
> Bootloader: Isolinux
> 2 Core 64 bit Mem: 3055 MB
> Needs now:
> VM builder alternatives to CHEF.
Chef is not a VM builder, although it can be used that way.
I meant
"& run it all;
VM, Docker containers, websites in/via a 24/7 Cloud service storage &
website hotel provider".
Geg
On Mon, 2 Aug 2021, 15:11 Gunnar Gervin, wrote:
> Mac 2.1 2007. Version: 3.O, PVT
> Vesa Bios, Intel 82945 GM
> Notebook Mac 4208 VAA
> Software Rev: 256 Modes: 36
> Bootload
On Sun, Aug 1, 2021 at 11:17 AM Kleene, Steven (kleenesj) <
kleen...@ucmail.uc.edu> wrote:
> On Saturday, July 31, 2021 4:54 PM I wrote concerning firefox-esr:
> >> Neither translate.google.com nor images.google.com functions properly.
>
Similar problem here, only with Google sites like Gmail, Do
> Similar problem here, only with Google sites like Gmail, Docs, and
> Chat (via a[n?] university/Google system).
Interesting. Do you see any relevant errors if you press F12 and take a
look at the JavaScript console on the affected pages, compared to the
unaffected pages? What about the Network t
I see.
It's now a dual boot;
Debian 10.9 i386 32b Buster (installed from netinst dvd), in which Synaptic
crashed 80%. Tried reinstall with above dvd, it was rejected, not sure why.
So I restored the machine with a DVD with Linux Mint, dual boot;
Debian above is 1/2 , Mint is 1/2 & set up Synaptic i
Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> I meant
> "& run it all;
> VM, Docker containers, websites in/via a 24/7 Cloud service storage &
> website hotel provider".
Let's talk about the XY problem.
https://xyproblem.info/
Go read that, understand it, and then please come back and ask
questions.
-dsr-
Scam:
Was from outside of this list.
This info because someone thought I accused this list.
Sorry for the confusion I made.
BR,
Geg.
On Sun, 1 Aug 2021, 23:46 Polyna-Maude Racicot-Summerside, <
deb...@polynamaude.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 2021-08-01 9:58 a.m., Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> > I expected t
Stefan Monnier writes:
>>> > cp /path/to/file.iso /dev/sdX
>>> dd if=whatever.iso of=/dev/sdX
>> It's up to taste.
>
> Not at all. The only right answer is:
>
> pv -parIe /dev/sdX
Actually I'm not sure how good it is to have both -a and -r, pv doesn't
really show which rate counter is whi
My exMac looks like old Mac, but 1/2 of software/harddisk is Debian i386
32b Buster, another
1/2 of HD (Toshiba MK1655GS ssd 160gb, Intel, 3gb memory) is Linux Mint 32b
Ubuntu-based.
Wikipedia said it's the first Mac (Snow Leopard)to run on 64bit.
You asked what changed it from being a Macbook to a
Debian buster 32b i386 is the dysfunctional 1/2 part (that the scammer
might have access to until I am able to find acceptable dvd to burn 64bit
Debian 10.10 into (dropped Bullseye because of request I couldn't do; no
Grub)
So I can renew that half. For me a probable way to test different distros
a
On Saturday, July 31, 2021 4:54 PM I wrote concerning firefox-esr:
> Neither translate.google.com nor images.google.com functions properly.
I have figured out the problem and solved it.
At some point I remembered that I have in place an old-fashioned way of
blocking sites. In /etc/hosts, I have
On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 10:36:22 +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> Thomas Schmitt (12021-08-02):
> > Do you have any sg device left as suspect for the scanner's device file,
> > after you subtracted one for each hard disk and each optical drive ?
> > (I.e. are there two hard disks to occupy sg0 and sg1
On 01/08/2021 23:51, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 01, 2021 at 03:29:07PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
>> 2021-08-01 13:52:37 root@dipsy ~
>> # file /boot/initrd.img-4.19.0-17-amd64
>> /boot/initrd.img-4.19.0-17-amd64: gzip compressed data, last modified: Sun
>> Jul 25 19:43:38 2021, from
Brian (12021-08-02):
> Helpful remarks, but I did not think printers used kernel drivers.
AFAIR, USB printers appear as a special device, unlike generic USB
devices, that makes one layer of drivers, but then you need an userland
driver, probably GhostScript, to talk the proper language to that
dev
On Sun 01 Aug 2021 at 13:21:11 (+0300), Ilkka Huotari wrote:
> Thanks. I should have said, that also apt-get autoremove fails:
>
> $ sudo apt-get autoremove
> Reading package lists... Done
> Building dependency tree... Done
> Reading state information... Done
> 0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to
On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 07:51:55 (-0400), Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 07:41:03AM -0400, The Wanderer wrote:
> > On 2021-08-02 at 07:25, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> >
> > > unicorn:~$ lsinitrd /boot/initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64 | wc -l
> > > 1646
> > > unicorn:~$ lsinitramfs /boot/initrd.i
On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 16:14:15 (+0300), Anssi Saari wrote:
> Stefan Monnier writes:
>
> >>> > cp /path/to/file.iso /dev/sdX
> >>> dd if=whatever.iso of=/dev/sdX
> >> It's up to taste.
> >
> > Not at all. The only right answer is:
> >
> > pv -parIe /dev/sdX
>
> Actually I'm not sure how go
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 10:45:25AM -0500, David Wright wrote:
> You posted here their precise sizes before you installed dracut.
> What's the size of your new initrd.img—has dracut done its job?
unicorn:~$ ls -l /boot/initrd*
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 30924690 Jan 29 2021 /boot/initrd.img-4.19.0-13-
On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 08:04:25 (+0300), Teemu Likonen wrote:
> * 2021-08-01 16:00:24-0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>
> > Someone who knows what makes initrd images swell up, please step in
> > and advise. And no, it's not "try using a different compression
> > algorithm". It's something in the *conte
On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 17:35:46 +0200, Nicolas George wrote:
> Brian (12021-08-02):
> > Helpful remarks, but I did not think printers used kernel drivers.
>
> AFAIR, USB printers appear as a special device, unlike generic USB
> devices, that makes one layer of drivers, but then you need an userlan
On Tue, 3 Aug 2021 at 01:45, David Wright wrote:
> BTW I encrypt only /home and swap, and AFAICT my initrd.img doesn't
> contain crypt stuff except for /usr/bin/cryptroot-unlock (5686B).
> So I ignore a polite warning at every rebuild:
>
> update-initramfs: Generating /boot/initrd.img-4.19.0-17
David Wright writes:
> On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 16:14:15 (+0300), Anssi Saari wrote:
>> Stefan Monnier writes:
>>
>> >>> > cp /path/to/file.iso /dev/sdX
>> >>> dd if=whatever.iso of=/dev/sdX
>> >> It's up to taste.
>> >
>> > Not at all. The only right answer is:
>> >
>> > pv -parIe /dev/sdX
Favor de contarnos sobre una situación en específico donde tuvo que actuar sin
el consentimiento de su jefe.
Workshop:
Cómo Diseñar y Aplicar Entrevistas Laborales Conductuales y Situacionales
Online en Vivo
11 de Agosto 2021
El modelo de entrevista tradicional quedó en el pasado...
¡APRENDE DE
On 8/1/21 3:51 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Sun, Aug 01, 2021 at 03:29:07PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
2021-08-01 13:52:37 root@dipsy ~
# gunzip -c /boot/initrd.img-4.19.0-17-amd64 | cpio -i -d -H newc
--no-absolute-filenames
246741 blocks
That may not extract the full content of the in
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 11:11:11AM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
> On 8/1/21 3:51 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > On Sun, Aug 01, 2021 at 03:29:07PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
> > > 2021-08-01 13:52:37 root@dipsy ~
>
> > > # gunzip -c /boot/initrd.img-4.19.0-17-amd64 | cpio -i -d -H newc
> > >
On Tue 03 Aug 2021 at 02:03:57 (+1000), David wrote:
> On Tue, 3 Aug 2021 at 01:45, David Wright wrote:
>
> > BTW I encrypt only /home and swap, and AFAICT my initrd.img doesn't
> > contain crypt stuff except for /usr/bin/cryptroot-unlock (5686B).
> > So I ignore a polite warning at every rebuild
On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 13:26:19 (-0400), Stefan Monnier wrote:
> Anssi Saari [2021-08-02 19:04:59] wrote:
> > David Wright writes:
> >> On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 16:14:15 (+0300), Anssi Saari wrote:
> >>> Stefan Monnier writes:
> >>> >>> > cp /path/to/file.iso /dev/sdX
> >>> >>> dd if=whatever.iso of=
On Mon, Aug 2, 2021 at 7:52 AM Ivan Krylov wrote:
> > Similar problem here, only with Google sites like Gmail, Docs, and
> > Chat (via a[n?] university/Google system).
>
> Interesting. Do you see any relevant errors if you press F12 and take a
> look at the JavaScript console on the affected page
Hi.
The different suggestions are not complete, are they??
Like:
pv -parle /dev/sdX
would rather be:
sudo pv -parle /dev/sdb
And even not sure on that example as being correct. Please correct my
possible failure/s in the above try.
As you can see, I`m trying a -64bit- because Macbook 2.1 might fit
Hi again.
This is an unusual question &/or project, maybe utterly stupid, maybe
temporary:
I bought a 1 TB external SSD (Intenso) for later commercial use -in my
company.
Meanwhile I want to use it for something else: To burn an entire Debian
distro on it.
I guess it`ll be more than enough space to
Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> Hi again.
> This is an unusual question &/or project, maybe utterly stupid, maybe
> temporary:
> I bought a 1 TB external SSD (Intenso) for later commercial use -in my
> company.
> Meanwhile I want to use it for something else: To burn an entire Debian
> distro on it.
> I gu
On 8/2/21 11:29 AM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 11:11:11AM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
Please post your console session showing how you created
initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64.txt.gz.
I didn't. It was created automatically when I installed dracut-core.
Prior to that, it was
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 10:02:18PM +0300, Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> pv -parle /dev/sdX
> would rather be:
> sudo pv -parle /dev/sdb
No, that won't work.
https://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashPitfalls#pf53
If you want to use redirections with sudo, you either need to wrap
things in "sh -c" a lot, or else
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 12:43:27PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
> I'd rather not install dracut.
Me too. So why not use lsinitramfs -l ? Why keep reinventing the wheel?
unicorn:~$ lsinitramfs -l /boot/initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64 | head -12
drwxr-xr-x 2 root root0 Apr 25 08:00
Greg Wooledge (12021-08-02):
> No, that won't work.
>
> https://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashPitfalls#pf53
>
> If you want to use redirections with sudo, you either need to wrap
> things in "sh -c" a lot, or else get a full interactive shell first
> (sudo -s), and *then* run your commands with redirec
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 03:44:03PM -0400, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 10:02:18PM +0300, Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> > pv -parle /dev/sdX
> > would rather be:
> > sudo pv -parle /dev/sdb
>
> No, that won't work.
>
> https://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashPitfalls#pf53
>
> If you want to us
I cowarded out of Terminal, or not really, cos Gnome Multiwriter did it in
5 minutes.
But later I`ll try it, if 64 bit doesn`t work in this old computer that
only Looks like a Mac. But is it, really? Not in my point of view; no Mac
software, except some hotkey functions, a pretty good keyboard, so-
On 8/2/21 12:47 PM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 12:43:27PM -0700, David Christensen wrote:
I'd rather not install dracut.
Me too. So why not use lsinitramfs -l ? Why keep reinventing the wheel?
unicorn:~$ lsinitramfs -l /boot/initrd.img-5.10.0-8-amd64 | head -12
drwxr-xr-x
Anssi Saari [2021-08-02 19:04:59] wrote:
> David Wright writes:
>> On Mon 02 Aug 2021 at 16:14:15 (+0300), Anssi Saari wrote:
>>> Stefan Monnier writes:
>>> >>> > cp /path/to/file.iso /dev/sdX
>>> >>> dd if=whatever.iso of=/dev/sdX
>>> >> It's up to taste.
>>> >
>>> > Not at all. The only righ
Hi,
What are you asking for here ? Or trying to achieve ?
On 2021-08-02 4:48 p.m., Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> I cowarded out of Terminal, or not really, cos Gnome Multiwriter did it
> in 5 minutes.
> But later I`ll try it, if 64 bit doesn`t work in this old computer that
> only Looks like a Mac. But i
Hi,
On 2021-08-02 3:35 p.m., Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> Hi again.
> This is an unusual question &/or project, maybe utterly stupid, maybe
> temporary:
> I bought a 1 TB external SSD (Intenso) for later commercial use -in my
> company.
> Meanwhile I want to use it for something else: To burn an entire
unless you are having a conversation
with yourself.
- from time-to-time, do enjoy Canadienne,
"the Amazing Polly" [youtube]
.
rgds
.
Hi,
On 2021-08-02 5:36 p.m., ellanios82 wrote:
>
>> unless you are having a conversation
>> with yourself.
>
>
> - from time-to-time, do enjoy Canadienne,
>
All "Canadian" politicans enjoy having their own day-to-day,
conversation with themselves.
How did you know I was "canadienne" ?
Where
i have 2 memory slotsmemtest86+ shows each has 2G, but total is 3Gafter booting
linux, top shows total is 3Gwhy 1 G is missing? Thanks!
Are you booting an x86 or x86_64 install? Run: “uname -a” without quotes
and post the results to us.
On Mon, Aug 2, 2021 at 6:12 PM wrote:
> i have 2 memory slots
> memtest86+ shows each has 2G, but total is 3G
> after booting linux, top shows total is 3G
> why 1 G is missing? Thanks!
>
> i have 2 memory slots
> memtest86+ shows each has 2G, but total is 3G
> after booting linux, top shows total is 3G
>
why 1 G is missing? Thanks!
>
You probably have 32bit OS
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/3_GB_barrier
On Mon, Aug 02, 2021 at 05:30:30PM -0400, Polyna-Maude Racicot-Summerside wrote:
> Hi,
> What are you asking for here ? Or trying to achieve ?
>
> On 2021-08-02 4:48 p.m., Gunnar Gervin wrote:
> > I cowarded out of Terminal, or not really, cos Gnome Multiwriter did it
> > in 5 minutes.
> > But lat
>> If it weren't for the first sometimes changing to
>> 44.xKiB/s it'd be hard to know which is which (IIUC the average is
>> higher because occasionally the drive gives a more reasonable transfer
>> rate than that measly 45kB/s).
>
> So now we're left wondering how you came by this situation. Perh
Jeremy Hendricks:Are you booting an x86 or x86_64 install? Run: “uname -a”
without quotes and post the results to us.
Linux debian 4.9.0-13-686-pae #1 SMP Debian 4.9.228-1 (2020-07-05) i686
GNU/Linux
Thanks, i thought pae can bypass 4G limit of 32-bit OS
It’s bios/chipset dependent. Example: the Intel 945 will not allow more
than 3.25GB or so regardless if PAE is used. However, the Intel 965 chipset
will provide the full 4GB if used with PAE enabled and the BIOS allows it
by default or has a ‘remap’ option.
On Mon, Aug 2, 2021 at 7:15 PM wrote:
I used debian 9 for 1 year and everything works fine. After update to
debian 10 it works very slow but after some update it works somewhat ok.
But suspension and hibernation not works . I use kde 5 as DE so if i
suspend using menu i have blank screen and never resume . So i search
internet and
Sorry, Stefan. This was supposed to go to the list.
On 8/2/21 11:02 PM, Marc Shapiro wrote:
On 8/1/21 9:33 PM, Stefan Monnier wrote:
So really think hard before splitting off a filesystem outside of
volume management. I believe it is more likely to cause problems
than it is to avoid problems.
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