I just tried to upgrade my main desktop machine (this machine) from buster to
bullseye.
The upgrade halted with:
...
Setting up libgnustep-base1.27 (1.27.0-3) ...
Processing triggers for shared-mime-info (2.0-1) ...
Setting up gnustep-base-runtime (1.27.0-3) ...
Setting up unar (1.10.1-2+
D. R. Evans wrote on 10/4/21 4:12 PM:
I just tried to upgrade my main desktop machine (this machine) from buster to
bullseye.
I am suspicious that the problem is related to having root on ZFS on this
machine. So I have posted a request for help on the zfsonlinux reflector, and
probably it
D. R. Evans wrote on 10/4/21 4:36 PM:
D. R. Evans wrote on 10/4/21 4:12 PM:
I just tried to upgrade my main desktop machine (this machine) from buster to
bullseye.
I am suspicious that the problem is related to having root on ZFS on this
machine. So I have posted a request for help on the
For years (decades, actually) I have routinely executed graphical programs
over ssh (i.e., I sit at computer A, ssh into computer B, then run a graphical
program on computer B whose windows, mouse events, etc., all occur on computer A).
In bullseye, at least out-of-the-box bullseye, this sudden
Greg Wooledge wrote on 10/7/21 2:21 PM:
On Thu, Oct 07, 2021 at 02:15:45PM -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
For years (decades, actually) I have routinely executed graphical programs
over ssh (i.e., I sit at computer A, ssh into computer B, then run a
graphical program on computer B whose windows
I don't use jupyter-notebook often, so I only just discovered that I am
encountering a problem with it following my upgrade from buster to bullseye a
couple of months ago. It worked fine on buster, and I have changed nothing
related to jupyter since the upgrade.
When jupyter-notebook starts th
Reco wrote on 12/17/21 6:10 AM:
Hi.
On Thu, Dec 16, 2021 at 12:43:51PM -0700, D. R. Evans wrote:
FileNotFoundError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory: '/usr/bin/python'
...
Can someone suggest how I might get back to the fully-working set of kernels
that I had in bus
Reco wrote on 12/31/21 1:47 PM:
That was certainly a help (although I wonder why it was necessary for me to do
that manually),
It's official Debian policy now, believe it or not.
python 2.x is /usr/bin/python2.
python 3.x is /usr/bin/python3.
If the user really wants /usr/bin/python the use
Andrew M.A. Cater wrote on 4/22/21 2:57 PM:
On Thu, Apr 22, 2021 at 04:23:02PM -0400, Kenneth Parker wrote:
I saw TDE discussed in another, recent Thread, and had to look it up, as I
am not familiar with it.
How does it compare with the current KDE? Other than a qemu VM with KDE
(so that I can
Christian wrote on 6/25/21 6:19 AM:
Is Debian stable safe to use - I mean in the sense that it gets security
updates for the installed packages?
Yes, it does get security updates. It also gets non-security updates for some
of the most popular packages.
For years I have run debian stable o
James Allsopp wrote on 3/18/22 15:20:
I'm having lots of trouble starting my zfs /var partition as part of boot,
I urge you to post the question on the zfs-discuss reflector.
Doc
--
Web: http://enginehousebooks.com/drevans
I am trying to configure postfix correctly to send e-mail to a gmail.com
account, using my gmail credentials.
1. It all works fine if I use Thunderbird, with the following configuration:
server name: smtp.googlemail.com
port:587
Connection security: STARTTLS
Authentication method
And, of course, half an hour after giving up and asking for help, I discovered
what I needed to change.
I did a "journalctl | grep smtp" and noticed that, when my machine was
connecting to gmail, it seemed to be doing so on port 25. Aha!
So I changed my transport file explicitly to use port 5
Normally to remove an old kernel from my debian stable systems, I issue the
following command:
apt purge linux-headers--amd64
linux-headers--common linux-image--amd64
Following this recipe, which has always worked in the past, I issued:
apt purge linux-headers-5.10.0-11-amd
DdB wrote on 6/20/22 10:07:
Since i am running dozens of VM's, i can say:
Me2 am running into this regularly, when i am trying to purge old
kernels. I am seeing this so frequently, that i even wrote a script
(meant to be run inside the VM's) to clean up the mess, some apt-scripts
happen to leave
Richard Owlett wrote on 9/7/20 9:12 AM:
>>
>
> Answers I'm seem focused on too low levels. I'm interested in the
> end-user experience.
>
> E.G. what end user observable difference would there be between 32 bit
> based browser and a 64 bit based browser?
>
The short version:
what Reco said
David Wright wrote on 9/7/20 12:53 PM:
>
> That may be an unfair comparison as the OP has a 64-bit machine
> running the 32-bit software, rather than two machines of different
> generations.
>
Sorry; I missed that. (I find it too easy to skim instead of actually /read/
on a computer screen.)
Victor Sudakov wrote on 9/30/20 7:12 AM:
> No ZFS gurus here? Where could I ask?
>
zfs-disc...@list.zfsonlinux.org
Doc
--
Web: http://enginehousebooks.com/drevans
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
I see that the latest official updates to debian stable want to remove
enigmail and install a new version of Thunderbird.
I recall a couple of years ago the same thing happened, and encrypted e-mail
was effectively broken for a couple of months until a version of enigmail
compatible with the updat
to...@tuxteam.de wrote on 10/13/20 8:25 AM:
> On Tue, Oct 13, 2020 at 07:26:28AM -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
>> repository. But I seem to recall reading somewhere a while back that the
>> enigmail functionality was going to be incorporated into Thunderbird
>> upstream.
>
Greg Marks wrote on 10/13/20 9:37 AM:
>> So I'd like to know if anyone who uses encrypted e-mail has taken
>> the plunge and installed the newer version of Thunderbird that the
>> official buster repository is offering (and also, therefore, removed
>> enigmail); and, if so, have there been any issu
Mike McClain wrote on 10/16/20 4:09 PM:
> I've been using rsync to backup to a flash drive but it's not
> performing exactly as I expected.
>
> The man page says:
> --deletedelete extraneous files from dest dirs
> A section of the backup script is so:
> Params=(-a --inplace --d
Greg Marks wrote on 10/13/20 9:37 AM:
I had no problems transitioning from Enigmail to Thunderbird 78.3.1,
which has removed Enigmail. With an existing GPG installation, it
was necessary to run the command "gpg --export-secret-keys --armor >
private_key.asc" for importation into Thunderbird.
Greg Marks wrote on 10/21/20 5:23 PM:
I had no problems transitioning from Enigmail to Thunderbird 78.3.1,
which has removed Enigmail. With an existing GPG installation, it
was necessary to run the command "gpg --export-secret-keys --armor >
private_key.asc" for importation into Thunderbird. Th
Celejar wrote on 11/22/20 7:46 AM:
On a list like this, changing the subject line while leaving the other
headers in place will result in many users' MUAs still associating the
new message with the old thread, annoying those users. Just compose a
And also meaning that users such as myself who
I went to update one of my machines running debian stable today, using (as
usual) synaptic [which I think is basically a wrapper for various apt
functions]. The machine is running:
[Z:~] uname -a
Linux zserver 4.19.0-13-amd64 #1 SMP Debian 4.19.160-2 (2020-11-28) x86_64
GNU/Linux
[Z:~]
Andy Smith wrote on 2/2/21 6:33 PM:
Perhaps you do not have the virtual package "linux-image-amd64" for
some reason. That package depends upon the latest actual kernel
package, so causes you to see upgrades.
That's it. Somehow both linux-image-amd64 and the linux-headers-amd64 were no
longe
My reading of the man page for tmpfiles.d suggests that if I edit the file
/etc/tmpfiles.d/tmp.conf so that it contains the line:
d /tmp 1777 root root 35d
then files in /tmp will be deleted after 35 days.
However, that isn't happening; I see for example:
drwxr-xr-x 18 n7dr n7dr4096 Ma
Sven Joachim wrote on 6/28/19 11:06 PM:
>
> If you cannot get systemd-tmpfiles-clean.service to do its job,
> something like this should do the trick:
>
> find /tmp -mindepth 1 -mtime +35 -atime +35 -delete
>
I was hoping to avoid having to write a script (because obviously one needs to
add so
pe...@easthope.ca wrote on 7/17/19 3:32 PM:
> Jul 16 11:25:16 joule stunnel: LOG5[4]: Service [https] accepted connection
> from 127.0.0.1:36140
>
> * From: Reco recovery...@enotuniq.net
> * Date: Wed, 17 Jul 2019 11:01:32 +0300
>> No, you're incorrect. A client application has connecte
1. I have a server that does all I need it to do under stretch.
2. On that machine, I have installed a clean version of buster on a separate
bootable drive.
3. Under buster on that machine, I have installed (by copy from stretch) an
iptables configuration that seems to be behaving as I expect. In
Thanks to those who replied to my original post,
<45c61e48-0393-a413-4f7a-d88be911a...@gmail.com>; the responses gave me enough
clues to find the source of the problem.
The solution turned out to be obvious in retrospect (like so many things).
For some reason, the buster installation had not inst
How do I configure konqueror in buster so that I can run more than one instance?
Doc
--
Web: http://enginehousebooks.com/drevans
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
D. R. Evans wrote on 9/1/19 8:51 AM:
> How do I configure konqueror in buster so that I can run more than one
> instance?
>
I haven't seen any responses to this. Is it perhaps, for reasons I can't even
begin to guess, by design not even possible to run multiple instances
Dan Ritter wrote on 9/5/19 9:36 AM:
> D. R. Evans wrote:
>> D. R. Evans wrote on 9/1/19 8:51 AM:
>>> How do I configure konqueror in buster so that I can run more than one
>>> instance?
>>>
>>
>> I haven't seen any responses to this. Is it pe
Étienne Mollier wrote on 9/5/19 1:38 PM:
> On my side, the window manager happily brings up the first
> konqueror window having been started, and the "konqueror"
> command gives back the hand to the shell, instead of spawning a
> new window, which I believe is the expected behaviour ?
>
I'm afra
Curt wrote on 9/7/19 5:37 AM:
> On 2019-09-01, D. R. Evans wrote:
>>
>> How do I configure konqueror in buster so that I can run more than one
>> instance?
>
>
> Settings-Configure Konqueror-Performance-
> Disable 'Always try to have one preloaded instance
R.Lewis wrote on 9/7/19 8:14 AM:
> I'm glad to see that you have solved your problem with konqueror, and I'm
> wondering if you can help me with mine.
>
> Do you have a sidebar (F9)? If you do, how did you get it?
>
Nope. I saw your original question, and have no solution for you, I'm afrai
Mark Fletcher wrote on 5/12/20 7:34 AM:
> Hello
>
> I have recently had cause to compare performance of running the R
> language on my 10+-year-old PC running Buster (Intel Core i7-920 CPU)
> and in the cloud on AWS. I got a surprising result, and I am wondering
> if the R packages on Debian ha
Mark Fletcher wrote on 5/12/20 9:55 AM:
> On Tue, May 12, 2020 at 08:16:52AM -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
>> Mark Fletcher wrote on 5/12/20 7:34 AM:
>>> Hello
>>>
>>
>> I have noticed that recent versions of R supplied by debian are using all the
>> avai
I have some code that has worked for years under 32-bit versions of Debian
(and other distros before that). Specifically, it works fine under 32-bit
buster. But on a pristine 64-bit installation it fails, and I can sort-of
understand why, but I don't know how to fix it.
The code tried to create a
I am trying to build alsa-utils from source, but am clearly missing something
obvious.
1. I executed:
apt-get source alsa-utils
and that seemed to run OK, generating:
drwxr-xr-x 23 n7dr n7dr4096 May 29 07:41 alsa-utils-1.1.8
-rw-r--r-- 1 n7dr n7dr 27076 Apr 9 2019 alsa-utils_1.1.8-2.de
to...@tuxteam.de wrote on 5/29/20 8:08 AM:
> On Fri, May 29, 2020 at 07:54:51AM -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
>
> This is a Debian package. One of the things Debian does for you is
> to unify all that buildery. So first
>
> - install the package "build-essential"
&g
to...@tuxteam.de wrote on 5/29/20 8:08 AM:
> On Fri, May 29, 2020 at 07:54:51AM -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
>> I am trying to build alsa-utils from source, but am clearly missing something
>> obvious.
>>
>> 1. I executed:
>> apt-get source alsa-utils
>>
As far as I can tell, no one else using other OSes seems to be having this
problem, so maybe it's a Thunderbird-on-buster issue that needs to be reported
somewhere. Or maybe it's just my system for some obscure reason
So, with current buster, the installed version of Thunderbird is 68.8.0.
I have
Virgo Pärna wrote on 6/11/20 1:27 AM:
> On Wed, 10 Jun 2020 14:10:45 -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
>> For example:
>> if I type the "-" character twice in a row, Thunderbird displays only one,
>> even though both characters are present in the text
>> if I
Virgo Pärna wrote on 6/16/20 6:34 AM:
> On Thu, 11 Jun 2020 13:12:25 -0600, D. R. Evans wrote:
>>
>> I'll have to dig in and see if there's a way to turn it off. I'll look at the
>> details of the font as well; I'm not at all sure what exactly is tellin
Virgo Pärna wrote on 6/16/20 6:27 AM:
>
> Nothing to do with keyboard layouts. Some fonts have ligatures,
> that combine two different characters into one symbol. I actually tried
> it on Windows with Thunderbird and "Cascadia Mono" font. Rendering
> engine in Thunderbird probably has ligat
Martin McCormick wrote on 6/24/20 11:19 AM:
>
> Right now, uptime looks like:
>
> 11:48:07 up 26 days, 23:10, 7 users, load average: 16.15, 15.60, 10.65
>
> That's pretty loaded so ideally, one could start the
> looping script and it would fire up processes until things got
> rea
Dan Ritter wrote on 6/26/20 1:41 PM:
> echo test wrote:
>
>> Note: I will need some RAID solution hard or soft.
>
> We are firmly of the opinion that mdadm or ZFS are the best
> solutions here.
>
Absolutely.
Actually I'd go further and differentiate the two by suggesting that if you
use ECC me
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote on 7/24/20 4:28 PM:
> On Friday, July 24, 2020 05:35:34 PM Thomas Schmitt wrote:
>> David Christensen wrote:
>>> https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Click_of_death
>>
>> But that's a different technology (and 20 years ago).
>
> You might not have read the entire article.
>
Hav
Tom Dial wrote on 8/1/20 9:31 PM:
>
> My experience, now on eight machines, indicates that it should be if the
> installed, configured, and used versions of grub components is
>
> 2.02+dfsg1-20+deb10u2.
>
> I could be wrong, but here it has been the case for both UEFI (and root
> on ZFS) and le
Greg Wooledge wrote on 8/13/20 2:29 PM:
>
> The simplest answer would be to use ext4.
>
I concur, given the OP's use case. And I speak as someone who raves about ZFS
at every reasonable opportunity :-)
Doc
--
Web: http://enginehousebooks.com/drevans
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP d
Running current debian stable (64-bit).
I installed the jupyter-notebook package (which caused several other packages
associated with python3 to be installed).
There was no indication of any problems with the installation, and I didn't
see any messages suggesting that anything else needs to be do
vipul kumar wrote on 11/05/2018 05:35 PM:
> Run Jupyter-notebook from terminal. Send log report which you'll get on
> terminal while running jupyter-notebook.
>
>
[W 18:07:15.047 NotebookApp] Widgets are unavailable. On Debian, notebook
support for widgets is provided by the package
jupyt
D. R. Evans wrote on 11/05/2018 06:14 PM:
> vipul kumar wrote on 11/05/2018 05:35 PM:
>> Run Jupyter-notebook from terminal. Send log report which you'll get on
>> terminal while running jupyter-notebook.
>>
>
>
> [HN:~] jupyter-notebook
> [I 18:11:04.2
D. R. Evans wrote on 11/06/2018 07:56 AM:
> D. R. Evans wrote on 11/05/2018 06:14 PM:
>> vipul kumar wrote on 11/05/2018 05:35 PM:
>>> Run Jupyter-notebook from terminal. Send log report which you'll get on
>>> terminal while running jupyter-notebook.
>>>
finn wrote on 11/07/2018 08:45 AM:
> Solution 1:
> sudo apt purge python3-ipykernel
> sudo apt install python3-ipykernel
>
> Solution 2:
> OR, purge python-notebook package and install it again, it will automatically
> install ipykernel package while resolving its dependency.
> sudo apt purge pyt
hw wrote on 11/9/22 04:41:
configure the controller cards, so that won't really work. And ZFS with Linux
isn't so great because it keeps fuse in between.
That isn't true. I've been using ZFS with Debian for years without FUSE,
through the ZFSonLinux project.
The only slightly discomfortin
I just installed buster on a new machine (well, new to me; I think that the
mobo is two or three years old).
The GUI splash screen comes up with very large icons (i.e., it's low res), and
once I am logged in, the (KDE) function to control the size of display
provides nothing higher than 1600x1200.
Felix Miata wrote on 11/11/19 4:08 PM:
> D. R. Evans composed on 2019-11-11 16:04 (UTC-0700):
>
>> Any suggestions as to what I might need to do to improve at least the
>> logged-in resolution?
>
> Make sure your kernel cmdline does not include nomodeset. Sometim
Michael Lange wrote on 11/11/19 4:11 PM:
> (...)
>> The chip is an E3-1245, which is supposed to be able to operate at
>> 4096x2304 resolution.
>>
>> Any suggestions as to what I might need to do to improve at least the
>> logged-in resolution?
>>
>
> just a guess: maybe some firmware file(s) fro
Felix Miata wrote on 11/11/19 4:58 PM:
> D. R. Evans composed on 2019-11-11 16:04 (UTC-0700):
>
>> The chip is an E3-1245, which is supposed to be able to operate at 4096x2304
>> resolution.
>
>> Any suggestions as to what I might need to do to improve at least
D. R. Evans wrote on 11/11/19 5:32 PM:
> Felix Miata wrote on 11/11/19 4:58 PM:
>> D. R. Evans composed on 2019-11-11 16:04 (UTC-0700):
>>
>>> The chip is an E3-1245, which is supposed to be able to operate at 4096x2304
>>> resolution.
>>
>>>
I see that the update to debian stable that I was going to do today wants to
update thunderbird but remove enigmail. Does anyone have any insight into how
long it is likely to take before enigmail will be made compatible with the
thunderbird that debian stable wants to install?
I remember that thi
D. R. Evans wrote on 11/18/19 12:57 PM:
> I see that the update to debian stable that I was going to do today wants to
> update thunderbird but remove enigmail. Does anyone have any insight into how
> long it is likely to take before enigmail will be made compatible with the
> thun
After five seconds, konsole hides the cursor if it's within the window
boundary. Can anyone tell me where the setting is to stop the cursor from
being hidden?
Doc
--
Web: http://enginehousebooks.com/drevans
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signature
I have a buster system that is failing ever to reach a login prompt on the
console tty.
The last message on the screen is:
A start job is running for Hold until boot process finished up
followed by a timer that simply increases without end and says "no limit".
How do I find out what is causing
Felix Miata wrote on 12/6/19 11:22 AM:
> D. R. Evans composed on 2019-12-06 11:11 (UTC-0700):
>
>> I have a buster system that is failing ever to reach a login prompt on the
>> console tty.
>
>> The last message on the screen is:
>> A start job is running for
Running debian stable (64 bit).
For the past couple of months I've been trying to get a system with onboard
Intel graphics to work completely correctly, but have never been able to get
rid of flicker on the console tty or on fine text in konsole in a graphical
desktop. There are enough threads on
D. R. Evans wrote on 1/27/20 2:57 PM:
> Running debian stable (64 bit).
>
> For the past couple of months I've been trying to get a system with onboard
> Intel graphics to work completely correctly, but have never been able to get
> rid of flicker on the console tty or on fin
Stefan Monnier wrote on 1/27/20 4:06 PM:
>> anything at all, then, after a very long time, I see the stream of Linux text
>> messages that indicates booting, but I never see a graphical login screen.
>> (The delay before the messages appear is far longer than a normal boot cycle
>> -- indeed, I had
Felix Miata wrote on 1/27/20 4:47 PM:
> D. R. Evans composed on 2020-01-27 14:57 (UTC-0700):
>
>> I'm sure I'm missed out important information, so feel free to ask and I'll
>> do
>> my best to answer.
>
> I have a display that takes a long time
Miguel A. Vallejo wrote on 2/11/20 12:07 PM:
>
> What are my alternatives? nVidia cards? I've never used an nVidia card
> but I have read also tons of problems with them in the past. How about
> now? And how about AMD cards?
>
> What are your recommendations / experiences?
>
My advice: put an
I just installed buster on a new (to me) machine, and the audio level is very
low. With all the mixer controls and the physical volume control on the
speakers turned up, I can hear audio, but even then it is unpleasantly quiet,
certainly nothing one would want to listen to.
Any suggestions as to h
Jonas Smedegaard wrote on 2/12/20 10:43 AM:
> Quoting D. R. Evans (2020-02-12 18:34:27)
>> I just installed buster on a new (to me) machine, and the audio level
>> is very low. With all the mixer controls and the physical volume
>> control on the speakers turned up, I can
Doug McGarrett wrote on 2/12/20 12:19 PM:
>
>
> On 2/12/20 1:05 PM, D. R. Evans wrote:
>> Jonas Smedegaard wrote on 2/12/20 10:43 AM:
>>> Quoting D. R. Evans (2020-02-12 18:34:27)
>>>> I just installed buster on a new (to me) machine, and the audio level
Jonas Smedegaard wrote on 2/12/20 1:26 PM:
> Quoting D. R. Evans (2020-02-12 19:05:40)
>> Jonas Smedegaard wrote on 2/12/20 10:43 AM:
>>> Quoting D. R. Evans (2020-02-12 18:34:27)
>>>> I just installed buster on a new (to me) machine, and the audio
>>>
Jonas Smedegaard wrote on 2/12/20 3:19 PM:
> Another thing you might try is go "below" Pulseaudio and mess directly
> with ALSA settings:
>
> Install the package alsa-utils and run (in a terminal) the tool
> alsamixer
>
> By default it will probably show a single volume control for a virtual
Jonas Smedegaard wrote on 2/12/20 3:21 PM:
> I would recommend to first try locate possible places where volume is
> turned down, and only as a last option (for this setup, before giving up
> and buying another card) artificially amplify the weak audio - because
> that will undoubtedly lead to
D. R. Evans wrote on 2/12/20 12:28 PM:
> Doug McGarrett wrote on 2/12/20 12:19 PM:
>>
>>
>> On 2/12/20 1:05 PM, D. R. Evans wrote:
>>> Jonas Smedegaard wrote on 2/12/20 10:43 AM:
>>>> Quoting D. R. Evans (2020-02-12 18:34:27)
>>>>> I just
D. R. Evans wrote on 2/12/20 4:58 PM:
> For what it's worth, "aplay -l" says, for the port I'm using:
>
> card 0: PCH [HDA Intel PCH], device 0: ALC888-VD Analog [ALC888-VD Analog]
> Subdevices: 0/1
> Subdevice #0: subdevice #0
>
I'm wondering
Curt wrote on 2/13/20 9:31 AM:
> On 2020-02-13, D. R. Evans wrote:
>>
>> I'm wondering if there's a problem with the sound driver that the system =
>> is
>> using, and therefore:
>> 1. How to determine which driver I'm using?
>> 2. Ho
I am trying to run a command that appears to need super-user privileges. When
it tries to run, I get:
---
AUTHENTICATING FOR org.freedesktop.policykit.exec ===
Authentication is needed to run `/tmp/hda-jack-retask-0TDDG0/script.sh' as the
super user
Authenticating as: D. R.
john doe wrote on 3/2/20 12:31 PM:
> On 3/2/2020 8:22 PM, D. R. Evans wrote:
>> I am trying to run a command that appears to need super-user privileges. When
>> it tries to run, I get:
>>
>> ---
>>
>> AUTHENTICATING FOR org.freedesktop.policykit.exec
I just installed wheezy on a new system, and no matter what I have tried, I am
unable to get the attached monitor to display at 1920x1200. All my other
systems display at that resolution when attached to the same monitor.
I won't bore you with all the things I've tried without success. (At least,
Andrei POPESCU wrote on 11/20/2014 12:19 PM:
> On Jo, 20 nov 14, 12:05:11, D. R. Evans wrote:
>> I just installed wheezy on a new system, and no matter what I have tried, I
>> am
>> unable to get the attached monitor to display at 1920x1200. All my other
>> systems disp
Andrei POPESCU wrote on 11/20/2014 02:03 PM:
> your adapter. It might be prudent to give more details about where you
> obtained it from (e.g. the download page).
I downloaded it from:
http://www.asus.com/us/Commercial_Servers_Workstations/P9DE4L/HelpDesk_Download/
Select Linux, then VGA. T
Mark Neyhart wrote on 11/20/2014 05:49 PM:
>> The update (auto-update.sh) executed without error with the message:
>> "ASPEED Graphics Family Linux XORG 7.7 driver update finished"
>>
> This should result in the file ast_drv.so in
> /usr/lib/xorg/modules/drivers
>
> Is it there?
Yes; as I ment
Andrei POPESCU wrote on 11/20/2014 10:51 PM:
> On Jo, 20 nov 14, 16:00:23, D. R. Evans wrote:
>>
>> The update (auto-update.sh) executed without error with the message:
>> "ASPEED Graphics Family Linux XORG 7.7 driver update finished"
>
> I'll stop wit
lee wrote on 11/20/2014 04:36 PM:
> "D. R. Evans" writes:
>
>> I just installed wheezy on a new system, and no matter what I have tried, I
>> am
>> unable to get the attached monitor to display at 1920x1200. All my other
>> systems display at that reso
I just completed an upgrade to stretch on an i386 machine.
There were no obvious showstopping errors during the install. I saw a few
"unable to delete directory; directory not empty" errors fly by, but nothing
that seemed dangerous, and the installation didn't complain about anything.
But when I
Gian Carlo wrote on 06/21/2017 01:05 PM:
> What is the output of "/sbin/ifconfig"?
It's too long to type it all. If you want some part of it, please let me know
and I'll try to type it without too many mistakes.
> Do you see "eth0" or something like "enXX"?
eth0, eth1 and lo are the three n
Felix Miata wrote on 06/21/2017 01:33 PM:
> Gian Carlo composed on 2017-06-21 21:05 (UTC+0200):
> .
>> What is the output of "/sbin/ifconfig"?
>> Do you see "eth0" or something like "enXX"?
> .
> ip is not included in a default Stretch install. Try 'ip a'
>
That command seems to give more or
D. R. Evans wrote on 06/21/2017 09:53 AM:
> But when I tried the reboot following the upgrade, I lost all network
> connectivity. The boot screen said:
> Failed to Start Network Manager Wait Online
>
> It also suggested issuing the command:
> systemctl status N
Fungi4All wrote on 06/22/2017 09:48 PM:
>> From: doc.ev...@gmail.com
>> To: debian-user@lists.debian.org
>>
>> D. R. Evans wrote on 06/21/2017 09:53 AM:
>> It adds about 30 useless seconds to the boot time while the system waits for
>> it
>> to time ou
David Wright wrote on 06/23/2017 08:42 AM:
>> Can anyone provide suggestions as to how to remove this delay?
>
> Did you miss https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2017/06/msg00858.html
> which gave one possibility? It also asked for two things, neither of
> which were forthcoming. I can't find an
David Wright wrote on 06/24/2017 06:42 PM:
>
>>> The error message above indicates, that you have network-manager
>>> installed and since stretch NetworkManager-wait-online.service is
>>> enabled by default (it wasn't in jessie).
>
> this would suggest a cause. Do you need the network before you
Beginning a couple of weeks ago, I started to experience occasional freezes or
sudden blank screens on my 64-bit jessie system.
It just happened again, and this time the following appeared in the syslog:
Jul 17 13:55:05 homebrew kernel: [24064.296254] nouveau E[
PFIFO][:01:00.0] write fault
As my old thread has been hijacked, I thought that I'd better start a new one.
Teemu Likonen wrote on 07/17/2017 03:09 PM:
> D. R. Evans [2017-07-17 14:19:32-06] wrote:
>
>> Beginning a couple of weeks ago, I started to experience occasional freezes
>> or
>> sudd
1 - 100 of 187 matches
Mail list logo