> On Dec 17, 2019, at 20:51, Philip Webb wrote:
>
> When encrypting a file, I was told :
>
> root:552 root> gpg -c
> gpg: WARNING: unsafe ownership on homedir '/home/purslow/.gnupg'
>
> The file is owned by my user, ie : .
> This seems to be the default when 'gpg' is installed.
It's p
On Tue, Dec 17, 2019 at 2:46 AM n952162 wrote:
> I rebuilt my kernel, taking AMDGPU out and using "ATI Radeon" instead.
> Now X works for me, and even my power-off issue is gone.
>
> I don't think it has anything to do with firefox, really, or performance,
> but rather a problem with the driver a
On Wed, Dec 18, 2019 at 6:12 AM wrote:
> how does the bond0 i/f get set up?
> And why do I have it?
>
Are you using systemd? Do you have another bond interface setup on this
box?
When encrypting a file, I was told :
root:552 root> gpg -c
gpg: WARNING: unsafe ownership on homedir '/home/purslow/.gnupg'
The file is owned by my user, ie : .
This seems to be the default when 'gpg' is installed.
I don't see anything insecure inside the dir.
Is the msg perhaps caused by
On Tuesday, 17 December 2019 21:35:11 GMT Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Tue, 17 Dec 2019 21:29:01 +0100, Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> > though I currently do not find any relevant descriptions regarding this
> > topic on the web I must formerly have found something there, because I
> > had set my lapto
On Tue, 17 Dec 2019 21:29:01 +0100, Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> though I currently do not find any relevant descriptions regarding this
> topic on the web I must formerly have found something there, because I
> had set my laptop up this way, and it worked until the last reboot.
>
> Either I some
trying to upgrade some old, never upgraded image for an embedded system I
ran into a problem I do not have a solution for:
!!! All ebuilds that could satisfy
">=dev-lang/python-exec-2:=[python_targets_pypy(-)?,python_targets_python2_7(-)?,python_targets_python3_5(-)?,python_targets_python3_6(-)?,p
Greetings,
though I currently do not find any relevant descriptions regarding this
topic on the web I must formerly have found something there, because I
had set my laptop up this way, and it worked until the last reboot.
Either I somehow spoiled some configuration, upgraded some package, or
how does the bond0 i/f get set up?
And why do I have it?
On Mon, Dec 16, 2019 at 2:07 PM Rich Freeman wrote:
>
> On Mon, Dec 16, 2019 at 2:00 PM Helmut Jarausch wrote:
> >
> > Today's updating involves some package which causes rebuilding
> > a package which needs Python2.7 and another one which needs
> > python_single_target_python3_8
> > required by
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