Thanks for the diagnosis, I will test it tomorrow!
John
On 30 July 2013 22:15, François Bissey wrote:
> On Tue, 30 Jul 2013 19:51:58 Francois Bissey wrote:
>> Ah but you see the machine you are login in may be importing some of your
>> env variables by default. It usually has to be disabled some
On Tue, 30 Jul 2013 19:51:58 Francois Bissey wrote:
> Ah but you see the machine you are login in may be importing some of your
> env variables by default. It usually has to be disabled somewhere in
> /etc/sshd if I remember correctly.
>
I found it. In /etc/ssh/sshd_config there can be this sectio
Ah but you see the machine you are login in may be importing some of your env
variables by default. It usually has to be disabled somewhere in /etc/sshd if I
remember correctly.
Francois
On 31/07/2013, at 3:58, "John Cremona" wrote:
> On 30 July 2013 16:20, Volker Braun wrote:
>> Are you ssh
On 30 July 2013 16:20, Volker Braun wrote:
> Are you ssh-ing into the machine or not? And if yes, from where? It is not
> recommended to forward the environment by default over ssh but it can be
> configured (see SendEnv, AcceptEnv in the ssh configuration, /etc/ssh/ or
> ~/.ssh/config)
>
Yes, I
Are you ssh-ing into the machine or not? And if yes, from where? It is not
recommended to forward the environment by default over ssh but it can be
configured (see SendEnv, AcceptEnv in the ssh configuration, /etc/ssh/ or
~/.ssh/config)
On Tuesday, July 30, 2013 10:48:05 AM UTC-4, John Cremon
On 30 July 2013 15:43, Jeroen Demeyer wrote:
> On 07/29/2013 05:55 PM, John Cremona wrote:
>>
>> I have never understood this locale business, but this is on a
>> just-installed system where I followed all the ubuntu installation
>> prompts and have customised nothing, even my .bashrc is whatever
On 07/29/2013 05:55 PM, John Cremona wrote:
I have never understood this locale business, but this is on a
just-installed system where I followed all the ubuntu installation
prompts and have customised nothing, even my .bashrc is whatever
ubuntu puts in by default.
Well, somewhere, something must
Having just installed ubuntu 12.04 server on a new machine I built and
tested Sage 5.11.beta3 (how else to test it?)
I used make after doing export MAKE='make -j' (the machine has 32
cores) and after building most stuff it froze, I saw via "ps aux" that
there were a huge number of python processes