Hi
First, apologies if this isn't really systemd related ...
I have a wifi router and an extender/repeater. I connect to the
extender's ssid to get the best signal, but when I close the
lid on my laptop and then open it again, wifi resumes instead
with a connection to my router's ssid, thereby lo
On 2023-09-07 Andrei Borzenkov wrote:
> You could at least tell what you are using to manage you (wireless) network.
Sorry.
iwctl station wlan0 connect
Thanks,
Morten
On 2023-09-07 Morten Bo Johansen wrote:
> On 2023-09-07 Andrei Borzenkov wrote:
>
>> You could at least tell what you are using to manage you (wireless) network.
>
> Sorry.
>
> iwctl station wlan0 connect
Wasn't really systemd, sorry, but now that I have started it
I have two services that are irrelevant to my system
systemd-tpm2-setup-early.service
systemd-tpm2-setup.service
that nonetheless are loaded with every boot. They cannot be
disabled with systemctl. I can delete the service files under
/usr/lib/systemd/system/, but that only lasts until s
On 2024-01-18 Barry wrote:
> Use systemctl mask?
Seems like an interesting suggestion.
Thank you,
Morten
On 2024-01-18 Andy Pieters wrote:
> Not being funny, but why care? They have got a conditional check in them
> and will only run when it makes sense.
> So these units will do nothing and won't delay your boot or take up
> resources
They are turning up as failed units, so they are being run,
even
On 2024-01-18 Lennart Poettering wrote:
> hence, any chance you can provide logs about this? and what kind of
> system is this? i.e. does it really lack a tpm?
I shall try to accommodate you. How do I get the log?
The command "systemctl --plain --no-legend list-units --state=failed"
does not pr
On 2024-01-18 Lennart Poettering wrote:
> That sounds fairly recent, so I would assume that your machine has a
> TPM.
>
> Which OS is this?
Arch GNU/Linux.
~/ % uname -a
Linux gatsby 6.7.0-arch3-1 #1 SMP PREEMPT_DYNAMIC Sat, 13 Jan
2024 14:37:14 + x86_64 GNU/Linux
> Is it possible that you
On 2024-01-18 Lennart Poettering wrote:
> On Do, 18.01.24 22:53, Morten Bo Johansen (morte...@hotmail.com) wrote:
>
>> ~/ % systemd-creds has-tpm2
>> partial
>> +firmware
>> -driver
>> +system
>> +subsystem
>> +libraries
>
> OK, so this in
On 2024-01-19 Mantas Mikulėnas wrote:
> In general I've learned to not quite trust what the firmware shows... we've
> had a batch of Skylake-or-so desktops that *did* have a CPU-integrated fTPM
> but it wasn't even mentioned until we did a BIOS update, even though CPU
> spec said it should be pres
On 2024-01-19 Morten Bo Johansen wrote:
> I shall try to upgrade the bios to the latest version and see
> if something shows up.
The bios was already the latest version.
Hi,
I am on Arch Linux and strangely after updating e.g. the kernel, device
nodes (/dev/sdb1, etc.) for removable devices such as usb disks are no
longer created when I plug in the disk. If I reboot, they are created again.
Is there a systemd command I can run after upgrading, so the device nodes
gt; copy of the running kernel's modules even after an upgrade.
>
> On Thu, Feb 20, 2025 at 11:45 AM Morten Bo Johansen
> wrote:
Thank you very much.
Morten
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