On Mon, Jan 2, 2012 at 12:26 PM, Julius Smith wrote:
> Why is it so hard to find the iso checksums for Fedora releases? It is
> easy to find the .iso downloads themselves, and we're asked to verify them,
> but it is very hard to find the checksums! I ultimately had to search the
> Web for the ch
hello,
I started it for terminal but I got no warning.
I know that konsole does not exist in kde 4 and kile is writen with kde3.
Could you please verify if you have konsole on your system?
Thanks
2011/12/31 stan
> On Sat, 31 Dec 2011 10:54:45 +0100
> Adel ESSAFI wrote:
>
> > In this last day o
OK
2011/12/31 stan
> On Sat, 31 Dec 2011 10:54:45 +0100
> Adel ESSAFI wrote:
>
> > In this last day of 2011, I have a question about konsole of kile on
> > F15. This konsole do not appear on F15. is there anyone who resolved
> > this
>
> I don't use this application, but I have no problem star
On 01/01/2012 08:30:18 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 01/02/2012 12:06 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> > On 01/02/2012 11:56 AM, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> >> H ... well, I blew that. I removed (rm -rf) the entry in /
> >> nfsexports for /usr/local. And away went the entire directory.
> What
> was
> >> the
On 01/02/2012 12:06 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 01/02/2012 11:56 AM, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
>> H ... well, I blew that. I removed (rm -rf) the entry in /
>> nfsexports for /usr/local. And away went the entire directory. What was
>> the correct method?
> Ahhhno. The entries in /nfs4exports
Why is it so hard to find the iso checksums for Fedora releases? It is
easy to find the .iso downloads themselves, and we're asked to verify them,
but it is very hard to find the checksums! I ultimately had to search the
Web for the checksum itself!
--
"Anybody who knows all about nothing knows
On 01/02/2012 11:56 AM, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> H ... well, I blew that. I removed (rm -rf) the entry in /
> nfsexports for /usr/local. And away went the entire directory. What was
> the correct method?
Ahhhno. The entries in /nfs4exports were the results of the "mount
--bind". You sho
On 01/01/2012 04:31:00 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 01/02/2012 07:23 AM, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> > I'll try anything. By "working with one" do you mean deleting the
> > others from the server?
> Yes...
H ... well, I blew that. I removed (rm -rf) the entry in /
nfsexports for /usr/local. And awa
On Mon, 2012-01-02 at 09:41 +0900, Joel Rees wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 2, 2012 at 1:44 AM, Craig White wrote:
> > Thus my statement that POP3 is so 1990's.
>
> 1990s? Nonsense.
>
> From my point of view, the entire internet, including IMAP4 is so 1960s.
obviously I don't share that perspective
Brian Hanks writes:
1. Umount the two RAID devices with a current copy of data.
2. Edit /etc/fstab replacing Device IDs with new RAID devices
(UUID= becomes /dev/md?)
Although you can, /etc/fstab should still refer to filesystem UUIDs. If
you're switch partitions, /etc/fstab will simpl
On 01/01/2012 03:06 PM, Olav Vitters wrote:
>
> Beagle was used in the past. Currently it uses Tracker. Before the
> release of 3.0, Tracker could still negatively impacted performance.
> This was fixed before 3.0 (you can tell the kernel to give a low/idle
> priority for a processes IO, etc).
>
OK, I'm a long-time RedHat/Fedora user, but some of the recent changes
(grub2, systemd, hal, etc.) are modifying or deprecating my tried and
true methods. The latest issue I've got is that I want to add a second
drive in a RAID1 config for my main data partitions. This is something
I had planne
On Mon, Jan 2, 2012 at 1:44 AM, Craig White wrote:
> [...]
> not disputing access issues requiring Internet connection or security
> concerns w/r/t others handling the storage and ignoring the basic fact
> that e-mail is essentially an insecure medium to begin with [1] but...
Well, while we argue
On 01/02/2012 07:23 AM, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> I'll try anything. By "working with one" do you mean deleting the
> others from the server?
Yes...
--
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something
completely foolproof was to underestimate the ingenuity of complete
fools. -- D
On 1 Jan 2012 at 23:16, antonio montagnani wrote:
Date sent: Sun, 01 Jan 2012 23:16:32 +0100
From: antonio montagnani
To: Community support for Fedora users
Subject:Re: Gnome3 - Forced Fallback Mode
> Olav Vitters ha scritto /
On 01Jan2012 13:15, Frank Murphy wrote:
| On 01/01/12 13:10, Theodore Papadopoulo wrote:
| >>Would this work: find /path/to/repo/*.rpm | grep -v "foo* bar*" |
| >>rm *.rpm
| >
| >Make it
| >
| >find /path/to/repo/*.rpm -print | grep -v "foo* bar*" | xargs rm
| >
| >and that should work (not tested
On 12/15/2011 12:17 AM, Gene Smith wrote:
On 09/05/2011 11:08 PM, Gene Smith wrote:
F15 on new HP dv7-6195 (i7/sandy bridge) cannot regain wireless
connection after awake from suspend. In KDE, I see notification "waiting
for authorization" and then a "key" icon appears over the wireless icon
in
T.C.
For some reason pulseaudio is starting now. I don't think my original
observation was wrong, but ... Before I set up the .config/autstart in
the users account I did a reboot and when I logged in pulseaudio was
active.
running 'pacmd suspend false' resulted in :
"Welcome to PulseAudio! Use
On 01/01/2012 02:29:03 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 01/02/2012 05:44 AM, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> > Yes, although the /tmp was just to test something, which proved to
> be
> > irrelevant.
>
> OK So just to confirm. You have 3 file systems you want to
> export/mount on the other system. And yo
On 01/01/2012 10:05 AM, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 12/31/2011 05:30 PM, g wrote:
>> do consider this, *never* say you are sorry. people may agree with you.
>
> Thank you, Special Agent Gibbs.
-=-
lshicaf.
welcome. now i am going to have to get a new personae.
--
peace out.
tc.hago,
g
.
*please
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 1:09 PM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> T.C.
>
> /etc/xdg/autostart/pulseaudio.desktop does exist and
>
> "Exec=start-pulseaudio-x11" is one of the line items of the file.
That's very weird. I don't understand why it doesn't autostart. You
should probably file a bug about this
On 01/02/2012 05:44 AM, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> Yes, although the /tmp was just to test something, which proved to be
> irrelevant.
OK So just to confirm. You have 3 file systems you want to
export/mount on the other system. And you are unable to mount any of
them. Correct?
Have you cons
On 01/02/2012 05:53 AM, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> Continuing the thread sigh :-)
I know. Really a pain when someone with, hopefully, the exact same
setup can't duplicate the problem
>
> There's a thread concerning problems with nfs4 mounts where the UID and
> GID for a user were diffe
Olav Vitters ha scritto / said the followingil giorno/on 01/01/2012
21:18:
On Sat, Dec 31, 2011 at 04:48:33PM +1000, Michael D. Setzer II wrote:
Gnome3 works fine on some of my systems, but unfortunately my
classrooms machines with Nvidia Geoforce FX 5200 cards it only
works about 80%.
Cou
Continuing the thread sigh :-)
There's a thread concerning problems with nfs4 mounts where the UID and
GID for a user were different on the client and server systems. As it
happens, that applies to me. I moved my uid and gid on the server from
500 to 1000 and restarted the nfs processes on
On 12/31/2011 10:38:17 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 01/01/2012 02:29 PM, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> > /etc/exports on server yes. On client no (present but empty)
>
> OK Just sounded like both contained the same data Just
> wanted t
>
> Looks like you have 3 directories exported on the serve
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 1:09 PM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> T.C.
>
> /etc/xdg/autostart/pulseaudio.desktop does exist and
>
> "Exec=start-pulseaudio-x11" is one of the line items of the file.
That's very weird. I don't understand why it doesn't autostart. You
should probably file a bug about this
On Sat, Dec 31, 2011 at 04:48:33PM +1000, Michael D. Setzer II wrote:
> Gnome3 works fine on some of my systems, but unfortunately my
> classrooms machines with Nvidia Geoforce FX 5200 cards it only
> works about 80%.
Could you link to either a screenshot or a picture of the problem?
Sounds like
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 12:27 PM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> T.C,
>
> I am using gnome, but have kde and xfce installed - have not tried
> either of the two at this point.
Hmm, does /etc/xdg/autostart/pulseaudio.desktop exist? Not sure why
GNOME isn't autostarting it.
> Here is the output of rpm
On Sat, Dec 31, 2011 at 10:32:18PM -0500, Genes MailLists wrote:
> yes - tho Gnome has a similar thing - it may be called Beagle .. but
> I'm not sure ...
Beagle was used in the past. Currently it uses Tracker. Before the
release of 3.0, Tracker could still negatively impacted performance.
This
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 12:27 PM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> T.C,
>
> I am using gnome, but have kde and xfce installed - have not tried
> either of the two at this point.
Hmm, does /etc/xdg/autostart/pulseaudio.desktop exist? Not sure why
GNOME isn't autostarting it.
> Here is the output of rpm
I received an iPod Classic (160GB/2009 model) and have been trying to
get it to sync using Rhythmbox. Every time that I attempt to sync the
iPod using Rhythmbox, Rhythmbox crashes. It does not appear to crash
the same way each time. At first, an error dialog box was appearing
just before the
On Sun, 2012-01-01 at 08:03 -0500, Claude Jones wrote:
> On 12/31/2011 10:15 PM, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> > What is Fprint and why is it getting reactivated?
>
> It's the fingerprint reader driver.
> Why it's being reactivated I don't know.
While I don't understand the specific details, I'm fair
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 11:39 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> T.C.
>
> Well looks like we have an answer the pulse audio daemon is not even
> running.chmod o+rw /dev/snd/*,
Yep, that'll do it. ;-)
What desktop environment do you use? What is the output of:
rpm -qa '*pulseaudio*'
Does your HDMI
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 11:39 AM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> T.C.
>
> Well looks like we have an answer the pulse audio daemon is not even
> running.chmod o+rw /dev/snd/*,
Yep, that'll do it. ;-)
What desktop environment do you use? What is the output of:
rpm -qa '*pulseaudio*'
Does your HDMI
On Sat, Dec 31, 2011 at 6:14 PM, Gregory P. Ennis wrote:
> T.C.
>
> Thanks for the advice. I added the "radeon.audio=1" to the kernel
> command line, but the hdmi still does not function. I tried to add the
> command to ./grub/menu.lst but looks like that file is not present in
> F16. I took a
On 01/01/2012 07:54 AM, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
Depending on particular needs, either IMAP or POP can be a better tool for the
job. I think that saying "POP is 1990's" is a tad bit too overstated. ;-)
I think the most important thing to remember here is that there isn't
just One True Way. Ever
On Sat, Dec 31, 2011 at 11:29 AM, T.C. Hollingsworth
wrote:
> Is your /var on another partition? If so, you're probably hitting this bug:
> https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=748119
>
> There's an updates.img in comment 42 that should fix it.
That must be it! Thanks!
Richard
--
users
On 01/01/2012 11:15 AM, Frank Murphy wrote:
> (I have line wraps here)
>
> my.server.here://nfs/store01 /home/myuser/Net01 nfs
> user,rw,noauto,hard,intr0 0
>
>
> The problem I'm having is myuser on the client is uid:1000
> (my son set up his own PC with Fedora16
On 01/01/2012 08:12 AM, Timothy Murphy wrote:
> Genes MailLists wrote:
...
>>
>> K-menu->System Settings-> Desktop Search
>
> As a matter of interest, what is lost if one does this (as I have).
> Presumably running strigi indexing must have some benefit?
>
Desktop search:
http://en.
I'm not able to put the tcpdump program to write to SDHC memory cards using
default configuration.I use : sudo tcpdump -s 96 -i eth0 -w /media/"card ID"
and receive this warning:tcpdump: /mnt/DSLcapture/dslcapture: Permission
denied.My account has administration rights so I do not know what is
On Sun, 2012-01-01 at 07:54 -0800, Marko Vojinovic wrote:
> On Sunday 01 January 2012 06:15:34 Craig White wrote:
> [snip]
> > POP3 is what it is - a retrieval of e-mail from a server where it
> > becomes the end client/user responsibility to store, manage, migrate
> > etc. Anyone who has more than
(I have line wraps here)
my.server.here://nfs/store01 /home/myuser/Net01
nfs user,rw,noauto,hard,intr0 0
The problem I'm having is myuser on the client is uid:1000
(my son set up his own PC with Fedora16)
on the server myuser uid:500
I was thinking:
my.serve
On Sunday 01 January 2012 06:15:34 Craig White wrote:
[snip]
> POP3 is what it is - a retrieval of e-mail from a server where it
> becomes the end client/user responsibility to store, manage, migrate
> etc. Anyone who has more than 1 computer or more than 1 device accessing
> e-mail from that accou
On Sun, 2012-01-01 at 19:22 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 01/01/2012 07:18 PM, Jake Shipton wrote:
> > PS: Sorry for any grammar issues etc.. I'm still recovering from last
> > night...
>
> I'll drink to that!
Cup of coffee maybe haha
--
Mike Chambers
Madisonville, KY
"Best little town on Eart
On Sun, 01 Jan 2012 12:56:20 +
Frank Murphy wrote:
> I'm trying to remove rpms from my local repo.
> But keep some named files.
>
> Would this work:
> find /path/to/repo/*.rpm | grep -v "foo* bar*" | rm *.rpm
Simple solution:
mkdir tmp
mv /path/to/repo/foo* /path/to/repo/bar* tmp
find /path
On Sun, 2012-01-01 at 19:11 +0800, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 01/01/2012 06:39 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
> > In case someone new to mail comes along,
> > and believes he is primitive for using
> > this method over that.
>
> Wellmy memory may be clouded a bit due to over celebration
>
> But I
On 01/01/12 13:10, Theodore Papadopoulo wrote:
Would this work: find /path/to/repo/*.rpm | grep -v "foo* bar*" |
rm *.rpm
Make it
find /path/to/repo/*.rpm -print | grep -v "foo* bar*" | xargs rm
and that should work (not tested).
Gave it a test, it works.
Thanks.
--
Regards,
Frank Murp
2012/1/1, Frank Murphy :
> I'm trying to remove rpms from my local repo.
> But keep some named files.
>
> Would this work:
> find /path/to/repo/*.rpm | grep -v "foo* bar*" | rm *.rpm
I don't think so. But you can always try in a "sandbox". And while
there are probably a thousand clever ways to do
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
On 01/01/2012 01:56 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
> I'm trying to remove rpms from my local repo. But keep some named
> files.
>
> Would this work: find /path/to/repo/*.rpm | grep -v "foo* bar*" |
> rm *.rpm
>
Make it
find /path/to/repo/*.rpm -print | gr
On 12/31/2011 10:15 PM, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
With the resent talk about dbus problems, I did a grep of messages for
dbus and found FREQUENT:
Dec 31 21:59:50 lx120e dbus-daemon[981]: dbus[981]: [system] Activating
service name='net.reactivated.Fprint' (using servicehelper)
Dec 31 21:59:50 lx12
I'm trying to remove rpms from my local repo.
But keep some named files.
Would this work:
find /path/to/repo/*.rpm | grep -v "foo* bar*" | rm *.rpm
--
Regards,
Frank Murphy--exclude
UTF_8 Encoded
Friend of fedoraproject.org
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or c
On 01/01/2012 07:18 PM, Jake Shipton wrote:
> PS: Sorry for any grammar issues etc.. I'm still recovering from last
> night...
I'll drink to that!
--
A common mistake that people make when trying to design something
completely foolproof was to underestimate the ingenuity of complete
fools. -- Do
On 01/01/12 10:39, Frank Murphy wrote:
> On 01/01/12 10:26, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>>
>> You know, I don't think anybody should feel the need to justify what
>> type of email system they use or what tools they use to manage their
>> email traffic.
>>
> I do agree with you.
> But, I felt an explanation
On 01/01/2012 06:39 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
> In case someone new to mail comes along,
> and believes he is primitive for using
> this method over that.
Wellmy memory may be clouded a bit due to over celebration
But I think the latest RFC for POP3 was published in May of 1996 (RFC
1939)
On 01/01/12 10:26, Ed Greshko wrote:
You know, I don't think anybody should feel the need to justify what
type of email system they use or what tools they use to manage their
email traffic.
I do agree with you.
But, I felt an explanation was warranted here.
In case someone new to mail comes a
On 01/01/2012 05:54 PM, Frank Murphy wrote:
> On 31/12/11 21:44, Craig White wrote:
>>
>> POP3 for a typical mail client is for people who are mired in the 1990's
>> and thus slavishly move mail from computer to computer, program to
>> program, either out of ignorance for a better way or just lack
On 12/31/2011 05:30 PM, g wrote:
do consider this,*never* say you are sorry. people may agree with you.
Thank you, Special Agent Gibbs.
--
users mailing list
users@lists.fedoraproject.org
To unsubscribe or change subscription options:
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Guid
On 31/12/11 21:44, Craig White wrote:
POP3 for a typical mail client is for people who are mired in the 1990's
and thus slavishly move mail from computer to computer, program to
program, either out of ignorance for a better way or just lack
imagination. But if you never change computers, never c
On 01.01.2012, Craig White wrote:
> POP3 for a typical mail client is for people who are mired in the 1990's
> and thus slavishly move mail from computer to computer, program to
> program, either out of ignorance for a better way or just lack
> imagination.
So far, I can't see that you provide a
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