[Rick Stevens wrote:]
If you are unlucky enough to get stuck with a USB thumb drive that has U3
stuff on it, generally they've got it stuffed so that a normal write to
those blocks won't work unless you do some "magic" and delete the U3 stuff
first. If you don't, writing your bootable ISO to it is
On 10/17/2015 11:53 AM, Tim wrote:
> Allegedly, on or about 16 October 2015, jd1008 sent:
>> Have external usb 3.0 drive.
>> Laptop has usb 2.0 ports, and 1 eSata-II port.
>> In order for me to get decent I/O throughput
>> with this drive, I need a cable that has usb 3.0 Micro-B male
>> connector o
Quoting Tim :
Allegedly, on or about 16 October 2015, jd1008 sent:
Have external usb 3.0 drive.
Laptop has usb 2.0 ports, and 1 eSata-II port.
In order for me to get decent I/O throughput
with this drive, I need a cable that has usb 3.0 Micro-B male
When I search eBay for usb 3.0 micro-b male
On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 08:12:33PM -0600, jd1008 wrote:
> Have external usb 3.0 drive.
> Laptop has usb 2.0 ports, and 1 eSata-II port.
> In order for me to get decent I/O throughput
> with this drive, I need a cable that has usb 3.0 Micro-B male
> connector on one and and male eSata connector on t
Allegedly, on or about 16 October 2015, jd1008 sent:
> Have external usb 3.0 drive.
> Laptop has usb 2.0 ports, and 1 eSata-II port.
> In order for me to get decent I/O throughput
> with this drive, I need a cable that has usb 3.0 Micro-B male
> connector on one and and male eSata connector on the
On 10/17/2015 11:05 AM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 10/17/2015 10:12 AM, jd1008 wrote:
>> Have external usb 3.0 drive.
>> Laptop has usb 2.0 ports, and 1 eSata-II port.
>> In order for me to get decent I/O throughput
>> with this drive, I need a cable that has usb 3.0 Micro-B male
>> connector on one an
On 10/17/2015 10:12 AM, jd1008 wrote:
> Have external usb 3.0 drive.
> Laptop has usb 2.0 ports, and 1 eSata-II port.
> In order for me to get decent I/O throughput
> with this drive, I need a cable that has usb 3.0 Micro-B male
> connector on one and and male eSata connector on the other.
> I do n
Have external usb 3.0 drive.
Laptop has usb 2.0 ports, and 1 eSata-II port.
In order for me to get decent I/O throughput
with this drive, I need a cable that has usb 3.0 Micro-B male
connector on one and and male eSata connector on the other.
I do not know if this will require a protocol converter
On 10/16/2015 02:14 PM, Tod Merley wrote:
What of the device firmware, boot capability contained therein,
performance optimization contained in the section between the front of
the drive and the start of the provided partition, and and crazy often
auto-mount firmware “CD-ROM” provided as a method
Well, the problem still exists that, when you exit normally from
yumex-dnf, something is often left in a state that blocks starting
it again.
But, I've just found that running:
yumex-dnf --exit
will "tell session dbus services used by yumex to exit" and
seems to remove the lock preventing the
On F22 XFCE. Sound works with the XFCE media player Parole. But I get no
sound from firefox, chrome or midori (the XFCE browser).
But - I do get sound from the TOR browser. ???
PulseAudio Manager shows as clients:
Chrome input
CubebUtils - which has a firefox icon next to it
Any help appreci
What of the device firmware, boot capability contained therein, performance
optimization contained in the section between the front of the drive and
the start of the provided partition, and and crazy often auto-mount
firmware “CD-ROM” provided as a method of device software availability and
possibl
On 10/16/2015 12:10 PM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
But that has little impact on the tale.
It has no significant effect on the narrative, but considerable effect
(or so I would hope) on your understanding of the underlying issues
involved.
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On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 11:59:03AM -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 10/16/2015 11:45 AM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
> >After the F22 upgrade, the boot would hang at an early
> >stage. I could still boot F21.
>
> Actually, what you had was F22 with an F21 kernel, as you'd have seen if
> you'd tried to update y
On 10/16/2015 11:45 AM, Jon LaBadie wrote:
After the F22 upgrade, the boot would hang at an early
stage. I could still boot F21.
Actually, what you had was F22 with an F21 kernel, as you'd have seen if
you'd tried to update your system. Yes, I know what uname -r would
return, but that's bec
Using "fedup", I upgraded from F20 to F21 and a few
weeks later to F22. The F22 upgrade resulted in a
couple of problems, one of which I'll describe here.
After the F22 upgrade, the boot would hang at an early
stage. I could still boot F21.
Eventually I discovered that dracut was encountering a
I can see apps utilizing the network interface (other than loopback)
hanging but this the entire gnome interface minus the mouse/keyboard and
the app with focus freezing.
On Fri, Oct 16, 2015 at 10:08 AM, Rick Stevens wrote:
> On 10/16/2015 08:23 AM, Shawn Badger wrote:
>
>> I have been searchi
On 10/16/2015 01:04 PM, Doug Wyatt wrote:
Thanks for your reply ...
However, /var/cache/dnf/metadata_lock.pid does not exist;
if there was a dnf lock file, I would have expected it to
prevent the 'dnf install ...' which I ran w/o problem. Also,
there do not appear to be any relevant *.pid fil
On 10/16/2015 08:23 AM, Shawn Badger wrote:
I have been searching this off and on for a while but haven't put a
bunch of time into it. On both my desktop and laptop Gnome will
occasionally freeze for a few seconds to minutes when the network is
changed (VPN disconnect or connect, wireless network
Thanks for your reply ...
However, /var/cache/dnf/metadata_lock.pid does not exist;
if there was a dnf lock file, I would have expected it to
prevent the 'dnf install ...' which I ran w/o problem. Also,
there do not appear to be any relevant *.pid files in /var/run.
DW
On 10/16/2015 4:58 AM, Pa
On 10/16/2015 02:36 AM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
On Thu, 15 Oct 2015 22:44:20 -0700 Joe Zeff wrote:
On 10/15/2015 09:14 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
No, I would not think so. But if the device is not mounted, would it not write
to the mount point, especially because you are doing so as root (so noth
On 10/12/2015 11:18 PM, Gordon Messmer wrote:
On 10/12/2015 07:55 PM, sean darcy wrote:
i really don't want to edit grub.cfg directly, and I can't figure out
the templates.
grub2-mkconfig should generate a new configuration entirely.
Installing a kernel will run:
/bin/kernel-install add
I have been searching this off and on for a while but haven't put a bunch
of time into it. On both my desktop and laptop Gnome will occasionally
freeze for a few seconds to minutes when the network is changed (VPN
disconnect or connect, wireless network change, unplug network cable).
Every time the
Tim:
>> Why would anyone think that a command like:
>>
>> dd if=boot.iso of=/dev/sdb bs=8M
>>
>> Is going to write to anywhere else than /dev/sdb?
Ranjan Maitra sent:
> No, I would not think so. But if the device is not mounted, would it
> not write to the mount point, especially because yo
On Fri, 16 Oct 2015 18:37:26 +0800 Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 10/16/2015 05:35 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> > On Fri, 16 Oct 2015 12:24:22 +0800 Ed Greshko
> > wrote:
> >
> >> On 10/16/2015 12:14 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> >>> I don't know and I am not an expert. However, from experiment,
> >>> obse
On Fri, 16 Oct 2015 08:29:51 -0400 Fred Smith
wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 15, 2015 at 11:14:53PM -0500, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> > > Ranjan Maitra:
> > > > In my experience with Fedora (only), I have found that mounting is
> > > > essential. Otherwise it writes to the mount point, but not the device.
> >
On Thu, Oct 15, 2015 at 11:14:53PM -0500, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> > Ranjan Maitra:
> > > In my experience with Fedora (only), I have found that mounting is
> > > essential. Otherwise it writes to the mount point, but not the device.
> >
> > Why would anyone think that a command like:
> >
> > dd
On Fri, 2015-10-16 at 17:43 +0700, Frederic Muller wrote:
> Got the machine for a while. Funnily while F22 USB stick was detected
> it
> seems F23 beta is not. The SSD controller is a NVMExpress. Does
> anyone
> has ever tried that?
Questions about F23 should go to the Test list.
poc
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Got the machine for a while. Funnily while F22 USB stick was detected it
seems F23 beta is not. The SSD controller is a NVMExpress. Does anyone
has ever tried that?
Thank you.
Fred
On 09/08/2015 09:52 AM, Frederic Muller wrote:
> Hi!
>
> Totally agree with you but it's not like I had a choice.
On 10/16/2015 05:35 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> On Fri, 16 Oct 2015 12:24:22 +0800 Ed Greshko wrote:
>
>> On 10/16/2015 12:14 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
>>> I don't know and I am not an expert. However, from experiment, observation
>>> and inference, I have noticed that unless the usb is mounted, dd
On 10/16/2015 04:38 AM, Doug Wyatt wrote:
I ran yumex-dnf a few times, then the last time I got the message:
dnf is locked by another process
yum extender will exit
[ OK ]
and, it exits.
I can run dnf install successfully, and rpm -i also works.
Can anyone suggest where the
On Thu, 15 Oct 2015 22:44:20 -0700 Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 10/15/2015 09:14 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> > No, I would not think so. But if the device is not mounted, would it not
> > write to the mount point, especially because you are doing so as root (so
> > nothing to stop you). This logic seems
On Fri, 16 Oct 2015 12:24:22 +0800 Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 10/16/2015 12:14 PM, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> > I don't know and I am not an expert. However, from experiment, observation
> > and inference, I have noticed that unless the usb is mounted, dd does not
> > copy to the device. (This happened
I ran yumex-dnf a few times, then the last time I got the message:
dnf is locked by another process
yum extender will exit
[ OK ]
and, it exits.
I can run dnf install successfully, and rpm -i also works.
Can anyone suggest where the lock might be?
Thanks,
Doug Wyatt
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