I have a JMicron USB RAID enclosure that is exhibiting read failures.
> [59996.137762] sd 5:0:0:0: [sdd] tag#0 FAILED Result: hostbyte=DID_OK
> driverbyte=DRIVER_SENSE
> [59996.137786] sd 5:0:0:0: [sdd] tag#0 Sense Key : Aborted Command [current]
> [59996.137792] sd 5:0:0:0: [sdd] tag#0 Add. Sens
On 15 August 2017 at 14:32, Beartooth wrote:
>
> Some years ago, I bought an
> IBM-refurbished Thinkpad T42, meaning to
> devote it to use with a Garmin UPS, under
> Linux of course. It turned out not to be
> suitable for that.
>
> I pu
On 08/15/17 16:31, Tim wrote:
Working fine here.
Perhaps at the time you tried it, whatever Google server you were
connecting to, is having a problem.
[tim@fluffy ~]$ dig google.com +short
216.58.196.142
That's the IP that I'm currently finding Google at.
+
216.58.196.142 Worked immediately,
2017-08-15 11:32 GMT-06:00 Beartooth :
>
>It demanded an i386, 32-bit .iso;
> and I did finally manage, after a lot of
> grief, to get it to seem to finish an
> installation. Upon rebooting, it says only
> that it can't boot what it has!
H
On 08/15/17 16:25, Tim wrote:
I don't see that. It could be that the page, at*that* time, was
trying to reference something from Google, and that bit of things
wasn't loading.
Though I'd be surprised that something on Firefox's homepage was doing
that. I'm more inclined to think it was Firefo
On 08/15/2017 01:48 PM, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
On Tue, 2017-08-15 at 13:37 -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
ps aux | grep $1 | grep -v grep
Why not use pgrep?
*Shrug!* Just a matter of personal preference, just as the switches for
ps are, plus the fact that mine gives the entire output from ps,
On 08/15/2017 10:32 AM, Beartooth wrote:
> Some years ago, I bought an
> IBM-refurbished Thinkpad T42,
Since you did not mention how much RAM it contains, I assume the least
usually supplied -- 256 MB.
I suggest you remove that memory module and replace it with two modules
eac
On Tue, 2017-08-15 at 13:37 -0700, Joe Zeff wrote:
> ps aux | grep $1 | grep -v grep
Why not use pgrep?
poc
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On 08/15/2017 01:25 PM, Tim wrote:
I've found that if Firefox is running while it's updated, it soon goes
into an unusable condition. Close all open Firefox windows, check
there's no processes still open (downloads, background doo-dads, etc).
And for the big fight, if it's not quitting, run "kil
Just found your follow-up message, after I'd replied to the first one.
Allegedly, on or about 15 August 2017, Bob Goodwin sent:
> When I address Firefox to https://www.google.com I get a message at the
> bottom of my screen "Performing a TLS handshake to www.google.com" and
> it looks like nothing
Allegedly, on or about 15 August 2017, Bob Goodwin sent:
> When I address Firefox to https://www.firefox.com I get a message at
> the bottom of y screen "Performing a TLS handshake to www.google.com"
> and it looks like nothing m,ore than that is ever going to happen ...
I don't see that. It coul
On 08/15/17 15:17, Joe Zeff wrote:
It can do it wherever it wants, but that's not the response I expect,
normally I get a window to enter some search terms in, as it is it
does nothing but display an "error" message." It has always just
worked until now, something has changed and it may be my I
On 08/15/2017 12:27 PM, Tim wrote:
But you're specifically told not to hand-edit the grub config file, and
put your options in the defaults file.
Right, so if you modify the default file, you need to run grub2-mkconfig
after.
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Allegedly, on or about 15 August 2017, Samuel Sieb sent:
> The question is what is it meant to do. I think it's only used by
> grub2-mkconfig. When you dnf update the kernel, the script uses
> grubby to modify the grub.cfg file. Grubby takes the previous
> kernel's command line and uses that to
On 08/15/2017 11:22 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
It can do it wherever it wants, but that's not the response I expect,
normally I get a window to enter some search terms in, as it is it does
nothing but display an "error" message." It has always just worked until
now, something has changed and it may
On Tue, 2017-08-15 at 17:32 +, Beartooth wrote:
> Some years ago, I bought an
> IBM-refurbished Thinkpad T42, meaning to
> devote it to use with a Garmin UPS, under
> Linux of course. It turned out not to be
> suitable for that.
>
>
On 08/15/17 14:03, Walter H. wrote:
On 15.08.2017 19:54, Bob Goodwin wrote:
When I address Firefox to https://www.google.com I get a message at
the bottom of my screen "Performing a TLS handshake to
www.google.com" and it looks like nothing more than that is ever
going to happen ...
whereelse
On 08/15/2017 10:32 AM, Beartooth wrote:
>
> Some years ago, I bought an
> IBM-refurbished Thinkpad T42, meaning to
> devote it to use with a Garmin UPS, under
> Linux of course. It turned out not to be
> suitable for that.
>
>
On 15.08.2017 19:54, Bob Goodwin wrote:
When I address Firefox to https://www.google.com I get a message at
the bottom of my screen "Performing a TLS handshake to www.google.com"
and it looks like nothing more than that is ever going to happen ...
whereelse do you expect to perform the TLS hand
When I address Firefox to https://www.google.com I get a message at the
bottom of my screen "Performing a TLS handshake to www.google.com" and
it looks like nothing more than that is ever going to happen ...
Is this some new feature I need to deal with, I believe there was a
Firefox upgrade th
When I address Firefox to https://www.firefox.com I get a message at the
bottom of y screen "Performing a TLS handshake to www.google.com" and it
looks like nothing m,ore than that is ever going to happen ...
Is this some new feature I need to deal with, I believe there was a
Firefox upgrade t
Some years ago, I bought an
IBM-refurbished Thinkpad T42, meaning to
devote it to use with a Garmin UPS, under
Linux of course. It turned out not to be
suitable for that.
I put it into the guest room, where
it also got
On 08/14/2017 09:09 PM, Tim wrote:
By now we've seen a few postings that you can't customise grub the way
that it's meant to be done (by modifying /etc/default/grub) as the
processes used by "dnf update ..." ignore it.
Why doesn't this work the way that it's meant to?
The question is what is i
On 08/15/2017 10:22 PM, wge...@redhat.com wrote:
> I have TLP installed to extend battery life. I have a Lenovo T440s and I
> have Fedora 26 installed. When I run TLP it recommends the installation of
> the acpi-call kernel. When I follow directions here[1] it "works" until the
> final step(s
I have TLP installed to extend battery life. I have a Lenovo T440s and I have
Fedora 26 installed. When I run TLP it recommends the installation of the
acpi-call kernel. When I follow directions here[1] it "works" until the final
step(s) of: dnf install akmod-tp_smapi akmod-acpi_call kernel-d
On Tue, 2017-08-15 at 08:22 -0400, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Tue, 15 Aug 2017 13:58:16 +0200
> Jakub Jelen wrote:
>
> > Thank you for comments and constructive ideas.
>
> I certainly never understood why it existed at all, unless maybe
> it pre-dated having a firewall. It seems totally redundant
>
Tom Horsley writes:
On Tue, 15 Aug 2017 13:58:16 +0200
Jakub Jelen wrote:
> Thank you for comments and constructive ideas.
I certainly never understood why it existed at all, unless maybe
it pre-dated having a firewall. It seems totally redundant
to the firewall.
tcp_wrappers was useful. A l
On Tue, 15 Aug 2017 13:58:16 +0200
Jakub Jelen wrote:
> Thank you for comments and constructive ideas.
I certainly never understood why it existed at all, unless maybe
it pre-dated having a firewall. It seems totally redundant
to the firewall.
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Hello Fedora devels and users,
more than three years ago, the same topic started discussion if we want
this package in Fedora or not and how [1]. The discussion resulted
mostly in flames and in the removal of the dependency on tcp_wrappers
from systemd. But it was quite agreed that it is considere
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