On Sun, 21 Jan 2018 19:54:56 +0100
François Patte wrote:
> This is the problem: it is not remembered.
Changing the device is a separate setting from setting it as a
default. So, are you changing the device and then making it the
default? If you are, and this is happening, it's a bug, and y
On 01/22/18 05:32, JD wrote:
> So, for some reason, it is not able to shake hands with the hotspot wifi
> router.
Did you verify that the Wifi security settings are correct for the connection?
--
A motto of mine is: When in doubt, try it out
signature.asc
Description: OpenPGP digital signa
Bringing up F27 WS on an old laptop machine for a friend (at a hotspot):
Inserting the usb dongle (TP-Linketc) suggested by a list member,
I see the following related output from dmesg:
852.412125] usb 2-3: RTL8192EU rev B (SMIC) 2T2R, TX queues 3,
WiFi=1, BT=0, GPS=0, HI PA=0
[ 852.4
On Sun, Jan 21, 2018 at 4:57 AM, Tim wrote:
> Tim:
>>>
>>> rm -rfd .cache/mozilla/firefox
>>>
>>> Only to have it chuck a hissy fit and claim the options were
>>> invalid.
>
> Tom H:
>> Without the "-d"?
>
> Tried that, didn't like it (I did need to remove directories).
It's not needed. "-fr" wil
On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 10:47 AM, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Sat, 20 Jan 2018 10:24:26 -0500
> Sam Varshavchik wrote:
>>
>> Did anyone use grub2-mkconfig before, to generate a new grub.cfg, and then
>> subsequently installed kernels new without grubby causing any issues?
>
> I never use /etc/default/
On Sat, Jan 20, 2018 at 10:24 AM, Sam Varshavchik wrote:
> I edited GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX in /etc/default/grub before I installed
> the most recent kernel update. However the grub entry for the new
> kernel did not reflect my changes in the updated /boot/grub2/grub.cfg
>
> Digging into this, it app
On 21/1/18 12:50 pm, stan wrote:
On Sun, 21 Jan 2018 11:30:46 +1100
Stephen Morris wrote:
I have always used grub2-mkconfig and the old grub equivalent as I
have never liked the boot menus that grubby generates. The one thing
I don't like about this process is that I also boot Ubuntu and
Windo
On 01/21/2018 01:57 AM, Tim wrote:
Without the "-d"?
Tried that, didn't like it (I did need to remove directories).
You don't need "-d" to remove directories. The "-r" option will do
that. The "-d" option removes *empty* directories. "rm" will not
delete directories without an option ind
Le 21/01/2018 à 17:16, stan a écrit :
> On Sun, 21 Jan 2018 16:34:18 +0100
> François Patte wrote:
>
>> Since I upgraded to f27, I have to configure the sound output: open
>> the mixer and choose the right device.
>>
>> How can I perpetuate the config?
>
> There is probably a way to do this from
Hi use (htop) command to see all the services and stop the services using
pid process
On 18-Jan-2018 4:23 AM, "Adrian Sevcenco" wrote:
> Hi! I need to have tftp run by service not by socket (at this moment
> service requires and start the socket) but even with a proper (i hope)
> override and
On Sun, 21 Jan 2018 16:34:18 +0100
François Patte wrote:
> Since I upgraded to f27, I have to configure the sound output: open
> the mixer and choose the right device.
>
> How can I perpetuate the config?
There is probably a way to do this from the command line for pulseaudio,
but if you open p
Bonjour,
Since I upgraded to f27, I have to configure the sound output: open the
mixer and choose the right device.
How can I perpetuate the config?
Thank you.
--
François Patte
UFR de mathématiques et informatique
Laboratoire CNRS MAP5, UMR 8145
Université Paris Descartes
45, rue des Saints Pè
Hi.
On Sun, 21 Jan 2018 13:02:41 +0200 Adrian Sevcenco wrote:
...
> the proper procedure would be "systemctl edit service_name"...
> as such i have this :
> cat tftp.service.d/override.conf
> [Unit]
> DefaultDependencies=no
> Requires=
...
> in which i tried to remove the socket dependency but
On 01/21/2018 03:56 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 01/21/18 21:17, Adrian Sevcenco wrote:
On 01/21/2018 02:12 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 01/21/18 19:02, Adrian Sevcenco wrote:
so, i had to create mytftp.service with the content as above that works as
expected, and i have the freedom to start and stop
On 01/21/18 21:17, Adrian Sevcenco wrote:
> On 01/21/2018 02:12 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> On 01/21/18 19:02, Adrian Sevcenco wrote:
>>> so, i had to create mytftp.service with the content as above that works as
>>> expected, and i have the freedom to start and stop whenever i chose to..
>>
>>
>> Wha
On 01/21/2018 02:12 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 01/21/18 19:02, Adrian Sevcenco wrote:
so, i had to create mytftp.service with the content as above that works as
expected, and i have the freedom to start and stop whenever i chose to..
What command do you use to stop/start mytftp.service and how
On 01/21/18 19:02, Adrian Sevcenco wrote:
> so, i had to create mytftp.service with the content as above that works as
> expected, and i have the freedom to start and stop whenever i chose to..
What command do you use to stop/start mytftp.service and how does that differ
from
"systemctl stop/st
On 01/21/2018 07:03 AM, Samuel Sieb wrote:
On 01/20/2018 07:40 AM, Adrian Sevcenco wrote:
On 01/19/2018 03:00 PM, James Hogarth wrote:
Seeing as this is a very unusual request, even to the point prior to
systemd tftpd was run under xinetd rather than its own service, I
think the first question
Tim:
>> rm -rfd .cache/mozilla/firefox
>>
>> Only to have it chuck a hissy fit and claim the options were
>> invalid.
Tom H:
> Without the "-d"?
Tried that, didn't like it (I did need to remove directories). In the
end we got it done, but I was more curious if anyone knew why it didn't
work. I
Thanks Patrick for bearing with me on this, i think that's got my thinking
sorted :-)
M
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