Recently my system has been refusing to suspend. How can I debug?
(I've recently installed expressvpn, could this be the issue?)
Here's what the log says:
Apr 18 02:30:01 nbecker2 systemd[1]: Started Suspend.
Apr 18 02:30:01 nbecker2 systemd[1]: sleep.target: Unit not needed anymore.
Stopping.
A
I installed native TeX Live 2017 and now everything works fine.
As it works also in Debian 9 with TeX Live 2016, it looks like a
problem in some texlive Fedora package. I saw a tiny difference in the
version of some packages between Debian and Fedora, for example
luaotfload module. See my comm
On Tue, 2018-04-17 at 17:42 +, Beartooth wrote:
> If this isn't the right list, please redirect me!
>
> I have a PC running F27, with mate and xfce both installed; at
> present, what I see is xfce. How do I change to mate??
The details differ according to which desktop manager (D
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 22:26:22 +0200
Wolfgang Pfeiffer wrote:
> And that looks really interesting:
> https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/admin-guide/pm/sleep-states.rst
Forgot that one:
https://www.kernel.org/doc/Documentation/power/swsusp.txt
Sorry,
Wolfgang
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 10:53:09 -0700
Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 04/17/2018 04:55 AM, Wolfgang Pfeiffer wrote:
> >Trying 'upower -d' here results in the display of current power
> > settings ...
>
> So that's why mine works. The output includes this line:
> critical-action: HybridSleep
>
> I d
On 17/04/18 20:12, Chris Adams wrote:
> I am trying to get a handle on firewalld... I can't actually see right
> off how to limit access to services to certain sources. For example, on
> a single-interface server, I want to limit access to SSH and SNMP to
> some "management" networks. With iptabl
I am trying to get a handle on firewalld... I can't actually see right
off how to limit access to services to certain sources. For example, on
a single-interface server, I want to limit access to SSH and SNMP to
some "management" networks. With iptables, I might have:
*filter
:INPUT ACCEPT
Allegedly, on or about 17 April 2018, Bob Goodwin sent:
> From the client /etc/fstab:
> 192.168.1.86:/exports/home//mnt/test/nfs4defaults0 0
Okay, looks normal. The server has /exports/home making it available
to your LAN.
When your client saves into its /mnt/test/, file
On 04/17/2018 04:55 AM, Wolfgang Pfeiffer wrote:
Trying 'upower -d' here results in the display of current power
settings ...
So that's why mine works. The output includes this line:
critical-action: HybridSleep
I do wonder what starts it up. The service is disabled although the
default
At the login screen, first choose the login name
then before you type the password, click on the small
wheel in the login banner and it will drop down a menu
of DT's to choose from.
Choose Mate, then type your password and you are done.
On 04/17/2018 11:42 AM, Beartooth wrote:
If this i
If this isn't the right list, please redirect me!
I have a PC running F27, with mate and xfce both installed; at
present, what I see is xfce. How do I change to mate??
--
Beartooth Staffwright, Not Quite Clueless Power User
Remember I know little (precious little!) of where up
On 04/17/2018 02:42 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
/dev/mapper/fedora-home 2.7T 4.8G 2.5T 1% /home
As you can see it is putting the stored data in "/" [19G in a 49G
space]. Those partitions were setup selecting "custom/standard
partitions] in the installer. It looks to me like I should've used the
On 04/17/18 06:35, Eyal Lebedinsky wrote:
On 17/04/18 19:42, Bob Goodwin wrote:
I have the NFS server working nicely and doing what I expect it to
do, with a lot of help from this list, EXCEPT data is not being put
in the right partition!
Who is the client putting data in? How are the nfs exp
On Fri, Apr 13, 2018 at 10:03 PM, Earl Ramirez wrote:
>>
>> Does "192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0" work?!
>>
>> The prefix is usually "24" not "255.255.255.0".
>
> Yes, that also works NFS supports both contiguous mask length and
> prefix.
Now that you mention it, my memory's clearer about this. I shou
On Mon, 16 Apr 2018 08:41:56 +0100
Dave Mitchell wrote:
> F27. I ran a new laptop battery down to 4% (as claimed by gnome) and my
> laptop didn't auto-suspend, nor hibernate.
I'm not that familiar with power settings on Fedora (having F26 here).
But a look at upower.service might be useful - m
Allegedly, on or about 17 April 2018, Bob Goodwin sent:
> So I guess it boils down to how do I tell NFS to store data in /home
> instead of "/"? I've been looking at this and can't see what to
> change, or maybe it can';t be fixed that way?
I'm not sure of which side of the equation you're approa
On 17/04/18 19:42, Bob Goodwin wrote:
I have the NFS server working nicely and doing what I expect it to do, with a
lot of help from this list, EXCEPT data is not being put in the right partition!
Who is the client putting data in? How are the nfs exports mounted on this
client?
Can I fix t
I have the NFS server working nicely and doing what I expect it to do,
with a lot of help from this list, EXCEPT data is not being put in the
right partition!
Can I fix this without starting from a new Fedora 27 installation or
completely replacing NFS? Df shows the following:
$ df -h
Filesy
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