Hi all,
I've updated my OS a few times now and it would appear that I am still
on Xorg of Fedora 27 workstation;
From:
https://docs.fedoraproject.org/f27/system-administrators-guide/Wayland.html
0 digimer@pulsar:~$ loginctl
SESSIONUID USER SEAT TTY
On 04/18/2018 08:43 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
bobg]# mount 192.168.1.86:/home/exports/home /mnt/test
mount.nfs: access denied by server while mounting
192.168.1.86:/home/exports/home
What am I missing and/or doing wrong?
If you are using NFSv4, remember that the first export is the *root*.
Allegedly, on or about 18 April 2018, Jeremy Eder sent:
> I'm constantly drawing workflows/diagrams on a notepad...I like the
> freedom of ink and paper. I then manually convert the useful ones to
> google draw/lucidcharts. I stumbled on this https://www.wacom.com/en
> -us/products/smartpads/bamb
On Wed, 2018-04-18 at 17:30 +, Beartooth wrote:
> On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 22:42:53 +0100, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
>
> > The details differ according to which desktop manager (DM) you're using
> > (which is *not* the same as the Desktop Environment). The typical
> > options are GDM, KDM, SDDM et
On 04/18/2018 02:15 PM, Rick Stevens wrote:
> On 04/18/2018 12:42 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>> On 04/18/18 15:01, Rick Stevens wrote:
>>> By default, Fedora uses the LVM (logical volume manager) system to
>>> partition the disks. It actually creates regular partitions as a raw
>>> volumes (PVs or "phy
On 19/4/18 3:45 am, Rick Stevens wrote:
On 04/18/2018 08:43 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
On 04/17/18 06:47, Tim via users wrote:
The /etc/fstab file points to where devices get mounted onto the
directory tree.
If you have mounts like
/dev/wrong-device pointing to /my-preferred-storage-space
Simply
On 04/18/2018 12:42 PM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 04/18/18 15:01, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> By default, Fedora uses the LVM (logical volume manager) system to
>> partition the disks. It actually creates regular partitions as a raw
>> volumes (PVs or "physical volumes"). It then typically creates a VG
>>
On 04/18/18 15:01, Rick Stevens wrote:
By default, Fedora uses the LVM (logical volume manager) system to
partition the disks. It actually creates regular partitions as a raw
volumes (PVs or "physical volumes"). It then typically creates a VG
(volume group) that has that PVs in it. From there, it
On Mon, Apr 16, 2018 at 10:36 PM, Tim via users
wrote:
> Allegedly, on or about 16 April 2018, Go Canes sent:
>> why would a power-cycle clear it, while a reboot doesn't?
> It reminds me of the number of times I've had to pull out the plug and
> put it back in again, to get USB devices to work, o
I'm constantly drawing workflows/diagrams on a notepad...I like the freedom
of ink and paper. I then manually convert the useful ones to google
draw/lucidcharts. I stumbled on this
https://www.wacom.com/en-us/products/smartpads/bamboo-slate … and am
intrigued.
It looks like the way to get it run
On 04/18/2018 11:23 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 04/18/18 13:45, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> Uhm, that looks like "box86" either isn't in DNS or /etc/hosts so it
>> can't be resolved. If this is on the server, try "showmount -e" or
>> "showmount -e localhost".
>
> +
>
> I eventually realized that and c
On 04/18/2018 10:49 AM, Dario Lesca wrote:
After last remmina update (1.2.0-0.51.20180408.git.6b62986) the VNC
incoming connection (Plugin VNCI) is go away.
Now it's any more possible to start a reverse connection, like previous
version (1.2.0-0.42.20170908git205df66) allow to do (I have do a
On 04/18/18 13:45, Rick Stevens wrote:
Uhm, that looks like "box86" either isn't in DNS or /etc/hosts so it
can't be resolved. If this is on the server, try "showmount -e" or
"showmount -e localhost".
+
I eventually realized that and changed it to showmount -e 192.168.1.86
and unfortunately i
After last remmina update (1.2.0-0.51.20180408.git.6b62986) the VNC
incoming connection (Plugin VNCI) is go away.
Now it's any more possible to start a reverse connection, like previous
version (1.2.0-0.42.20170908git205df66) allow to do (I have do a "sudo
dnf downgrade remmina --allowerasing" to
On 04/18/2018 08:43 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 04/17/18 06:47, Tim via users wrote:
>> The /etc/fstab file points to where devices get mounted onto the
>> directory tree.
>>
>> If you have mounts like
>>
>> /dev/wrong-device pointing to /my-preferred-storage-space
>>
>> Simply change the device to
On 04/18/2018 10:15 AM, Beartooth wrote:
> On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 11:49:45 -0600, JD wrote:
>
>> 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,
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 22:42:53 +0100, Patrick O'Callaghan wrote:
> The details differ according to which desktop manager (DM) you're using
> (which is *not* the same as the Desktop Environment). The typical
> options are GDM, KDM, SDDM etc. In the case of SDDM there's a drop-down
> menu at the lower
On Tue, 17 Apr 2018 11:49:45 -0600, JD wrote:
> 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 04/17/18 06:47, Tim via users wrote:
The /etc/fstab file points to where devices get mounted onto the
directory tree.
If you have mounts like
/dev/wrong-device pointing to /my-preferred-storage-space
Simply change the device to the one you actually want.
--
.
Ser
2018-04-18 8:58 GMT+02:00, Neal Becker :
> 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]:
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