On Mon, 2018-07-30 at 14:57 -0700, Rick Stevens wrote:
> dump was designed to feed a streaming, non-random access device like a
> tape system and it won't cross source devices. For flat-out speed, dump
> is slightly slower than dd but it is file-aware (which dd isn't). I'd
> imagine dumping to a se
On 07/30/18 23:10, Ed Greshko wrote:
Well, to avoid triggering anything, I would boot the system and then use a
Virtual
Terminal (or ssh in) to login as root.
Then I would do...
systemctl status mnt-testb.automount
and maybe
systemctl show mnt-testb.automount
+
Wont it trigger the mount pro
On 07/31/18 18:36, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 07/30/18 23:10, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> Well, to avoid triggering anything, I would boot the system and then use a
>> Virtual
>> Terminal (or ssh in) to login as root.
>>
>> Then I would do...
>>
>> systemctl status mnt-testb.automount
>>
>> and maybe
>>
>>
On 07/31/18 18:36, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> Wont it trigger the mount process as soon as I "startxfce4"?
I think I mis-read this
Are you saying you boot to a text login, login as yourself, and then start your
desktop with "startxfce4"?
If that is the case, don't start it. Just login and issue
Hello,
I've just upgraded my TP X230i from F27 to F28 painless.
But I'm still on my last F27 kernel-4.16.16-200.fc27.i686+PAE.
No newer kernel installed.
During ame upgrade procedure on my TP x121e kernel was updated to
kernel-4.17.7-100.fc27.i686+PAE.
Both systems are 32bit. What could prevent
I have computer which I have upgraded every six month or so from 26
September 2014, starting with Fedora 20. I want to do a fresh
installation of Fedora. I have a 3 Tbyte disk with two partitions, 500
Mbyte for /boot and the rest is one physical volume which is divided in
three logical volume /, /h
On 07/31/18 08:35, Ed Greshko wrote:
On 07/31/18 18:36, Bob Goodwin wrote:
Wont it trigger the mount process as soon as I "startxfce4"?
I think I mis-read this
Are you saying you boot to a text login, login as yourself, and then start your
desktop with "startxfce4"?
If that is the case,
On 07/31/2018 06:57 AM, Frank Elsner wrote:
I've just upgraded my TP X230i from F27 to F28 painless.
But I'm still on my last F27 kernel-4.16.16-200.fc27.i686+PAE.
No newer kernel installed.
During ame upgrade procedure on my TP x121e kernel was updated to
kernel-4.17.7-100.fc27.i686+PAE.
Both
On 07/31/2018 07:04 AM, Jon Ingason wrote:
I have computer which I have upgraded every six month or so from 26
September 2014, starting with Fedora 20. I want to do a fresh
installation of Fedora. I have a 3 Tbyte disk with two partitions, 500
Mbyte for /boot and the rest is one physical volume w
On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 15:57:48 +0200
Frank Elsner wrote:
> I've just upgraded my TP X230i from F27 to F28 painless.
> But I'm still on my last F27 kernel-4.16.16-200.fc27.i686+PAE.
> No newer kernel installed.
>
> During ame upgrade procedure on my TP x121e kernel was updated to
> kernel-4.17.7-
On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 08:33:08 -0700 Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 07/31/2018 06:57 AM, Frank Elsner wrote:
> > I've just upgraded my TP X230i from F27 to F28 painless.
> > But I'm still on my last F27 kernel-4.16.16-200.fc27.i686+PAE.
> > No newer kernel installed.
> >
> > During ame upgrade procedure on
On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 16:04:38 +0200
Jon Ingason wrote:
> I have computer which I have upgraded every six month or so from 26
> September 2014, starting with Fedora 20. I want to do a fresh
> installation of Fedora. I have a 3 Tbyte disk with two partitions, 500
> Mbyte for /boot and the rest is on
On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 08:46:55 -0700 stan wrote:
> On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 15:57:48 +0200
> Frank Elsner wrote:
>
> > I've just upgraded my TP X230i from F27 to F28 painless.
> > But I'm still on my last F27 kernel-4.16.16-200.fc27.i686+PAE.
> > No newer kernel installed.
> >
> > During ame upgrade p
On 07/31/2018 09:14 AM, Frank Elsner wrote:
> On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 08:46:55 -0700 stan wrote:
>> On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 15:57:48 +0200
>> Frank Elsner wrote:
>>
>>> I've just upgraded my TP X230i from F27 to F28 painless.
>>> But I'm still on my last F27 kernel-4.16.16-200.fc27.i686+PAE.
>>> No newe
On 07/31/2018 03:36 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 07/30/18 23:10, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> Well, to avoid triggering anything, I would boot the system and then use a
>> Virtual
>> Terminal (or ssh in) to login as root.
>>
>> Then I would do...
>>
>> systemctl status mnt-testb.automount
>>
>> and maybe
>
Den 2018-07-31 kl. 17:36, skrev Samuel Sieb:
> On 07/31/2018 07:04 AM, Jon Ingason wrote:
>> I have computer which I have upgraded every six month or so from 26
>> September 2014, starting with Fedora 20. I want to do a fresh
>> installation of Fedora. I have a 3 Tbyte disk with two partitions, 500
On 07/31/18 12:35, Rick Stevens wrote:
If it's an automount with a "comment=systemd.automount" or
"x-systemd.automount" in the options of the fstab entry:
server:/export /mnt/nfsmount nfs4options,x-systemd.automount 0 0
you must_access_ the mountpoint for systemd to automount it
On 07/31/18 22:26, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 07/31/18 08:35, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> On 07/31/18 18:36, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>>> Wont it trigger the mount process as soon as I "startxfce4"?
>>
>> I think I mis-read this
>>
>> Are you saying you boot to a text login, login as yourself, and then start
Hi
On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 09:35:27 -0700 Rick Stevens wrote:
> If you don't have the automount stuff, I think the most reliable thing
> is to give your client a fixed IP/netmask/gateway combination. ...
This may not be sufficient: I had a client with fixed IP configuration
that fails to mount an N
On 07/31/18 13:10, Ed Greshko wrote:
In a previous post, I wrote
systemctl show mnt-testb.automount
+
Sorry, here's a second go at doing mit right:
[bobg@ASRock-J3455M ~]$ systemctl show mnt-testb.automount
Where=/mnt/testb
DirectoryMode=0755
Result=success
TimeoutIdleUSec=0
Id=mnt-testb.
On 07/31/18 13:30, Bob Goodwin wrote:
On 07/31/18 13:10, Ed Greshko wrote:
In a previous post, I wrote
systemctl show mnt-testb.automount
+
Sorry, here's a second go at doing mit right:
NO That's probably not what you want either because now the computer is
connected. I will shut it down
On 07/31/2018 10:23 AM, francis.montag...@inria.fr wrote:
>
> Hi
>
> On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 09:35:27 -0700 Rick Stevens wrote:
>
>> If you don't have the automount stuff, I think the most reliable thing
>> is to give your client a fixed IP/netmask/gateway combination. ...
>
> This may not be suffi
On 07/31/2018 10:06 AM, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 07/31/18 12:35, Rick Stevens wrote:
>> If it's an automount with a "comment=systemd.automount" or
>> "x-systemd.automount" in the options of the fstab entry:
>>
>> server:/export /mnt/nfsmount nfs4
>> options,x-systemd.automount 0 0
>>
>>
On 07/31/2018 08:47 AM, Frank Elsner wrote:
On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 08:33:08 -0700 Samuel Sieb wrote:
The PAE kernel is no longer being built. You either need to switch to
non-PAE or 64-bit.
Since when? The TP x121e got the kernel-PAE-4.17.7-100.fc27.i686
on 2018-07-17 19:19:51
Si
I checked in koij.fedoraproject and I didnt't find kerenl headers in
4.7.11. Is it correct??
Antonio Montagnani
Linux Fedora 28 Workstation
da/from Gmail
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On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 18:49:51 +0200
Antonio M wrote:
> I checked in koij.fedoraproject and I didnt't find kerenl headers in
> 4.7.11. Is it correct??
>
> Antonio Montagnani
>
> Linux Fedora 28 Workstation
> da/from Gmail
Yes, it is correct. The headers have been broken out into a separate
pack
On 08/01/18 01:37, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> On 07/31/18 13:30, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>> On 07/31/18 13:10, Ed Greshko wrote:
>>> In a previous post, I wrote
>>>
>>> systemctl show mnt-testb.automount
>> +
>> Sorry, here's a second go at doing mit right:
> NO That's probably not what you want either be
On 07/31/2018 01:59 PM, Ed Greshko wrote:
> On 08/01/18 01:37, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>> On 07/31/18 13:30, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>>> On 07/31/18 13:10, Ed Greshko wrote:
In a previous post, I wrote
systemctl show mnt-testb.automount
>>> +
>>> Sorry, here's a second go at doing mit righ
+
On 07/31/18 16:59, Ed Greshko wrote:
I just saw the other message from Rick
Is ASRock-J3455M the NFS client?
+
No, that is the NFS server.
UPS just delivered a new Das keyboard i3 and I just had to check it out,
I was off track here for a while.
__
On 08/01/18 05:16, Bob Goodwin wrote:
> +
>
> On 07/31/18 16:59, Ed Greshko wrote:
>> I just saw the other message from Rick
>>
>> Is ASRock-J3455M the NFS client?
> +
>
> No, that is the NFS server.
>
> UPS just delivered a new Das keyboard i3 and I just had to check it out, I
> was off
> tra
As we know, memory leak bugs #64 and relevent fixes are available only
on gjs 1.53.x + gnome 3.29.
On my current Fedora 28 workstation, I have gnome-shell 3.28.3 and gjs
1.52.3 from updates repository and I can't found the newer version on
updates-testing repository
$ rpm -qi gnome-shell | head -
On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 11:00:15 -0700 Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 07/31/2018 08:47 AM, Frank Elsner wrote:
> > On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 08:33:08 -0700 Samuel Sieb wrote:
> >> The PAE kernel is no longer being built. You either need to switch to
> >> non-PAE or 64-bit.
> >
> > Since when? The TP x121e got the
On 07/31/2018 10:57 PM, Frank Elsner wrote:
Can you please explain the line
2018-08-01T05:53:36Z INFO Installed: kernel-4.17.9-200.fc28.i686
from /var/log/dnf.rpm.log of my 32bit F28 system?
What is there to explain? That is version 4.17.9 of the kernel, 32-bit
non-PAE, built for F28.
Do yo
On Tue, 31 Jul 2018 23:15:57 -0700 Samuel Sieb wrote:
> On 07/31/2018 10:57 PM, Frank Elsner wrote:
> > Can you please explain the line
> > 2018-08-01T05:53:36Z INFO Installed: kernel-4.17.9-200.fc28.i686
> > from /var/log/dnf.rpm.log of my 32bit F28 system?
>
> What is there to explain? That is
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