Le 2022-08-20 12:35, Patrick O'Callaghan a écrit :
On Sat, 2022-08-20 at 09:58 +0200, François Patte wrote:
Le 2022-08-20 08:56, Barry a écrit :
> > On 19 Aug 2022, at 21:33, François Patte
> > wrote:
> >
> > Bonjour,
> >
> > This morning, logwatch reported this in the iptables section:
> >
>
Le 2022-08-20 12:03, Tim via users a écrit :
On Sat, 2022-08-20 at 09:58 +0200, François Patte wrote:
The problem is: how an IP from a private network (10) could reach
my
machine through the internet?
WiFi?
I don't understand your question. The machine is connected to the box
with anet
The Digital Technology of the Future is Changing Business Today – The IT branch
has become one of the most critical for organizations and the situation of
virtual generation. It is because the control of the assets that this area has
is the help of all its records. For this purpose, understandin
The Digital Technology of the Future is Changing Business Today – The IT branch
has become one of the most critical for organizations and the situation of
virtual generation. It is because the control of the assets that this area has
is the help of all its records. For this purpose, understandin
People,
I have a fairly recent ASUS ROG motherboard that I want to interrogate
from the CLI - specifically to see which SATA drives are hot-swappable
but dmidecode does not supply that information - is there some way of
getting the info without rebooting into the BIOS setup screen? I am
runn
François Patte wrote:
>>> The problem is: how an IP from a private network (10) could reach
>>> my machine through the internet?
Tim:
>> WiFi?
François Patte:
> I don't understand your question. The machine is connected to the box
> with an ethernet cable?
It was a thought that maybe there
On Fri, Aug 19, 2022, at 1:33 PM, François Patte wrote:
> Bonjour,
>
> This morning, logwatch reported this in the iptables section:
>
> Logged 99 packets on interface enp3s0
> .
> From 10.91.96.218 - 6 packets to udp(54366)
>
> How, this IP address could be logged on my private network (w
Hi,
I am getting this exact problem since about a week or two weeks ago that I
noticed.
Still no resolution?
Thx
On Wed, Jul 27, 2022 at 1:08 PM stan via users <
users@lists.fedoraproject.org> wrote:
> On Wed, 27 Jul 2022 09:17:05 -0400
> Tom Horsley wrote:
>
> > For a few days now, I've been g
On Sun, 21 Aug 2022 10:52:42 -0500
Javier Perez wrote:
> Still no resolution?
I did a dnf erase on the old 32 bit lib and let it take a couple of things
with it, and haven't had a single problem since then. I don't know why
the 32 bit lib was installed, but removing it let the update proceed
and
Greetings,
A few weeks back, I uninstalled GNOME Boxes via DNF and then installed
the Flatpak version (because I wanted to run GNOME OS and that’s only
possible with the Flatpak version of GNOME Boxes).
Well GNOME OS was just too unstable to play around with, so I deleted
it. Then I tried in
On 8/13/22 6:37 AM, lejeczek via users wrote:
On 13/08/2022 11:49, Greg wrote:
Sorry I am not sure why the option is missing.
Can you right click the title bar, under more options and select no
border?
Kind regards from Greg.
___
Nope, no such
Generally there is no standard for how anything is encoded/decoded in the bios.
Each vendor does it a slightly different way even on different bios
versions. You would need a vendor tool that works for the specific
motherboard.
And the bios will have no way to know what is hot-swappable as that
On 8/19/22 15:33, François Patte wrote:
Bonjour,
This morning, logwatch reported this in the iptables section:
Logged 99 packets on interface enp3s0
.
From 10.91.96.218 - 6 packets to udp(54366)
How, this IP address could be logged on my private network (which is
192.168.1.0)?
I mis
On 8/13/22 6:37 AM, lejeczek via users wrote:
On 13/08/2022 11:49, Greg wrote:
Sorry I am not sure why the option is missing.
Can you right click the title bar, under more options and select no
border?
Kind regards from Greg.
___
Nope, no such
On Mon, 2022-08-22 at 00:00 +1000, Philip Rhoades via users wrote:
> I have a fairly recent ASUS ROG motherboard that I want to interrogate
> from the CLI - specifically to see which SATA drives are hot-swappable
> but dmidecode does not supply that information - is there some way of
> getting t
On 8/21/22 21:29, Tim via users wrote:
On Mon, 2022-08-22 at 00:00 +1000, Philip Rhoades via users wrote:
I have a fairly recent ASUS ROG motherboard that I want to interrogate
from the CLI - specifically to see which SATA drives are hot-swappable
but dmidecode does not supply that information -
Roger,
On 2022-08-22 06:40, Roger Heflin wrote:
Generally there is no standard for how anything is encoded/decoded in
the bios.
Ah . .
Each vendor does it a slightly different way even on different bios
versions. You would need a vendor tool that works for the specific
motherboard.
Ri
ToddAndMargo,
On 2022-08-22 16:11, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
On 8/21/22 21:29, Tim via users wrote:
On Mon, 2022-08-22 at 00:00 +1000, Philip Rhoades via users wrote:
I have a fairly recent ASUS ROG motherboard that I want to
interrogate
from the CLI - specifically to see which SATA drive
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