Thanks Mike,
On 04/06/2023 14.02, Mike Wright wrote:
On 6/3/23 19:42, Eyal Lebedinsky wrote:
I am on f38, but I had this problem before with f36.
I attach an external USB disk that has CentOS.
I see that beyond the basic device and partitions, three other devices
/dev/dm-{0,1,2} show up.
With
Hi,
I'm using fedora37 on my desktop, and it appears a recent update
caused google-chrome-stable-114.0.5735.90-1.x86_64 to no longer play DRM
protected content like Netflix. I've installed all the latest updates.
Anyone know what changed?
I've confirmed that protected content is enabled
at chrome
On Sun, 2023-06-04 at 09:41 -0400, Alex wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm using fedora37 on my desktop, and it appears a recent update
> caused google-chrome-stable-114.0.5735.90-1.x86_64 to no longer play
> DRM
> protected content like Netflix. I've installed all the latest
> updates.
> Anyone know what chang
I am trying to kickstart multiple versions of Linux. Some of my systems
are BIOS based, and some are UEFI based.
I have a stanza in my dhcpd.conf file that looks like this:
class "pxeclients" {
match if substring (option vendor-class-identifier, 0, 9) =
"PXEClient";
ne
Once upon a time, Thomas Cameron said:
> Is it that the shim.efi file is signed for UEFI environments, and
> the RHEL kernel is expecting the signature for the RHEL shim.efi
> file? If so, how do I specify which shim.efi file I want to use
> based on the kernel? I would assume I'd need to add the
On 6/4/23 14:40, Chris Adams wrote:
As far as I can tell, you cannot configure network boot for different
OSes in a UEFI Secure Boot environment. The shim is loaded first,
before you get to the point of choosing which kernel to boot, and a
given distribution's shim will only load other Linux thi
Once upon a time, Thomas Cameron said:
> Yeah, that's why I was hoping there was maybe some magic in the
> vendor-class-identifier response that I could use. It would make
> life a LOT easier.
All the DHCP communication happens before shim is loaded (and then it's
too late to change), so all you
On 06/04/2023 01:40 PM, Chris Adams wrote:
It'd be nice if there was a way to chainload one shim from another
If memory serves, you could have GRUB boot Windows by giving it the
command chainload +X, where X represented the number of sectors to load.
I've no idea if GRUB2 still does this, b
Once upon a time, Joe Zeff said:
> On 06/04/2023 01:40 PM, Chris Adams wrote:
> >It'd be nice if there was a way to chainload one shim from another
>
> If memory serves, you could have GRUB boot Windows by giving it the
> command chainload +X, where X represented the number of sectors to
> load.
On 6/3/23 08:55, stan via users wrote:
On Thu, 01 Jun 2023 20:29:54 - ron flory via users
wrote:
Results: hello_world.c:1:10: fatal error: stdio.h: No such file or
directory 1 | #include | ^ compilation terminated.
- Hello_world sample consists of: #include #include
int mai
> On 4 Jun 2023, at 19:43, Thomas Cameron
> wrote:
>
> Or am I going about this the wrong way?
I have always seen this done by having tooling that read a database of hardware
mac addresses mapped to config.
With that setup you “just” edit the database to switch the os you want and
rebuild
> On 4 Jun 2023, at 21:48, Ron Flory via users
> wrote:
>
> If another noarch or arm header-only RPM happens to contain the missing
> headers (which I have not stumbled upon yet), it would be helpful for this to
> be marked a co-dependency so dnf can install it too.
I use dnf search to loo
On 6/4/23 16:25, Barry wrote:
I have always seen this done by having tooling that read a database of hardware
mac addresses mapped to config.
With that setup you “just” edit the database to switch the os you want and
rebuild
your dhcpd/tftpd config.
Unfortunately, the vast majority of my syste
On 6/4/23 15:00, Thomas Cameron wrote:
I really wish that there was something in the OS that would identify
itself when it sends a DHCP broadcast. I've read up
The part you're missing is that it isn't the OS that's sending the DHCP
request. It's the BIOS. There's no OS loaded yet, that's wh
Once upon a time, Thomas Cameron said:
> I really wish that there was something in the OS that would identify
> itself when it sends a DHCP broadcast.
Again, the DHCP request that gets a response "use this file" comes from
the firmware, not the OS.
It goes something like:
- BIOS/UEFI configured
On 4/6/23 04:33, Patrick Dupre wrote:
vgs
VG#PV #LV #SN Attr VSize VFree
VolSys_1b 1 3 0 wz--n- <40.00g <4.00g
VolSys_21 3 0 wz--n- 84.50g 0
VolSys_2b 1 2 0 wz--n- <40.00g <14.00g
# lvs
LVVGAttr LSize Pool Origin Data
Hi all;
I just installed Fedora 38 and when the laptop puts the screen to sleep
it never wakes up.
Running Fedora 38 on a Dell XPS 17
Thoughts?
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On 6/4/23 17:12, Samuel Sieb wrote:
The part you're missing is that it isn't the OS that's sending the
DHCP request. It's the BIOS. There's no OS loaded yet, that's what
you're trying to boot.
The hardware definitely sends a DHCP request when it tries to PXE boot.
But when the OS actually lo
On 6/4/23 17:30, Chris Adams wrote:
Again, the DHCP request that gets a response "use this file" comes from
the firmware, not the OS.
It goes something like:
- BIOS/UEFI configured for network boot sends DHCP request
- DHCP server says "use this file (aka shim)"
- BIOS/UEFI loads that file and
On Sun, Jun 4, 2023 at 8:26 PM Sbob wrote:
> Hi all;
>
>
> I just installed Fedora 38 and when the laptop puts the screen to sleep
> it never wakes up.
>
Have you also installed the recent updates?
>
> Running Fedora 38 on a Dell XPS 17
>
There were reports like this when F38 first appeared on
Yes I installed the rpmfusion repos and did a dnf -y update
(and rebooted)
On 6/4/23 18:42, George N. White III wrote:
On Sun, Jun 4, 2023 at 8:26 PM Sbob wrote:
Hi all;
I just installed Fedora 38 and when the laptop puts the screen to
sleep
it never wakes up.
Have you al
On Thu, Jun 1, 2023 at 4:30 PM ron flory via users
wrote:
>
> Hi- am hopefully missing something dumb/obvious here---
>
> Am trying to cross-compile for raspberry-pi, but some basic headers appear
> to be missing, or not redirecting to 'generics'.
>
> -
> Install the cross-compiler(s):
>
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