On 24 July 2018 at 08:51, Frank Elsner wrote:
> I'm waiting now for 5 days. Any idea how long it will take?
>
> --Frank
All the necessary packages seem to have been pushed on the 20th, at
least for me - I'm now on soundtouch v2.0.0-3.fc27. There do seem to
be others with problems though, mostly
On 24 July 2018 at 10:28, Frank Elsner wrote:
> Problem: problem with installed package
> gstreamer-plugins-bad-free-0.10.23-41.fc27.i686
> - package gstreamer-plugins-bad-free-0.10.23-41.fc27.i686 requires
> libSoundTouch.so.1, but none of the providers can be installed
There's your proble
On 24 July 2018 at 11:16, Frank Elsner wrote:
> so I have both installed. Is it safe to remove the gstreamer-* packages and
> only keep the gstreamer1-* packages?
Assuming all dependencies are declared then dnf should prevent you
from removing the gstreamer0 packages if anything needs them and te
Here we go again...
--
Andy
The only person to have all his work done by Friday was Robinson Crusoe
--
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On 14 July 2010 20:58, Frank Murphy wrote:
> My /var/log/messages
>
> seems to have started hording info.
> It is now 112mb in size.
> Covers 3-4 days of info.
Unless this is a busy server, then that seems rather excessive to say
the least - mine is currently 14kB, but I redirect quite a bit of
s
On 15 July 2010 10:18, Frank Murphy wrote:
> Quite a lot of kvm\qemu, being doing a lot of testing.
OK. There are two options here depending on whether or not the
KVM/Qemu stuff is useful to you in your testing.
If it is, then the best option is probably going to be to try and pull
the KVM/Qem
On 16 July 2010 08:12, Eric Tanguy wrote:
> I read somewhere that firefox 4 would be out in november. Fedora 14 will
> be released at the end of october. So will fedora 14 include firefox 4 ?
This came up when Firefox 3.6 came out the question got asked about it
replacing Firefox 3.5.x in the the
On 9 February 2010 08:59, Mike Cloaked wrote:
>
> In today's updates there is a message during yum update for dnssec-conf:
> Cleanup : dnssec-conf-1.21-2.fc11.noarch
> 11/15
> sed: can't read /etc/pki/dnssec-keys/named.dnssec.keys: No such file or
> directory
>
> Then when restarting the
On 9 February 2010 23:30, Steven Stern wrote:
> After updating DNSSEC a few minutes ago, named is broken
Paul Frields just posted about this - it's a known problem and a fix
is on the way. In the mean time, you can find workarounds and more
information here:
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug
On 15 August 2010 11:52, Robert P. J. Day wrote:
> based on the datestamps in the filenames, i would think that second
> ISO is the latest x86_64 image, but it looks odd that it's
> significantly smaller than the earlier one. or am i misinterpreting
> what i'm looking at? thanks.
Fedora is sw
Can you boil the commands that you don't want included in the history
file to a series of regular expressions such as the following:
^cd
^ls
^rm
If so, you can create a list of these regular expressions in a file,
then use the ~/.bash_logout script to clean up the history:
# clean up
You want Koji:
http://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/
And specifically:
http://koji.fedoraproject.org/koji/buildinfo?buildID=188999
or, for a direct download:
http://kojipkgs.fedoraproject.org/packages/xscreensaver/5.11/9.fc12.respin1/i686/xscreensaver-5.11-9.fc12.respin1.i686.rpm
--
Andy
The
On 12 February 2011 21:19, Bill Davidsen wrote:
> While I appreciate people taking time to provide pointers to other tools,
> that
> really wasn't the question... I don't want to retrain a bunch of people in
> a
> mixed AIX/Linux environment, nor give them the impression that Linux tools
> are
>
On 13 February 2011 18:03, Bill Davidsen wrote:
> This is Linux (from IBM) going into AIX, in an IBM shop. The chances of IBM
> dropping AIX are remote (new major release out last year), and there are
> apps in
> AIX which are not in Linux. So I think the chances are that I will die
> before
> AI
On 18 April 2011 13:48, Tom Horsley wrote:
> On Mon, 18 Apr 2011 13:07:33 +0100
> Dave Cross wrote:
>
> > What kind of hosting company installs an operating system that has
> > been unsupported for three years?
>
> One that has been in business for about 3 years and has just
> been copying the or
On 18 April 2011 16:42, Dante Conti wrote:
> It was Fedora v6. RHEL was not offered as an OS option.
>
In that case they *really* ought to be named and shamed. Fedora Core 6 was
released at the tail end of 2006! That kind of OS age might be OK in
Microsoft shops where you get major releases ev
> I noticed that when I upgraded to FC 11, the screen lets me know that I have
> to hit the F1 key to continue. How can I disable this so it automatically
> continues?
Is this prompt coming from the BIOS, or Fedora? It sounds more like
it's a BIOS prompt than something coming from Fedora, but if
2010/1/16 Jean Francois Martinez :
> No it isn't. In 32 bits mode the processor only has a paltry eight
> registers and in addition it is limited to a brain damaged stack model
> for floating point. In 64 bits it has sixteen registers and possibly,
> not sure about it, a healthier floating point
2010/1/17 Jean Francois Martinez :
> I fail to understand how manipulating 16 bit values can benefit of
> 64 bits instead of 32. I still think it is the 16 registers and thus
> far less restrictive than "large chunks of data processed 64 bits at a
> time"
Depends on the operation at hand. If you
2010/1/22 Temlakos :
> Warning! Firefox 3.6 has been reported to create insurmountable problems
> for some publishers of Web content.
>
> The site involved is examiner.com. Independent contractors (of which I
> am one) report losing key features of the back-end publication tool, to
> the point at w
The wireshark package only provides the text mode interface, "tshark". If
you are looking for the GUI application, "wireshark", you'll also need to
install wireshark-gnome.
Regards,
Andy
On 7 April 2014 14:01, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> I installed wireshark on my F20/Gnome notebook, and yum h
On 7 April 2014 14:43, Robert Moskowitz wrote:
> ARGH I hate logging out!!! I have too many apps running 'just right'
> to logout more than say once a month. (really when I have to reboot when
> things get doggy)
>
> sigh.
What do you think this is, Windows? ;)
Either open a new console
"dd" is a much better command that "cp" for this. See the following
for more info and a good background as to what is going on:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Disk_Cloning
The sections on "Cloning a partition" and "Cloning an entire hard
disk" are the bits you want. Also take a look at th
Depends on what you are trying to achieve:
:msg, contains, "some string" stop
(on one line) will discard any message containing "some string".
:msg, contains, "some other string" /var/log/messages
& stop
(across two lines) will cause any message containing "some other
string" to be logged in me
It *should* be running every day, but just checked my system and it's
not enabled either and hasn't run for a week as well - possible bug?
Anyway, to fix it, run the following commands (as root or via sudo):
systemctl list-timers --all
That *should* list a UNIT called "mlocate-updatedb.timer", bu
On 19 September 2016 at 22:38, Patrick Dupre wrote:
> I did:
> systemctl enable mlocate-updatedb.service
> (no error)
> but it still does not seem to be enabled:
> ● mlocate-updatedb.service - Update a database for mlocate
>Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/mlocate-updatedb.service; stat
On 3 December 2016 at 12:54, Patrick Dupre wrote:
> Hello,
>
> using anacrontab weekly:
> This is what I have in my anacrontab file:
> 7 15 cron.weekly nice run-parts /etc/cron.weekly
>
> It seems that it run will be run 7 days after the date in
> /var/spool/anacron/cron.wee
On 7 December 2016 at 10:18, Tom Horsley wrote:
> When I remove it, dnf doesn't try to remove
> any other packages, so apparently nothing
> depends on it.
>
> Why on earth does it want to install it then?
My guess is that dnf itself is wanting to install it:
$ rpm -q --whatrecommends bash-comple
On 7 December 2016 at 11:39, Andras Simon wrote:
> Are you sure about this? It seems to work here with
> bash-completion-2.1-8.20150513git1950590.fc23.noarch
Working here with bash-completion-2.4-1.fc24.noarch too, with and
without paths before the package.
--
Andy
The only person to have all
On 27 December 2016 at 22:49, JD wrote:
> Reading lines from 2 files in such a way that each iteration
> lets me read the next line from each file so that the items
> read from each file are in sync as far as line number is concerned.
> Is this "doable"?
Maybe a little out of the box, but far sim
AdBlock Plus is available as an RPM, which I assume would install for every
user and require root to remove the package. You can check with the
command:
rpm -q mozilla-adblockplus
If it's installed, then removing the RPM and restarting Firefox should
remove the extension.
On 2 November 2013 19
ls,
but for all others the latter is probably a simpler choice.
Andy
On 3 November 2013 18:46, Beartooth wrote:
> On Sat, 02 Nov 2013 19:52:28 +0000, Andy Blanchard wrote:
>
> > AdBlock Plus is available as an RPM, which I assume would install for
> > every user and require roo
First step is to check whether you actually have multiple versions of the
same package installed, or just that RPM/Yum think so, ie. does the command:
rpm -q glibc
report one or more packages?
If the former, the you can probably fix the problem by a clean and reset of
both the RPM and Yum pac
On 3 March 2012 16:55, Geoffrey Leach wrote:
> Fedora (not just 16) leaves junk in /tmp. It's also using some of that
> junk, for example keyring-PRgjGV/.
>
Another instance of a Linux regression, IMHO. Used to be anything in /tmp
was supposedly safe to be erased on boot, and often was. Then a
PackageKit isn't one of my favourite parts of Fedora, but a lot of the
problems people are having and citing here are not actually to do with
PackageKit but are in fact the fault of Apper. If you don't mind doing
manual updates with yum, then uninstalling Apper might make your life a lot
easier.
On 27 March 2012 19:54, Mark Haney wrote:
>
> I got it. For some insane reason PK runs in the background a lot (all the
> time?) if you have it set to check for updates daily. Don't know about
> y'all, but that seems a bit heavy handed.
Sounds like you've hit the same bug myself and several o
On 14 April 2012 19:26, Reindl Harald wrote:
>
> on the other hand i am missing understanding that there
> is no root-command to kill such processes without
> "their help"
>
> the kernel should be able to kill anything
> sounds like a missing interface for me
>
In theory, yes, but the problem wo
On 14 April 2012 20:06, Joe Zeff wrote:
> I'd think that there'd have to be a special command, requiring root, to do
> it for exactly that reason. There's no way you can safely automate that
> decision, and it's probably best if the average user doesn't have direct
> access to it; if nothing els
On 14 April 2012 20:25, Michael Hennebry wrote:
>
> Under what circumstance would killing a waiting process
> be worse than a process that should have waited,
> but terminated instead?
>
>
Waiting for a timeout implies a reasonably sane state of affairs regarding
any data in transit, and if the wo
On 14 April 2012 20:37, jdow wrote:
> I was about to comment a little more acerbicly that he's obviously a
> youngster.
> Killing power used to be the only way to shut down a locked up computer
> with
> ANY then available OS on it. I remember those bad old days too well.
>
> {^_-}
Shudder. I
On 27 April 2012 19:57, Bill Davidsen wrote:
> If you say so... my kernel is 3.3.1-5 and doing a software update assures
> me that "All software is up to date" so I have no idea where you get new
> kernels, unless you are running from testing or rawhide. In any case, a
> quick look at the subjec
On 27 April 2012 22:18, jdow wrote:
> Now that you've had your rant, he is talking an embedded system. Remember
> that when you contemplate the following. Suppose for a moment that this
> is a theatrical lighting console application. (I know of at least one that
> runs Linux underneath.) It won'
On 28 April 2012 22:38, Peter Gueckel wrote:
> I read about a shell variable called HISTIGNORE that is supposed to
> prevent duplicate
> commands from occurring in .bash_history.
>
> I put the following line into ~/.bash_profile:
>
> export HISTIGNORE="&"
>
> It's not working. I still have duplic
On 29 April 2012 00:44, Peter Gueckel wrote:
> It looked promising, but it doesn't work. I logged out and back in twice,
> then even
> completely turned off the computer and back on again, but when I examine
> the
> .bash_history file, it is riddled with duplicate commands.
It works, but not re
On Wed, 7 Nov 2018 at 10:40, Scott van Looy via users
wrote:
> Since the upgrade to F29 my HTTPD has been shutting down around 3am every
> night. I’d like to try and investigate why, but the only thing in the log is:
> [mpm_event:notice] [pid 1096508:tid 140027704744192] AH00492: caught
> SIGWIN
Just upgraded a box to 29, and I've spotted the following in the httpd
section of my Logwatch email:
Unescaped left brace in regex is deprecated here (and will be fatal
in Perl 5.32), passed through in regex; marked by <-- HERE in m/\G%({
<-- HERE .*?})?./ at /usr/share/logwatch/scripts/services/
Of that bunch, autodld (downloading RPMs) and rkhunter (scanning the
filesystem, taking checksums, and looking for changes) are both
passive, certwatch probably shouldn't be updating certificates every
24 hours (but could do, so worth checking!), and logwatch just parses
the existing logfiles - it
On Thu, 27 Dec 2018 at 18:22, Antonio M wrote:
>
> during an upgrade of one of my systems I get:
>
> Errore:
> Problema 1: package AdobeReader_ita-8.1.7-1.i486 requires /bin/basename, but
> none of the providers can be installed
> - coreutils-8.29-7.fc28.i686 does not belong to a distupgrade r
On Fri, 15 Feb 2019 at 08:49, Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming
wrote:
> How about a budget of USD$100 per year? I am increasing my budget from
> USD$50 per year.
I doubt you're going to find a reputable and reliable provider that
will do 50TB for less than $150 per *month*. Might be worth checkout
On Fri, 15 Feb 2019 at 09:04, Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming
wrote:
> Sigh...
>
> I am sorely disappointed.
You shouldn't be. An enterpise level RAID-able 8TB HDD costs perhaps
$200 with large volume discount, so allowing for some redundancy and
hardware failures your chosen provider will need
Sounds like either a corrupted yum or rpm database. I'd start by
flushing the former and rebuilding the latter:
sudo yum clean all
sudo rpm --rebuilddb
On 18 January 2015 at 23:16, William Biggs wrote:
> I running 21 with gnome install when I try to install any software from
> the software ce
Just upgraded a box at home to new hardware with embedded Intel
graphics (i5 Haswell), did a clean install of Fedora 21, and while
poking around trying to fix a few issues while rebuilding my config
spotted something I've not noticed before. With KDE running "lsof"
lists over a thousand entries li
On 31 January 2015 at 23:53, Tom Horsley wrote:
>
> No ideas, but I see bazillions of them as well, not
> using KDE, but am running intel graphics.
Thanks for the pointer, Tom. I was KDE with Nvidia graphics before,
so was already looking suspiciously at the Intel driver (which is why
I mentione
ble it, use the command:
sudo setenforce 1
On 9 April 2015 at 20:54, Peter Ulrich Kruppa wrote:
>
>
> Am 09.04.2015 um 20:52 schrieb Andy Blanchard:
>>
>> Hi Peter,
>>
>> 0.0.0.0 is a "wildcard"; Postfix is definitely running and listening
>> for
SMTP from external IP addresses (e.g. anything other than 127.0.0.1)
is blocked by default by the Fedora firewall and I've not seen any
mention of checking that in the thread. I'm assuming you are using
the default firewall, FirewallD, rather than iptables?
If so:
"sudo firewall-cmd --get-servic
Hi Peter,
At least there's some progress. I think the advice to check the
Postfix config should be your next step - as mentioned earlier by
Robert Nichols, Look for "inet_interfaces =" in /etc/postfix/main.cf.
FirewallD and iptables are mutually exclusive in Fedora, with the
default being Firewa
Hi Peter,
0.0.0.0 is a "wildcard"; Postfix is definitely running and listening
for incoming connections on port 25 on any IP address on your server.
Do you have access to another PC or something on your internal network
that you can try connecting from? At least that way you could
determine whet
Are you connecting the serial device directly to a USB port on the
motherboard, or going via a hub? I believe the connection needs to be
direct (on any OS) for the driver to work, so if you are connecting to
a USB port on your keyboard, monitor, or whatever it's probably not
going to work.
Andy
The most effective thing I've found for preventing SSH attacks is
simply to listen on a different port. Yes, it's security by obscurity
so you should also deploy other counter measures, but if you choose
your non-standard port wisely you can avoid most, if not all, casual
attacks. Some tips:
Avo
Search engines are your friend. From the release notes:
Added a no-more-sessi...@openssh.com global request extension that is
sent from ssh(1) to sshd(8) when the client knows that it will never
request another session (i.e. when session multiplexing is disabled).
This allows a server to disallow
IIRC, it wasn't uncommon for Red Hat to re-issue ISOs several months after
the initial release to include all of the patches to date, so perhaps both
sets of hashes are correct, but one is for the original and one is for the
re-spin? This was when many Linux users were reliant on modems, LUGs and
Hi,
Just upgraded a box from F15 to F16 and my previously working VSFTPd config
appears to have broken.
If I enable anonymous logins, they work, but when a user tries to login
there is a pause after the password is entered, then:
> 530 Login incorrect.
> Login failed.
I've tried playing around
Update: This is now fixed. The problem was that "/bin/bash" was not
included in the file "/etc/shells".
Bug 754056 has been opened against the setup RPM, which provides
"/etc/shells", to correct this in the next release of the setup package.
--
Andy
The only person to have all his work done b
$ rpm -q --whatrequires libass
no package requires libass
Hmm... Looks like an RPM dependency configuration issue there. Let's try
the hammer:
$ rpm --erase libass --test
error: Failed dependencies:
libass.so.4()(64bit) is needed by (installed)
gstreamer-plugins-bad-free-0.10.22-2.fc16
On 15 December 2011 11:03, tom wrote:
> well, i didnt specify any size limitations during installation.
> so how do i change that now?
> thx
>
>
Don't use LVM myself, but see the LVM HOWTO for some info:
http://tldp.org/HOWTO/LVM-HOWTO/
You'll want to review section 11.10 to shrink the systemro
On 21 December 2011 07:56, Mike Chambers wrote:
>
> Also check out /etc/dovecot/conf.d as there are bunches of scripts in
> there that can be changed as well. You don't copy them or add their
> contents to anything. Just edit the file, save it and restart dovecot.
>
This is most likely it. Th
Kernel bug it seems:
https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=43282
There's a couple of patches available from the link, but I'm guessing a
"proper" fix in the form of an updated RPM will be along PDQ given the
severity of the bug.
--
Andy
*The only person to have all his work done by Frida
On 30 June 2012 20:35, JD wrote:
> But that is strange!!
> As I reported, it is branded as fc16 from @updates.
>
> I had to delete these:
>
> # rpm -e subscription-manager-**firstboot-1.0.3-1.fc16.i686
> subscription-manager-gui-1.0.**3-1.fc16.i686
> subscription-manager-**migration-1.0.3-1.fc16
On 30 June 2012 22:38, JD wrote:
> Does it exist?
> What about kernel add-on packages
> that would insert the pseudo-driver shim
> and the apps to use it?
>
>
If you mean, for instance, can I put an ISO image on my HD and mount it,
then it's built in to the Kernel:
mount -t iso9660 -o loop,ro
On 30 June 2012 22:49, JD wrote:
> I used k3b to copy the image of an audio cd.
> It produced files like
> Track01.wav
>
> Track16.wav
>
These are the audio tracks in .WAV format, which any media player should be
able to play. Alternatively you could transcode them into FLAC (lossless
comp
On 1 July 2012 00:08, JD wrote:
> On 06/30/2012 03:58 PM, Andy Blanchard wrote:
> Thanx Andy.
> I do know what wav files are.
> I was hoping to delete them and use just the one
> file which krb says is the image. I was under the
> impression it would produce a .img file. But I
On 16 July 2012 17:28, Alchemist wrote:
> COMPROMISING ELECTROMAGNETIC EMANATIONS OF WIRED AND WIRELESS KEYBOARDS
>
>
OLD news...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TEMPEST
Also, what's the Fedora angle?
--
Andy
*The only person to have all his work done by Friday was Robinson Crusoe*
--
users ma
I also call that they are full of it on grounds that they continue to host
Debian and CentOS. The question is whether "it" is just paranoia or
something else...
Argentina (presumably your local mirror is hosted in the same geographic
locale as their ccTLD) is not currently listed in the Export Ad
>
> Result: he apologized and told me there would be a local mirror during
> the week. :)
> I also suggested them they could mirror it from Chilean or Brazilian
> existing mirrors so there would be no connection to US based
> servers...
>
Bravo! Have a Fedora Community Gold Star award!
OK, I ma
On 8 September 2012 18:38, Heinz Diehl wrote:
>
> Upgrading F16 to F17 from DVD is one f*cking mess. Seriously.
> Backup your data and do a fresh install. It will save you a lot of
> time and hairpull.
>
Better yet, when you do the re-install set up some disk partitions so you
can segregate the
On 7 September 2012 23:28, JD wrote:
> I wonder about /etc, because that's where so much conf is kept.
> But it is small enough to simply back it up to an external partition.
> The pain is in remembering all the apps for which conf files were
> modified. To address that, inserting a comment like
I'm in a similar boat to Neal. I want to look into migrating from
IPTables to FirewallD before I'm forced too, but the documentation out
there seems to be woefully inadequate so far. As far as I can tell
the functionality isn't much better for my needs, but that might just
be a symptom of the doc
On 19 February 2013 08:44, valent.turko...@gmail.com
wrote:
>
> I feel really stupid because I don't seam to be able to operate new firewalld
> on Fedora 18. I'm Fedora user since FC6 but this is beyond me...
>
First thing to check - do you have the FirewallD GUI configuration
tool installed and
On 20 February 2017 at 09:18, T_POL wrote:
>
> not sure about that but I think the "cd" command executes indeed
> but it's valid only for the scripts' environment and not for the
> shell you started the script from.
*ding* *ding* *ding* We have a winner!
Shells execute in their own instance of
On 18 May 2017 at 23:25, William wrote:
> Fedora seems to have a huge number of commands. Does Fedora have a command
> to report the condition of a full-sized tower motherboard battery? If yes,
> what is that command?
I don't think there's any way to check on the status of a motherboard
battery
On 27 May 2017 at 22:27, bruce wrote:
> Hi.
>
> I've got a file.. with a bunch of lines looking like:
>
> $bookVariable['asu']['Fall-2016']='link';
> $bookVariable['lehmancuny']['Fall-2016']='1';
> $bookVariable['uvu']['Fall-2016']='1';
> $bookVariable['wmich']['Summer II 2017']='1';
> $
On 6 June 2017 at 20:53, Samuel Sieb wrote:
>> Then that means they prefer squirrelmail, right? So you might
>> as well keep using it or they'll hate the replacement just
>> as irrationally :-).
>
>
> I would second this. Someone that prefers webmail *on a phone* over a
> native app is likely to
On 11 July 2017 at 21:08, Joe Zeff wrote:
> On 07/11/2017 12:55 PM, Paul Smith wrote:
>>
>> Thanks, Tom. The problem appears to be caused by the file manager, as
>> unmounting via terminal is immediate. How can it be fixed?
>
>
> Filing a bug against thunar might be your best bet.
+1 on the bug r
On 21 September 2017 at 08:47, Bob Goodwin wrote:
>
> This is the first time I've observed this happening, delta rpm did the
> opposite of what I expected, dunno if I have a problem in this system or if
> it is in the data received? I thought it interesting if nothing else ...
Noticed that too.
On 3 November 2017 at 11:43, Cristian Sava wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> After updating F26:
> rsyslog
> systemd
> systemd-libs
> systemd-pam
> systemd-udev
>
> syslog does not start!
I spotted this problem too. Apparently the latest version of rsyslog
(v8.30.0-3.fc26) is dependant on the latest ver
On 6 January 2018 at 18:27, Beartooth wrote:
> Here's the accursed address it foists on me:
>
> http://search.hmyquickconverter.com/?uc=20171228&ad=appfocus1&source=d-
> lp0-
> bb8&uid=911a5330-5a79-48c7-9194-5d37fac4d6cd&i_id=converter_100.3&page=newtab&
That looks really sketchy. A qui
On 6 January 2018 at 21:39, Beartooth wrote:
> Hmmm... I get
>
> [btth@localhost ~]$ rpm -qa |grep -i iridium
> iridium-browser-62.0-1.fc27.x86_64
> [btth@localhost ~]$ which iridium
> /usr/bin/which: no iridium in (/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/local/
> sbin:/usr/sbin:/home/btth/.loca
On Sat, 4 Jan 2020 at 14:47, Robert P. J. Day wrote:
> yes, i twigged to that shortly after asking ... i was just thrown
> that that seems to be the only /usr/bin executable with that property,
> which confused me.
I've got a different colour scheme that includes separate colour
combinations fo
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