On 4 Jan 2002, Karl M. Hegbloom wrote:
I'm using LVM and XFS filesystems on my computer at home. This
morning, after I pushed g from the Gnus *Group* buffer (to get new
mail), it stopped part way through with an error message. Gnus
prompted me in the XEmacs minibuffer saying no space
[...]
I decided to use ext3 file systems in the LVM partitions and I wonder
if there is something like xfs_growfs for ext[23]. Not that I would
I made som very basic test on this some some weeks ago, and I extended
an ext3(2?) fs sucessfully (i.e. the data was intact after the
expansion).
On 06-Jan-02, 01:51 (CST), Egon Willighagen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Now, I am facing the following problem (after making more space):
- how can i determine which packages were updated yesterday?
- how can i (semi)-automatically reinstall these packages?
I see that it turned out that the
Andreas == Andreas Tille Tille writes:
Andreas On 4 Jan 2002, Karl M. Hegbloom wrote:
I'm using LVM and XFS filesystems on my computer at home. This
morning, after I pushed g from the Gnus *Group* buffer (to get new
mail), it stopped part way through with an error message.
Adrian == Adrian Bunk [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Adrian On Sun, 6 Jan 2002, Egon Willighagen wrote:
...
That makes me wonder: is it possible that i am imagening things, and
that the
upgrade went well, even though my HD was full? Did it actually install
files
then, or did
Tille, Andreas [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I decided to use ext3 file systems in the LVM partitions and I wonder
if there is something like xfs_growfs for ext[23]. Not that I would
apt-get install ext2resize
--
Debian GNU/Linux 2.2 is out! ( http://www.debian.org/ )
Email: Herbert Xu ~{PmVHI~}
On Tue, Jan 08, 2002 at 09:59:45AM -0800, Karl M. Hegbloom wrote:
I have not tried yet, but am planning to experiment and see if it is
possible to *shrink* an XFS filesystem. In the case where I have one
LV that's larger than it needed to be, I'd like to be able to shrink
the filesystem
On Sunday 6 January 2002 12:09, Adrian Bunk wrote:
On Sun, 6 Jan 2002, Egon Willighagen wrote:
...
That makes me wonder: is it possible that i am imagening things, and that
the upgrade went well, even though my HD was full? Did it actually
install files then, or did it not overwrite,
On Sunday 6 January 2002 08:51, Egon Willighagen wrote:
On Saturday 5 January 2002 00:24, Karl M. Hegbloom wrote:
Wow, now that's really cool. What I'm wondering is, can apt-get,
dpkg, and friends recover this easily from a device overflow? Was
that thought of during their design and
On Saturday 5 January 2002 00:24, Karl M. Hegbloom wrote:
Wow, now that's really cool. What I'm wondering is, can apt-get,
dpkg, and friends recover this easily from a device overflow? Was
that thought of during their design and implementation? If it needs
a little more space in /var or
On Sun, 6 Jan 2002, Egon Willighagen wrote:
...
That makes me wonder: is it possible that i am imagening things, and that the
upgrade went well, even though my HD was full? Did it actually install files
then, or did it not overwrite, because of the HD being full, and my files are
basically
Egon Willighagen wrote:
That makes me wonder: is it possible that i am imagening things, and that the
upgrade went well, even though my HD was full? Did it actually install files
then, or did it not overwrite, because of the HD being full, and my files are
basically not upgraded, but just
Egon Willighagen [EMAIL PROTECTED] sbagliĆ²:
Actually, i have just read a debian-kde message about the PNG
problem...
That seems to be a KDE specific problem.
Yes, it is due to the problem about libpng.
Apt is completely innocent. :-)
--
Au revoir.
Lele...
I'm using LVM and XFS filesystems on my computer at home. This
morning, after I pushed g from the Gnus *Group* buffer (to get new
mail), it stopped part way through with an error message. Gnus
prompted me in the XEmacs minibuffer saying no space left on device:
Continue (yes, no)?. My 10g
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