Nicolas George [2017-02-06 19:41:45+01] wrote:
> L'octidi 18 pluviôse, an CCXXV, Teemu Likonen a écrit :
>> I'm not expert in this area but from what I have read I'm quite sure
>> that 3DES is still very much safe. There are no known practical attack
>> methods and it's still used for serious encr
On 03/02/17 04:52 PM, RLewis wrote:
Gary Dale wrote:
On 02/02/17 08:03 AM, RLewis wrote:
Hi Gary --
Gary Dale wrote:
On 28/01/17 09:08 AM, RLewis wrote:
Hello Ken and Gary --
ken wrote:
On 01/24/2017 02:38 PM, Gary Dale wrote:
I'm running stretch/AMD64 and I'm having extreme problems
On Mon, Feb 06, 2017 at 01:19:00PM +, Patrick Schleizer wrote:
> The unattended-upgrades was not installed on my Debian jessie system.
> After upgrading to Debian stretch, the package unattended-upgrades got
> installed. 'reverse-depends unattended-upgrades' [1] did not make me any
> wiser. The
I'm the guy who was gobsmacked by the amount of data we (my son and I) are
sucking down from our ISP (Earthlink via DSL).
I've found something else that I don't understand. I'm going to keep this
general at first--if anybody needs specifics, I'll try to provide them.
I've now collected data
I think he just meant 'In case you didn't want to read my previous
paragraph, a reboot fixed it.'
On Sun, 2017-02-05 at 10:26 -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Sunday, February 05, 2017 09:55:14 AM Tony Baldwin wrote:
> > TL;DR: A reboot fixed me...I almost feel I've been jettisoned into
> >
On Tuesday 07 February 2017 00:13:42 rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> On Monday, February 06, 2017 06:24:40 PM Dan Purgert wrote:
> > It's a bit hard to figure out what you're actually seeing happen though,
> > since your post somehow repeated itself several times, in a pretty big
> > mess (there wasn't
On Monday, February 06, 2017 06:24:40 PM Dan Purgert wrote:
> Could be MTU differences, and the router needing to do something (e.g.
> 1500 on the LAN side, and 1452 on the WAN, which is usually typical for
> DSL / PPPoE connections).
BTW, thanks Dan for your response--I hope the resent email is a
On Monday, February 06, 2017 06:24:40 PM Dan Purgert wrote:
> It's a bit hard to figure out what you're actually seeing happen though,
> since your post somehow repeated itself several times, in a pretty big
> mess (there wasn't a given start / end of one post, but rather several
> copies interleav
On Monday 06 February 2017 18:24:38 Mart van de Wege wrote:
> Lisi Reisz writes:
> > On Monday 06 February 2017 13:54:11 Brian wrote:
> >> On Mon 06 Feb 2017 at 13:19:00 +, Patrick Schleizer wrote:
> >> > The unattended-upgrades was not installed on my Debian jessie system.
> >> > After upgrad
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
>
>* Why are there twice as many bytes measured coming in (from
>Earthlink) measured on the WAN VC side of the router as measured on
>the Ethernet / LAN side of the router (or, I guess the analagous
>question is why are the packets twice as big? (I mean, i
On Mon, Feb 06, 2017 at 07:24:38PM +0100, Mart van de Wege wrote:
>
> I agree with the developers' sentiment that automatic upgrades are a
> good thing, but I really think Debian could have cooked up a better
> script than !@#$% 'unattended-upgrades'.
>
Standard open source software response app
On 02/06/17 13:15, Marc Shapiro wrote:
I am pasting the result of smartctl -x /dev/sda below as I have no real
clue what to do with the information, but I have a few questions first.
1) I have purchased a new, very similar, Seagate 1TB drive and I plan to
install it and copy the whole system to
I'm the guy who was gobsmacked by the amount of data we (my son and I) are
sucking down from our ISP (Earthlink via DSL).
I've found something else that I don't understand. I'm going to keep this
general at first--if anybody needs specifics, I'll try to provide them.
I've now collected data fo
Gene Heskett composed on 2017-02-06 12:28 (UTC-0500):
That cold spare will eventually develop stiction, seizing the parked haed
to the surface of the disk solidly enough that the disk motor cannot
break it loose to spin the disk up. Such is best treated by hooking up
the cables, but holding the
On 02/06/17 09:28, Gene Heskett wrote:
That cold spare will eventually develop stiction, seizing the parked haed
to the surface of the disk solidly enough that the disk motor cannot
break it loose to spin the disk up. Such is best treated by hooking up
the cables, but holding the drive in your h
On 02/06/17 07:22, Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
David Christensen writes:
I've found (and heard) that the worst thing I can do to a HDD is put
it on the shelf and let it rot. I've had more than a few that failed
shortly after being put into a computer.
I hadn't heard this... I've got a drive I've be
On 02/03/2017 11:13 PM, David Christensen wrote:
On 02/03/17 13:47, Marc Shapiro wrote:
On 02/02/2017 10:23 PM, David Christensen wrote:
Have you downloaded and run the manufacturer diagnostic utilities for
all your drives? What do they say?
I have now downloaded and run Seagate's tools and
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On Mon, Feb 06, 2017 at 05:43:32PM +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> L'octidi 18 pluviôse, an CCXXV, Greg Wooledge a écrit :
> > I wrote this many years ago. It's primitive, but may suit:
> >
> > http://wooledge.org/~greg/crypt/
>
> Indeed. Unfortunate
to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> Thanks, very informative (esp. the ycombinator link).
which reminds me of those two cases
RHEL https://lwn.net/Articles/432012/
GRSec https://lwn.net/Articles/655721/
On Monday, February 06, 2017 10:49:53 AM Dan Ritter wrote:
> If you read carefully, you'll discover that LibertyBSD's
> complaints have not been addressed: Ubiquiti will ship you
> some source code, but not what's needed to build a booting
> system of your own.
Thanks, it was a pain to try to read
L'octidi 18 pluviôse, an CCXXV, Teemu Likonen a écrit :
> I'm not expert in this area but from what I have read I'm quite sure
> that 3DES is still very much safe. There are no known practical attack
> methods and it's still used for serious encryption.
I think you are mistaken.
As a block cipher
Lisi Reisz writes:
> On Monday 06 February 2017 13:54:11 Brian wrote:
>> On Mon 06 Feb 2017 at 13:19:00 +, Patrick Schleizer wrote:
>> > The unattended-upgrades was not installed on my Debian jessie system.
>> > After upgrading to Debian stretch, the package unattended-upgrades got
>> > insta
On 05/02/2017 23:18, deloptes wrote:
> [...]
> now check for tty
>
> cat /etc/default/console-setup
> # CONFIGURATION FILE FOR SETUPCON
>
> # Consult the console-setup(5) manual page.
>
> ACTIVE_CONSOLES="/dev/tty[1-6]"
>
> CHARMAP="UTF-8"
>
> CODESET="guess"
> FONTFACE="Fixed"
> FONTSIZE="8x16"
>
On 06/02/2017 07:53, Teemu Likonen wrote:
> Alessandro T. [2017-02-05 22:10:55+01] wrote:
>
>> Isn't localization set by locale?
> I have not followed this thread closely but will just point that
> nowadays it's probably good idea to set locales with "localectl". That
> command will write the chang
On Mon, 6 Feb 2017 17:18:25 +
Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Monday 06 February 2017 16:55:25 Joe wrote:
> > On Mon, 6 Feb 2017 16:30:36 +
> >
> > Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > > On Monday 06 February 2017 13:54:11 Brian wrote:
> > > > On Mon 06 Feb 2017 at 13:19:00 +, Patrick Schleizer wrote:
Nicolas George [2017-02-06 17:43:32+01] wrote:
> L'octidi 18 pluviôse, an CCXXV, Greg Wooledge a écrit :
>> I wrote this many years ago. It's primitive, but may suit:
>>
>> http://wooledge.org/~greg/crypt/
>
> Indeed. Unfortunately, it suffers from a limitation similar to the one
> of htpasswd:
On Monday 06 February 2017 10:22:54 Joe Pfeiffer wrote:
> David Christensen writes:
> > On 02/04/17 07:18, Ric Moore wrote:
> >> I'm looking at a Seagate 750 gig drive that went south on me with a
> >> pile of errors. Good luck getting Seagate to give a good gosh darn.
> >> In the past I have had
Hello Jiri,
I had the same problem and removing sssd solved the issue. Thank you
for the solution.
Do you know if there is already a bug report so the developers are
aware of the problem?
Greetings
Leo
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On Monday 06 February 2017 16:55:25 Joe wrote:
> On Mon, 6 Feb 2017 16:30:36 +
>
> Lisi Reisz wrote:
> > On Monday 06 February 2017 13:54:11 Brian wrote:
> > > On Mon 06 Feb 2017 at 13:19:00 +, Patrick Schleizer wrote:
> > > > The unattended-upgrades was not installed on my Debian jessie
>
On Mon, 6 Feb 2017 16:30:36 +
Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Monday 06 February 2017 13:54:11 Brian wrote:
> > On Mon 06 Feb 2017 at 13:19:00 +, Patrick Schleizer wrote:
> > > The unattended-upgrades was not installed on my Debian jessie
> > > system. After upgrading to Debian stretch, the pack
L'octidi 18 pluviôse, an CCXXV, Greg Wooledge a écrit :
> I wrote this many years ago. It's primitive, but may suit:
>
> http://wooledge.org/~greg/crypt/
Indeed. Unfortunately, it suffers from a limitation similar to the one
of htpasswd: it only supports 3DES, the oldest and weakest hashing
algo
On Mon, Feb 06, 2017 at 05:28:39PM +0100, Nicolas George wrote:
> Does anybody know a packaged program that provides a simple but good
> interface to the libc's crypt() function?
I wrote this many years ago. It's primitive, but may suit:
http://wooledge.org/~greg/crypt/
> [...] a packaged progr
On Monday 06 February 2017 13:54:11 Brian wrote:
> On Mon 06 Feb 2017 at 13:19:00 +, Patrick Schleizer wrote:
> > The unattended-upgrades was not installed on my Debian jessie system.
> > After upgrading to Debian stretch, the package unattended-upgrades got
> > installed. 'reverse-depends unat
Hi.
Does anybody know a packaged program that provides a simple but good
interface to the libc's crypt() function?
I mean something that reads "2JTnJhXPzISn" on stdin and writes
"$6$BqdmYkw0fsG5y8Av$LOTAkcnFu.LJlaZH./16RgX.IqSPoxuhALCqgih9tMqspMLMVzJ9WZqxUJr/.ium/8pi3iWh56G..V1XcRvNo."
on stdout,
David Christensen writes:
> On 02/04/17 07:18, Ric Moore wrote:
>> I'm looking at a Seagate 750 gig drive that went south on me with a pile
>> of errors. Good luck getting Seagate to give a good gosh darn. In the
>> past I have had mixed results replacing the drive motherboard. I saved
>> two out
On Sun, Feb 05, 2017 at 11:54:35AM -0500, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> I am the OP, I want to thank everyone for their comments.
>
> I think I've decided to buy an inexpensive router instead of a switch, and,
> in
> fact, I think I'll go with a Ubiquiti ER-X 256MB Storage 5 Gigabit RJ45
> ports.
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Oops, I really got those names confused:
* The person that mentioned that a router would be able to measure
bandwidth / traffic to each device on my LAN was Dan Ritter.
* The Dan Weber's name is really Bob Weber.
Apologies to you both, I really should have gone back and re-read the origin
On Mon 06 Feb 2017 at 13:19:00 +, Patrick Schleizer wrote:
> The unattended-upgrades was not installed on my Debian jessie system.
> After upgrading to Debian stretch, the package unattended-upgrades got
> installed. 'reverse-depends unattended-upgrades' [1] did not make me any
> wiser. There
The unattended-upgrades was not installed on my Debian jessie system.
After upgrading to Debian stretch, the package unattended-upgrades got
installed. 'reverse-depends unattended-upgrades' [1] did not make me any
wiser. There must be a gap of my apt knowledge. Can anyone shed light on
this please?
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On Mon, Feb 06, 2017 at 09:45:36AM +0100, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> Hi Andy,
>
> On 02/02/17 17:43, Andy Smith wrote:
> > Hi Harald,
> >
> > On Thu, Feb 02, 2017 at 02:50:09PM +0100, Harald Dunkel wrote:
> >>
> >> Exactly. The central place in my case i
Hi Andy,
On 02/02/17 17:43, Andy Smith wrote:
> Hi Harald,
>
> On Thu, Feb 02, 2017 at 02:50:09PM +0100, Harald Dunkel wrote:
>>
>> Exactly. The central place in my case is a debian source package. It
>> provides binary meta-packages referencing other packages and some
>> /etc/service.d/local.con
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