Le 12/04/2019 à 22:25, Thomas D Dial a écrit :
I let the installer partition the USB key that was the install target
and picked LVM, but specified distinct /, /usr/, /var, /home, and swap
Why did you create a distinct volume for /usr ?
partitions and left some empty space within the LVM volu
Le 12/04/2019 à 22:46, Thomas D Dial a écrit :
In terms of management, it is a major advance over physical partitioning
for the file systems and, depending on particular file system
characteristics, allows you to get out of space problems without down
time in many cases (online resizing is avail
On 2019-04-10, Patrick Gallagher wrote:
> --9c7f3b05862d2a11
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
>
> Hi Suppot,
This is not support. This is a mailing list for users of debian, just like you.
>
> I installed Debian 9.8.0 on my laptop using an iso DVD image and Virtualbox
> 6.0
On 4/11/19 5:02 AM, Tom Browder wrote:
I'm preparing to install Win 10 and Deb 9 on a new ZaReason laptop
which has no installed OS on it.
It comes with one 120 Gb SSD as its primary drive and has an empty
bay where I will install a Samsung evo 860 1 Tb SSD.
I would like to use a live image on
On Fri, Apr 12 2019, John Hasler wrote:
> Peter writes:
>> If you're using the kitchen sink, why not stay completely in emacs?
>
> Right. Use Gnus.
Me too, Gnus is it!!!
Sincerely, Byung-Hee.
--
^고맙습니다 _地平天成_ 감사합니다_^))//
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019, 18:07 Dan Ritter wrote:
> Default User wrote:
> > On Fri, Apr 12, 2019, 12:43 Dan Ritter wrote:
>
> > And what about Btrfs?
>
> I don't currently recommend it in any situation where ZFS is an
> option. That comes from 2 years of working with btrfs where
> doing normal maint
Peter writes:
> If you're using the kitchen sink, why not stay completely in emacs?
Right. Use Gnus.
--
John Hasler
jhas...@newsguy.com
Elmwood, WI USA
Pétùr writes:
> I use neomutt with emacs.
If you're using the kitchen sink, why not stay completely in emacs?
https://emacs.stackexchange.com/q/12927
(Disclaimer: I wrote one of the answers to that meta question)
I used mutt for decades, I still think it's a fine tool, but I found
more happines
Hi,
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 12:48:13 +0100
Paul Sutton wrote:
> Hi
>
>
> I would like to take a set of video files (I have mp4 and am aware they
> need transcoding) and put these on a dvd along with a menu etc, so they
> can be played from VLC or as a normal dvd.
>
> I did this years ago, it app
On 2019-04-12 16:11, Celejar wrote:
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 07:54:57 -0400
Dan Ritter wrote:
mick crane wrote:
> I have wondered what they do to stop people broadcasting their own top level
> domain.
Nothing. They don't have to.
If you want a top level domain and you control your own
nameservers
Default User wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 12, 2019, 12:43 Dan Ritter wrote:
> And what about Btrfs?
I don't currently recommend it in any situation where ZFS is an
option. That comes from 2 years of working with btrfs where
doing normal maintenance ended up destroying data more than
once. It may be be
David Wright wrote:
> Your figures are virtually meaningless without any sort of breakdown
> even into what's system and what's your documents.
>
yeah yeah ... use your imagination. Sqldeveloper, couple of virtual
machines, some installation packages each of which is 1-2GB and so one
Software fo
Tom Browder wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 11:43 AM Dan Ritter wrote:
> ...
> > If you want to experiment, having root on ext4 and /home on ZFS
> > is pretty easy to accomplish.
>
> Dan, I'm not trying to be obtuse, but when you say "experiment," do
> you mean taking it for a ride like a new c
On Fri, 2019-04-12 at 12:43 -0400, Dan Ritter wrote:
> Tom Browder wrote:
> > I have used ext4 for many years while I have been watching zfs and
> > btrfs being developed. I am now considering using one or both on at
> > least one partion during my upcoming new Debian installation.
> >
> > Can an
On Fri 12 Apr 2019 at 21:42:51 (+0200), deloptes wrote:
> David Wright wrote:
>
> > We have a laptop that was used with windows for just under four
> > years. Main applications are Office for excel/word/powerpoint,
> > Outlook for email, Coreldraw for publication figures. Disk usage
> > is approxi
Tom Browder composed on 2019-04-12 09:50 (UTC-0500):
> I have used ext4 for many years while I have been watching zfs and
> btrfs being developed. I am now considering using one or both on at
> least one partion during my upcoming new Debian installation.
Because of its snapshotting, BTRFS requir
On Fri 12 Apr 2019 at 12:13:09 -0500, Tom Browder wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 11:43 AM Dan Ritter wrote:
> ...
> > If you want to experiment, having root on ext4 and /home on ZFS
> > is pretty easy to accomplish.
>
> Dan, I'm not trying to be obtuse, but when you say "experiment," do
> you
On Fri, 12 Apr 2019 07:54:57 -0400
Dan Ritter wrote:
> mick crane wrote:
> > I have wondered what they do to stop people broadcasting their own top level
> > domain.
>
> Nothing. They don't have to.
>
> If you want a top level domain and you control your own
> nameservers, you've got it.
>
>
On 4/12/19, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 01:56:36AM -0400, Lee wrote:
>
>> so I don't know if case is significant or no
>
> Typically, an object (application, widget within an app, etc.) has
> a lower-case name, where object classes have an upper case name.
>
> The result is t
On Fri, 2019-04-12 at 09:41 -0500, Tom Browder wrote:
> I've been using Linux for over 20 years, and Debian for over 10, but
> I've always used conventonal partitions and /etc/fstab definitions.
>
> Now that I'm getting a virgin, up-to-date laptop, I am considering
> ising LVM but want to get the
On 12.04.2019 23:47, Michael Stone wrote:
> On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 01:13:49PM -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
>> It looks like I am writing something like 20 GB per day
>
> That's basically nothing for a reasonably sized modern SSD.
>
Still the SSD market is having a steady decline in terms of
qu
On Thu, 2019-04-11 at 20:01 -0700, David Christensen wrote:
> On 4/11/19 5:02 AM, Tom Browder wrote:
> > I'm preparing to install Win 10 and Deb 9 on a new ZaReason laptop
> > which
> > has no installed OS on it.
> >
> > It comes with one 120 Gb SSD as its primary drive and has an empty
> > bay
>
Greg Wooledge wrote:
> A lot of people are still using cached knowledge from pre-jessie days.
no you know at least one in the context of fdisk.
I don't know why but I got the impression it does not understand GPT. Just 2
months ago I had to partition 5TB RAID5 disk and fdisk did not work.
Perhap
David Wright wrote:
> We have a laptop that was used with windows for just under four
> years. Main applications are Office for excel/word/powerpoint,
> Outlook for email, Coreldraw for publication figures. Disk usage
> is approximately 90GB, of which the user's own files are 45GB,
> in a partitio
On 12.04.2019 19:41, Tom Browder wrote:
> I've been using Linux for over 20 years, and Debian for over 10, but
> I've always used conventonal partitions and /etc/fstab definitions.
>
> Now that I'm getting a virgin, up-to-date laptop, I am considering
> ising LVM but want to get the option of exper
Kevin DAGNEAUX wrote:
> The bug id 13439 give me an interesting info (about kernel / glibc).
> I'll follow this thread to see if a solution will be added.
>
> I'm running kernel 4.9.144-3.1 (from debian repo)
I always optimize and use a newer version of the kernel, which I build for
the machine
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 01:13:49PM -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
It looks like I am writing something like 20 GB per day
That's basically nothing for a reasonably sized modern SSD.
Le 12/04/2019 à 16:09, Tom Browder a écrit :
M.2 SSD:
120GB M.2 SSD (included)
Samsung SSD 860 EVO
==
V-NAND SSD
SATA 6 Gb/s
size: 1 Tb
my plan is to use the small disk for Win 10 and the other for Debian
If the small M.2 SSD has a NVMe or AHCI interface, it may be faster t
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019, 12:43 Dan Ritter wrote:
> Tom Browder wrote:
> > I have used ext4 for many years while I have been watching zfs and
> > btrfs being developed. I am now considering using one or both on at
> > least one partion during my upcoming new Debian installation.
> >
> > Can anyone re
On Fri 12 Apr 2019 at 18:04:45 (+0200), Pétùr wrote:
> I use neomutt with emacs.
>
> I would like to quickly save and kill a buffer in emacs. This is to
> avoid typing C-x C-s and, then, C-x C-c when sending an email. I want
> one shortcut to save and kill the buffer and be back quickly in mutt to
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 11:43 AM Dan Ritter wrote:
...
> If you want to experiment, having root on ext4 and /home on ZFS
> is pretty easy to accomplish.
Dan, I'm not trying to be obtuse, but when you say "experiment," do
you mean taking it for a ride like a new car where one has to learn
new cont
On Friday, April 12, 2019 08:07:07 AM Curt wrote:
> On 2019-04-12, Andy Smith wrote:
> > Honestly my advice to the OP as suggested what seems like many days
> > ago remains: just take a measure, do a day or two of work, take
> > another measure, check the difference in byte count and extrapolate
>
Tom Browder wrote:
> I have used ext4 for many years while I have been watching zfs and
> btrfs being developed. I am now considering using one or both on at
> least one partion during my upcoming new Debian installation.
>
> Can anyone recommend either one for a normal (non-developer,
> non-hobb
On Fri 12 Apr 2019 at 10:05:58 (+0200), deloptes wrote:
> Felix Miata wrote:
>
> >> No Win10 will not be happy with 120GB - better take 300GB from the large
> >> disk for windows and the rest for data linux, windows or both
> >
> > I limit Win10 system partitions to 48GB, and disable paging.
>
>
I use neomutt with emacs.
I would like to quickly save and kill a buffer in emacs. This is to
avoid typing C-x C-s and, then, C-x C-c when sending an email. I want
one shortcut to save and kill the buffer and be back quickly in mutt to
send the email.
I tried the following inside my .emacs (bind
I have used ext4 for many years while I have been watching zfs and
btrfs being developed. I am now considering using one or both on at
least one partion during my upcoming new Debian installation.
Can anyone recommend either one for a normal (non-developer,
non-hobbyiest) user who does backups and
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
mick crane wrote:
> On 2019-04-12 13:31, Gene Heskett wrote:
>> On Friday 12 April 2019 07:54:57 Dan Ritter wrote:
>>> [...]
>>> This can actually be useful: you can define .crane for use
>>> within your house, and now you have names that nobody else
I've been using Linux for over 20 years, and Debian for over 10, but
I've always used conventonal partitions and /etc/fstab definitions.
Now that I'm getting a virgin, up-to-date laptop, I am considering
ising LVM but want to get the option of expert users: Should I go that
route?
Every thing I r
deloptes composed on 2019-04-12 10:05 (UTC+0200):
> Felix Miata wrote:
>>> No Win10 will not be happy with 120GB - better take 300GB from the large
>>> disk for windows and the rest for data linux, windows or both
>> I limit Win10 system partitions to 48GB, and disable paging.
> You always want
On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 10:01 PM David Christensen
wrote:
> Which model zareason laptop?
> Which make, model, form factor, and interface 120 GB SSD?
> Which form factor and interface Samsung EVO 860 1 TB SSD?
> How much RAM?
> Make and model WiFi interface?
David, here are the specs on the lapto
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 12:48:13PM +0100, Paul Sutton wrote:
> Hi
>
>
> I would like to take a set of video files (I have mp4 and am aware they
> need transcoding) and put these on a dvd along with a menu etc, so they
> can be played from VLC or as a normal dvd.
>
> I did this years ago, it app
Hi folks,
you might remember, I was searching for the reason, that on tty1 -5 the blank
time
is too short.
After I checked all the variable, now I believe, it is a bug in the kernel
itself. As I
tested with two identical configured systems (one is amd64, the other i386) and
confirmed all co
On 12/04/2019 13:27, Curt wrote:
> On 2019-04-12, Paul Sutton wrote:
>> DVD authoring, DVD creation are both valid search terms but there may
>> be better search terms that I will have better luck with.
> Burn, baby, burn?
>
> I stumbled upon this tutorial:
>
> https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-bu
On 2019-04-12 13:31, Gene Heskett wrote:
On Friday 12 April 2019 07:54:57 Dan Ritter wrote:
mick crane wrote:
> I have wondered what they do to stop people broadcasting their own
> top level domain.
Nothing. They don't have to.
If you want a top level domain and you control your own
nameserve
On 2019-04-11, Mark Fletcher wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 07:03:08PM +0200, Michael Lee wrote:
>> Hello, I would like to know what I am supposed to do about this error
>> message. Would appreciate guidance.
>> M Lee
>
>> The repository 'http://ftp.de.debian.org/debian stretch/updates
It seem
DAGNEAUX Kevin
Service informatique
03 29 36 88 85
kevin.dagne...@fiitelcom.fr
Le 12/04/2019 à 12:11, deloptes a écrit :
Kevin DAGNEAUX wrote:
[2019/04/12 10:31:57.105329, 0]
../source3/locking/posix.c:455(decrement_lock_ref_count)
PANIC: assert failed at ../source3/locking/posix.c(455):
loc
On Wednesday, April 10, 2019 10:25:00 AM rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> Oh, I should have mentioned that the switches I use are 10/100 megabit, not
> gigabit.
>
> (I'm not sure, but the switch built into my Edge Router might be Gigabit,
> but that device was closer to $50 (on sale, I'm fairly sure, a
On Friday 12 April 2019 07:54:57 Dan Ritter wrote:
> mick crane wrote:
> > I have wondered what they do to stop people broadcasting their own
> > top level domain.
>
> Nothing. They don't have to.
>
> If you want a top level domain and you control your own
> nameservers, you've got it.
>
> But nob
On 2019-04-12, Paul Sutton wrote:
>
> DVD authoring, DVD creation are both valid search terms but there may
> be better search terms that I will have better luck with.
Burn, baby, burn?
I stumbled upon this tutorial:
https://linuxconfig.org/how-to-burn-dvds-with-devede-and-brasero-on-linux
Bo
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 10:07:04AM +0200, deloptes wrote:
> Pascal Hambourg wrote:
>
> > Why not ? Current versions support GPT.
>
> Thank you my fault - I have missed something
It changed after wheezy.
Wheezy's man page says:
fdisk does not understand GUID partition tables (GPTs) an
On 2019-04-12, Andy Smith wrote:
>
> Honestly my advice to the OP as suggested what seems like many days
> ago remains: just take a measure, do a day or two of work, take
> another measure, check the difference in byte count and extrapolate
> from there. I'd be amazed if you didn't end up with mul
mick crane wrote:
> I have wondered what they do to stop people broadcasting their own top level
> domain.
Nothing. They don't have to.
If you want a top level domain and you control your own
nameservers, you've got it.
But nobody else is likely to query your nameservers about it, so
it won't b
Hi
I would like to take a set of video files (I have mp4 and am aware they
need transcoding) and put these on a dvd along with a menu etc, so they
can be played from VLC or as a normal dvd.
I did this years ago, it appears the application bombono no longer
exists (or it is not in the Debian rep
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA256
mick crane wrote:
> On 2019-04-12 10:57, Dan Purgert wrote:
>> mick crane wrote:
>>> On 2019-04-11 17:16, mick crane wrote:
On 2019-04-11 17:05, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 05:02:46PM +0100, mick crane wrote:
>> I thin
On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 14:34 Felix Miata wrote:
> Tom Browder composed on 2019-04-11 08:42 (UTC-0500):
>
...
> > Does GPT partitioning on Windows 10 allow a user-friendly label along
> with
> > its UUID for a partition?
>
> > If so, is that label visible with Debian system administration progra
On 2019-04-12 10:57, Dan Purgert wrote:
mick crane wrote:
On 2019-04-11 17:16, mick crane wrote:
On 2019-04-11 17:05, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 05:02:46PM +0100, mick crane wrote:
I think that is what dynamic ip address services do, change the
ipaddress
but the service has
Kevin DAGNEAUX wrote:
> [2019/04/12 10:31:57.105329, 0]
> ../source3/locking/posix.c:455(decrement_lock_ref_count)
> PANIC: assert failed at ../source3/locking/posix.c(455):
> lock_ref_count >= 0
> [2019/04/12 10:31:57.105373, 0] ../source3/lib/util.c:791(smb_panic_s3)
> PANIC (pid 2206): assert
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mick crane wrote:
> On 2019-04-11 17:16, mick crane wrote:
>> On 2019-04-11 17:05, Greg Wooledge wrote:
>>> On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 05:02:46PM +0100, mick crane wrote:
I think that is what dynamic ip address services do, change the
ipaddre
Hello,
On Mon, Apr 08, 2019 at 01:32:48PM -, Curt wrote:
> How about:
>
> Subject: SSD for frequent edits of large text files?
It's really hard for me to imagine any form of human editing of a
text file that could wear out a modern SSD. Natural language text
files just aren't that big, and
On 2019.04.12 03:51, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
/etc/exim4/conf.d/auth/30_exim4-config_examples:
Thanks for pointing me to the examples file, Tomas; that is one source I
missed. I printed out that file and I shall go over it in the morning
after I catch a bit of sleep.
RLH
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 03:31:13AM -0500, rlhar...@oplink.net wrote:
> For SMTP-AUTH in exim4, the authorization string saved in
> /etc/exim4/passwd.client is of the form:
>
> smarthost.isp.net:login_identification:password
>
> with the colon character (:) being the delimiter.
>
> Can this s
Kevin DAGNEAUX wrote:
I'm using samba for lot of years too, i'm having trouble only with the
last version from debian repo.
Which debian version and which samba version - perhaps I missed this.
When crashing, samba don't need to be restarted and windows client just
see a small freeze.
Log
For SMTP-AUTH in exim4, the authorization string saved in
/etc/exim4/passwd.client is of the form:
smarthost.isp.net:login_identification:password
with the colon character (:) being the delimiter.
Can this scheme work with a password which itself contains a colon,
such as:
this:is:my:p
Kevin DAGNEAUX wrote:
> I'm using samba for lot of years too, i'm having trouble only with the
> last version from debian repo.
>
Which debian version and which samba version - perhaps I missed this.
> When crashing, samba don't need to be restarted and windows client just
> see a small freeze.
Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> Why not ? Current versions support GPT.
Thank you my fault - I have missed something
Felix Miata wrote:
>> No Win10 will not be happy with 120GB - better take 300GB from the large
>> disk for windows and the rest for data linux, windows or both
>
> I limit Win10 system partitions to 48GB, and disable paging.
You always want to arge - but tell me how many applications or how much
On Fri, Apr 12, 2019 at 01:56:36AM -0400, Lee wrote:
[...]
> As for upper/lower case - I dunno. I copied from the example in the
> man page but I just did a quick search & it has
>
> NOTE: some resource files use patterns such as
> *font: fixed
> which are overly broad, affectin
On 2019-04-11 17:16, mick crane wrote:
On 2019-04-11 17:05, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 05:02:46PM +0100, mick crane wrote:
I think that is what dynamic ip address services do, change the
ipaddress
but the service has to be on the ISP's router ?
Do I understand correctly then
Le 11/04/2019 à 16:57, Roberto C. Sánchez a écrit :
On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 04:45:53PM +0200, Kevin DAGNEAUX wrote:
Le 11/04/2019 à 16:27, Roberto C. Sánchez a écrit :
On Thu, Apr 11, 2019 at 03:46:11PM +0200, Kevin DAGNEAUX wrote:
Hi,
I'm having crash problem with samba 2:4.5.16+dfsg-1+deb9u
Kevin DAGNEAUX wrote:
But now, i've a dependency problem, version of samba in debian-security
repo and samba-dbgsym in debian-debug repo are not the sames :
may be a similar problem is the root cause for your crashes, because I am
running samba for years and my wife uses it from windows on da
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