I wonder if blkid might be a bit more informative.
Jude
"There are four boxes to be used in defense of liberty:
soap, ballot, jury, and ammo. Please use in that order."
-Ed Howdershelt (Author, 1940)
.
On Fri, 20 Jan 2023, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
> On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 11:03:14PM +,
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 10:18:33PM -0600, David Wright wrote:
On Fri 20 Jan 2023 at 03:43:09 (+), Russell L. Harris wrote:
I have not figured out how to configure the BIOS of a Dell Latitude
3510 to cause it to see and boot from a Debian netinst image (Debian
11) written to USB flash (8Gbyte
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 11:03:14PM +, thyme after thyme wrote:
> Hello lovely debianizers,
>
> My Debian 10 machine has two physical disks, sda and sdb. The
> (encrypted) root filesystem is on sdb, meanwhile I’ve used
> fstab/crypttab to mount an (encrypted) partition on sda to
> /mnt/data01-h
On Fri 20 Jan 2023 at 03:43:09 (+), Russell L. Harris wrote:
> I have not figured out how to configure the BIOS of a Dell Latitude
> 3510 to cause it to see and boot from a Debian netinst image (Debian
> 11) written to USB flash (8Gbyte Patriot).
Typically you'd tap away at F12 after turning i
I have not figured out how to configure the BIOS of a Dell Latitude
3510 to cause it to see and boot from a Debian netinst image (Debian
11) written to USB flash (8Gbyte Patriot).
RLH
--
He turneth rivers into a wilderness, and the watersprings into dry
ground; a fruitful land into barrenness,
On 1/19/23 13:15, Tom Browder wrote:
I am trying to use my new public static IP for my Debian PC which is ready
for it security-wise (thanks to advice from this ML; note I will initially
allow access only via ssh from the IP address of one of my remote hosts).
I know how to turn on public access
On Thu, 19 Jan 2023 23:03:14 +
thyme after thyme wrote:
> However, when i do
> user@hostname:/$ sudo umount /mnt/data01-hdd
>
> umount complains thus:
> umount: /mnt/data01-hdd: not mounted.
First off, don't tell us what the program did, show us exactly what the
program did by copying and p
On 1/19/23 17:08, john doe wrote:
On 1/19/23 22:15, Tom Browder wrote:
I am trying to use my new public static IP for my Debian PC which is
ready
for it security-wise (thanks to advice from this ML; note I will
initially
allow access only via ssh from the IP address of one of my remote hosts).
On Thu 19 Jan 2023 at 15:15:28 -0600, Tom Browder wrote:
> I am trying to use my new public static IP for my Debian PC which is ready
> for it security-wise (thanks to advice from this ML; note I will initially
> allow access only via ssh from the IP address of one of my remote hosts).
>
> I know
Hello lovely debianizers,
My Debian 10 machine has two physical disks, sda and sdb. The
(encrypted) root filesystem is on sdb, meanwhile I’ve used
fstab/crypttab to mount an (encrypted) partition on sda to
/mnt/data01-hdd, where I’ve stored some stuff:
user@hostname:/$ ls -gh /mnt/data01-hdd/
tot
On 1/19/23 22:15, Tom Browder wrote:
I am trying to use my new public static IP for my Debian PC which is ready
for it security-wise (thanks to advice from this ML; note I will initially
allow access only via ssh from the IP address of one of my remote hosts).
-Tom
If I may, use bridge mode o
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 09:12:19PM +0100, Maurizio Caloro wrote:
> # host -t A pluto.sternbild.m 127.0.0.1
> Using domain server:
> Name: 127.0.0.1
> Address: 127.0.0.1#53
> Aliases:
>
> Host pluto.sternbild.m not found: 3(NXDOMAIN)
Hmm. In your previous message, you have:
> # cat /etc/bind/nam
I am trying to use my new public static IP for my Debian PC which is ready
for it security-wise (thanks to advice from this ML; note I will initially
allow access only via ssh from the IP address of one of my remote hosts).
I know how to turn on public access in their router, but it's not clear
wh
Am 19.01.2023 um 20:24 schrieb Greg Wooledge:
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 07:45:34PM +0100, Maurizio Caloro wrote:
Let's start here. Why do you have multiple nameserver lines here?
Which one is the bind9 server that you're configuring? That should be
the only line.
If the bind9 server is 127.0.0.1
On Thu, 2023-01-19 at 19:56 +, Tixy wrote:
>
> Surely it's also straightforward to just copy the data in the partition
> then resize the filesystem...
>
> cp /dev/sdX1 /dev/sdY1
> resize2fs /dev/sdY1
>
> Assuming you've already partitioned the target disk /dev/sdY to how you
> want it. (An
On Thu, 2023-01-19 at 20:34 +0100, DdB wrote:
> Am 19.01.2023 um 19:49 schrieb Tom Browder:
> > On my main PC, I would like to clone my boot drive onto another disk for
> > 2 reasons:
> >
> > 1. Use a larger disk for the main drive
> > 2. Create an emergency recovery disk
> >
> > A new Debian pac
On 19.01.2023 23:49, Tom Browder wrote:
On my main PC, I would like to clone my boot drive onto another disk
for 2 reasons:
1. Use a larger disk for the main drive
2. Create an emergency recovery disk
A new Debian package to me is "partclone". Questions:
+ Can that be used for both purposes?
Am 19.01.2023 um 19:49 schrieb Tom Browder:
> On my main PC, I would like to clone my boot drive onto another disk for
> 2 reasons:
>
> 1. Use a larger disk for the main drive
> 2. Create an emergency recovery disk
>
> A new Debian package to me is "partclone". Questions:
>
> + Can that be used
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 07:45:34PM +0100, Maurizio Caloro wrote:
> fighting little with bind9, on Debian 10.13, in my opinion appair right, but
> # cat /etc/resolv.conf
> search sternbild.m
> nameserver 127.0.0.1
> nameserver A.B.C.D -> other Nameservers
> nameserver A.B.C.D -> other Nameservers
On Thu, 19 Jan 2023 12:49:57 -0600
Tom Browder wrote:
> + Can it do a complete clone on an active disk? Or do I need a live
> CD or USB stick?
I wouldn't try backing up a live partition due to issues with
referential integrity. Suppose two interdependent files, A and B, change
during the backing
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 1:50 PM Tom Browder wrote:
>
> On my main PC, I would like to clone my boot drive onto another disk for 2
> reasons:
>
> 1. Use a larger disk for the main drive
> 2. Create an emergency recovery disk
>
> A new Debian package to me is "partclone". Questions:
>
> + Can that
hello
fighting little with bind9, on Debian 10.13, in my opinion appair right,
but arn't possible
to ping local/inside the Client that i have add to my config.
information this machine running
on a VPS envirment.
also the checks are positiv
# named-checkzone sternbild.m /var/cache/bind/db.ster
I've tried Open Indiana for some time,but I stopped using it when a
developer told me :
"Using our build machinery brings another level of burden and you'll need
to learn a lot of new things additionally but when using it you can
participate in the project. If we don't find enough volunteers the p
On my main PC, I would like to clone my boot drive onto another disk for 2
reasons:
1. Use a larger disk for the main drive
2. Create an emergency recovery disk
A new Debian package to me is "partclone". Questions:
+ Can that be used for both purposes?
+ Can it do a complete clone on an active
Well, I didn't fix the errors, but I was able to use 'btrfs replace' to
move the file system to an external HDD. The SDD I ordered apparently
is ping-ponging its way from Kansas City to various area post offices
and back again before they get it on the right truck. Sigh...
- Nate
--
"The optim
Le 1/19/23 à 3:41 PM, Mario Marietto a écrit :
The question asked by Yassine is interesting for me. I've been a FreeBSD user
for some years. After having used Linux for 20 years, I took the decision to
stop using it a little bit because of some technical reasons,mainly tied to the
package mana
From: Joe
Date: Sat, 7 Jan 2023 12:50:37 +
> I use No-Script in Firefox.
Thanks! Installed it. Definitely helpful.
At the bottom of https://wiki.debian.org/Firefox#Profile under
heading "Other projects aim at improving security and privacy in Firefox:"
now a note about NoScript. If some
On 18/01/2023 13:02, Richard Hector wrote:
I have a Wordpress site. The directory /srv/sitename/doc_root, and most
of the directories under it, are owned by user 'sitename'.
PHP runs as 'sitename-run', which has access (via group 'sitename') to
read all of that, but not write it. Some subdirec
The question asked by Yassine is interesting for me. I've been a FreeBSD
user for some years. After having used Linux for 20 years, I took the
decision to stop using it a little bit because of some technical
reasons,mainly tied to the package management. Now that I'm using FreeBSD,I
don't regret th
Am 19.01.2023 um 12:18 schrieb Yassine Chaouche:
> If nothing like it is avaiable for linux,
> what would be the necessary steps to achieve something similar?
> (even manually)
>
Sorry for being late (i missed the post):
The ZoL gurus did work with the ubuntu team in order to provide all this
wit
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 02:00:00PM +0100, DdB wrote:
> Am 19.01.2023 um 13:13 schrieb Greg Wooledge:
> > The fact that this *appears* to work is what causes so much confusion.
> > It will "work" some of the time, but not all of the time, and you'll
> > get different results depending on which direc
Am Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 12:18:53PM +0100 schrieb Yassine Chaouche:
Hello Yassine,
> Hello all,
>
> I was wondering if there was anyone working on an equivalent of OpenSolaris
> BE?
> Basically,
> It automatically creates ZFS snapshots of the whole system each time you do a
> system upgrade.
>
On 1/19/23 06:28, Yassine Chaouche wrote:
Hello all,
I was wondering if there was anyone working on an equivalent of
OpenSolaris BE?
Basically,
It automatically creates ZFS snapshots of the whole system each time you
do a system upgrade.
Next time you boot,
you'll have the choice of running
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 02:00:00PM +0100, DdB wrote:
[...]
> I was really curious, how Greg would put words to this one. And i gotta
> applaud: Such unambiguous explanations, and so circumspect at the same
> time. Even understanding the basis for confusion, i could learn
> something new from this
Am 19.01.2023 um 13:13 schrieb Greg Wooledge:
> The fact that this *appears* to work is what causes so much confusion.
> It will "work" some of the time, but not all of the time, and you'll
> get different results depending on which directory you're in, on which
> computer.
>
> Bash has two other
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 07:13:46AM -0500, Greg Wooledge wrote:
[...]
> So, just to add to the list of people who've already said it: always
> quote the patterns that you pass to apt list, because you want apt
> to use them directly, without your shell interfering.
And, if in doubt, just replace
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 12:11:43PM +0100, Christoph Brinkhaus wrote:
> For curiosity If have done a small test as below.
> Unfortunately there are a few outputs in German. For this comparisons
> the exact meanings of the German text has no importance at all.
>
> 1. The first command of the origina
> Hello all,
>
> I was wondering if there was anyone working on an equivalent of
> OpenSolaris BE? Basically,
> It automatically creates ZFS snapshots of the whole system each time
> you do a system upgrade. Next time you boot,
> you'll have the choice of running the new system
> or the old one.
>
Hello Yassine,
I think you want nixos.org.
Il giorno gio 19 gen 2023 alle ore 12:28 Yassine Chaouche <
a.chaou...@algerian-radio.dz> ha scritto:
> Hello all,
>
> I was wondering if there was anyone working on an equivalent of
> OpenSolaris BE?
> Basically,
> It automatically creates ZFS snapshot
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 6:28 AM Yassine Chaouche
wrote:
>
> Hello all,
>
> I was wondering if there was anyone working on an equivalent of OpenSolaris
> BE?
> Basically,
> It automatically creates ZFS snapshots of the whole system each time you do a
> system upgrade.
> Next time you boot,
> you'
Hello all,
I was wondering if there was anyone working on an equivalent of OpenSolaris BE?
Basically,
It automatically creates ZFS snapshots of the whole system each time you do a
system upgrade.
Next time you boot,
you'll have the choice of running the new system
or the old one.
Pretty handy to
Am Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 11:40:50AM +0100 schrieb to...@tuxteam.de:
Hello Tomas,
> On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 11:31:23AM +0100, Christoph Brinkhaus wrote:
> > Am Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 09:10:30AM +0100 schrieb js-p...@online.de:
> >
> > Hello Julian,
> >
> > > Hello together,
> > > listing packages i
On Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 11:31:23AM +0100, Christoph Brinkhaus wrote:
> Am Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 09:10:30AM +0100 schrieb js-p...@online.de:
>
> Hello Julian,
>
> > Hello together,
> > listing packages in apt with ”sudo“ in the title returns different output
> > (bash commands at the end of the em
Am Thu, Jan 19, 2023 at 09:10:30AM +0100 schrieb js-p...@online.de:
Hello Julian,
> Hello together,
> listing packages in apt with ”sudo“ in the title returns different output
> (bash commands at the end of the email). I would fill a bug report, but I'm
> not sure whether to address it to grep
19.01.23, 09:10 +0100, js-p...@online.de:
Hello together,
listing packages in apt with ”sudo“ in the title returns different output (bash
commands at the end of the email). I would fill a bug report, but I'm not sure
whether to address it to grep or apt. How do you see this?
To me it seems t
Am 19.01.2023 um 09:10 schrieb js-p...@online.de:
> Hello together,
> listing packages in apt with ”sudo“ in the title returns different output
> (bash commands at the end of the email). I would fill a bug report, but I'm
> not sure whether to address it to grep or apt. How do you see this?
>
>
Hello together,
listing packages in apt with ”sudo“ in the title returns different output (bash
commands at the end of the email). I would fill a bug report, but I'm not sure
whether to address it to grep or apt. How do you see this?
Kind regards
Julian Schreck
--
$ apt list sudo* vs. $ apt l
47 matches
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