On Sat, 17 Aug 2013, Umarzuki Mochlis wrote:
2013/8/17 Henrique de Moraes Holschuh h...@debian.org:
On Sat, 17 Aug 2013, Umarzuki Mochlis wrote:
how's 3D acceleration? on wheezy radeon keeps restarting until my
laptop hangs, removing radeon x11 is the only way, leaving no 3D
acceleration
On Sat, 17 Aug 2013, Umarzuki Mochlis wrote:
2013/7/1 Henrique de Moraes Holschuh h...@debian.org:
On Mon, 01 Jul 2013, Umarzuki Mochlis wrote:
any recent success install of wheezy 32-bit on thinkpad T43 with sound
and wireless working?
Yes, mine works just fine, but it has an Intel
On Sat, 27 Jul 2013, Paul E Condon wrote:
I intended the question to be answered in the context of the post by
Henrique de Moraes Holschuh, where 'across security domains' is
considered less desirable than 'across hosts'. I know what hosts are
when writing computer stuff, but, come to think
On Sat, 27 Jul 2013, Brian wrote:
On Sat 27 Jul 2013 at 12:05:05 +0300, Lars Noodén wrote:
On 07/26/2013 11:26 PM, Brian wrote:
Does this 'good idea' have reasons to support it?
It is for much the same reasons that passwords are rotated. It was
mainly this draft that convinced me:
On Sat, 27 Jul 2013, Paul E Condon wrote:
In this case, what is a 'security domain'?
It is a partition or a group (actually, a set). When you have several
services/hosts that have different attributes from an information
security[1] perspective, you should place them in different partitions
On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
At some point in the future, I may buy one or two additional HDD and use
hardware RAID.
It's best to use identical drives with identical firmware, which means
buying all your drives up front from the same lot. You also need to
That is a fast way
On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 7/11/2013 11:25 AM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
At some point in the future, I may buy one or two additional HDD and use
hardware RAID.
It's best to use identical drives with identical firmware
On Thu, 11 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
1. If you're buying enterprise RAID arrays, you should have matching disks
and firmware, and they must be in the vendor approved list. Best to get
them all from the same vendor.
This is also true of quality PCIe RAID HBAs. LSI and Adaptec both
On Tue, 09 Jul 2013, Klaus wrote:
On my laptop I'm running sid amd64.
I've noticed that during the early stages of booting, the Intel
microcode fails to get loaded. Switching back
On 3.9.x, it should load as the very first thing the kernel actually logs
(it will be the very first line in
On Tue, 09 Jul 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 7/7/2013 12:55 PM, David Christensen wrote:
Can anyone recommend a PCI Express 2.0 SATA 3 host bus adapter with good
FOSS licensing/ documentation/ support? I'm looking for at least two
SATA 3 ports; four ports would be ideal. I don't need
On Mon, 01 Jul 2013, Umarzuki Mochlis wrote:
any recent success install of wheezy 32-bit on thinkpad T43 with sound
and wireless working?
Yes, mine works just fine, but it has an Intel IPW2915 wireless module and
an ATI Radeon X300. It is a model 2687 T43/p.
However, I do use a custom Linux
On Sun, 16 Jun 2013, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
Pretty much ANY distro which listens better than the Debian
developers will gain at the loss of Debian.
That's the way the world is going. If you don't deliver what users
want, someone else will.
It's not like back in the 80's when there were
On Mon, 10 Jun 2013, David Guntner wrote:
Anyone have any ides regarding the upgrade from 6.0.7 to 7.1? Is it
possible to do the direct migration like that, or should I upgrade from
The recommended procedure is:
1. Update from 6.0.x to the latest 6.0.x release.
2. Update from the latest
On Mon, 10 Jun 2013, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Mon, 10 Jun 2013, David Guntner wrote:
Anyone have any ides regarding the upgrade from 6.0.7 to 7.1? Is it
possible to do the direct migration like that, or should I upgrade from
The recommended procedure is:
1. Update from 6.0
On Sun, 02 Jun 2013, Celejar wrote:
On Sun, 2 Jun 2013 21:54:09 -0300
Henrique de Moraes Holschuh h...@debian.org wrote:
http://www.thinkwiki.org/wiki/Problem_with_hard_drive_clicking
2) What should I do to attempt to preserve whatever life it has left?
hdparm -B 254/255? Anything
On Sun, 02 Jun 2013, Celejar wrote:
Prompted by another thread on this list, I decided to check my drive's
Load_Cycle_Count, and it seems that my drive is living on borrowed time:
193 Load_Cycle_Count0x0012 031 031 000Old_age Always
- 697557
Searching the
On Tue, 28 May 2013, Andreas Meile wrote:
I tried that out on a lab system where I replaced pam_unix.so into
pam_unix2.so inside both common-auth and common-password config
files.
Result: The system nows recognizes all $2a$ (Blowfish) password
hashes but does not longer accepts $6$
On Sun, 12 May 2013, Geowany Alves wrote:
Era aí que eu queria chegar. Eu já tinha feito uma troca apenas do kernel
para 64bits e não percebi nenhuma diferença. A única diferença que
Tente testar a performance de IO com mais de 12GiB de RAM. Se brincar, com
8GiB o 32bits+PAE já vai começar a
On Fri, 17 May 2013, Rodolfo wrote:
tenso '-'
Segundo o changelog:
* Recommend proftpd-mod-vroot (closes: #704484)
Usuário que não instala pacote recomendado, tem que se virar com o que
quebrar. Essa regra existe desde sempre, é a própria *definição* de
recomendado.
Agora, se o pacote
On Fri, 17 May 2013, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Fri, 17 May 2013, Rodolfo wrote:
tenso '-'
Segundo o changelog:
* Recommend proftpd-mod-vroot (closes: #704484)
Usuário que não instala pacote recomendado, tem que se virar com o que
quebrar. Essa regra existe desde sempre, é
On Sun, 12 May 2013, Geowany Alves wrote:
Eu tenho 8Gb de RAM e utilizo atualmente o Debian no desktop com kernel
32bits com PAE (https://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_Address_Extension).
É recomendado utilizar o kernel 64 bits nesse caso. O resto pode continuar
em 32 bits.
Aliás, se a
On Sun, 12 May 2013, Geowany Alves wrote:
Então eu fiz uma instalação do Debian com KDE mas com kernel 32 com PAE.
Seria então possivel eu migrar para um kernel 64 sem precisar fazer outro
fresh install? Ou o fresh install seria recomendável?
Não precisa reinstalar se você quer um kernel 64
On Wed, 17 Apr 2013, Linux - Junior Polegato wrote:
Realmente não sei dizer se o kernel AMD64 do Debian já vem
com PAE habilitado, mas tenho certeza que com Windows isso ocorre,
PAE é parte integrante do x86-64. Não existe x86-64 sem PAE, o long mode
(modo 64-bits normal do x86) nem
On Tue, 16 Apr 2013, China wrote:
Bom, segue os comandos:
root@desktop:~# grep -i pae /boot/config-3.2.0-4-amd64
Esse não retornou nada. Mas porque o kernel padrão não vem com pae???
Kernel AMD64/x86-64 _sempre_ tem o equivalente ao PAE do long mode, então
ele vem com PAE...
Seu problema ou
On Tue, 16 Apr 2013, Brian wrote:
On Mon 15 Apr 2013 at 21:29:22 -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Mon, 15 Apr 2013, Brian wrote:
That cannot happen. Updating the system might alter grub.cfg but GRUB
itself is not installed or reinstalled to, for example, the MBR of any
disk
On Mon, 15 Apr 2013, Brian wrote:
That cannot happen. Updating the system might alter grub.cfg but GRUB
itself is not installed or reinstalled to, for example, the MBR of any
disk.
This is not entirely correct. You need to put all grub* packages on hold to
make sure it won't ever update the
On Sun, 14 Apr 2013, China wrote:
Tenho um desktop em casa, mas máquina mais antiga que tinha 2GB de
RAM. Então esta semana comprei mais um pente de 2GB e adicionei nela.
A memória está funcionando e na hora do boot a bios reconhece os 4GB
na contagem, mas o Debian só reconhece 3,2GB.
Precisa
On Sun, 17 Mar 2013, Ethan Rosenberg, PhD wrote:
This seems to imply that booting off a USB stick should work.
What is my error if I am mis-stating this.
You need a DOS boot image you can boot from a USB stick, or (if your laptop
has a CD drive, from a CD).
http://derek.chezmarcotte.ca/?p=188
On Fri, 15 Mar 2013, Erwan David wrote:
It seems SSDT is a BIOS thing dealing with power management... Why
incriminate Debian when you get same error in booting windows ?
SSDT is a suplementary ACPI methods table. As long as everything works
fine, your laptop might just have a DSDT (the
On Sun, 24 Feb 2013, Tixy wrote:
Actually, I just double checked, and my CPU [1] does have PAE after all.
I was confused because it only has 32-bit physical address size (and so
doesn't benefit from any 'Extension' to the physical address).
The Pentium-M does indeed have PAE, and they even
On Tue, 19 Feb 2013, Rodolfo wrote:
o Jasper Report quando é gerado, é gerado com uma fonte padrao, que é a
SansSerif, porem essa fonte nao existe no linux, ja procurei, ja instalei o
Tem como adicionar apelidos de fontes a todos os subsistemas de fontes
(antigo modo do X11, novo estilo
On Fri, 25 Jan 2013, Keppler wrote:
Tentei inverter o Cabo Sata na placa-mãe pra ver se resolvia e não
adiantou nada. Portanto, parece que o HD2 não tem as informações de
boot para carregar o sistema mesmo que o HD1 esteja faltando.
É exatamente este o problema.
Como faço para espelhar
On Fri, 18 Jan 2013, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
Given the recent threads regarding 32 vs 64 bit I thought I'd take a
moment to present information often omitted in responses to these posts.
First, the i386 kernel/user space have access to only the original 8
general purpose registers of the 80386
On Sun, 20 Jan 2013, Rubens Junior wrote:
Fiquei com a mesma duvida do Thiago, como saber se o sistema usa systemd ou
sysvinit, eu tenho alguns scripts em /etc/init.d/script q sao linkados para
/etc/rc2.d/script_link, entao deve ser sysvinit, correto?
Veja se o pacote systemd está instalado.
On Sat, 19 Jan 2013, Rubens Junior wrote:
Eis a pergunta: Pq o SID matou meus TTYS ? Ainda bem q ele nao matou o
TTY-F7 :P
1. Estás usando systemd ou sysvinit? Se for systemd, o systemd matou
teus TTYs, olhe na documentação do systemd como resolver isso (não
sei de cabeça).
2. Se você
On Tue, 20 Nov 2012, Jude DaShiell wrote:
On Tue, 20 Nov 2012, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
Too funny they still don't understand that PA doesn't work with some
cards, they still ignore that there are installs without dependencies to
They do, they just don't care. Pulseaudio has several design
On Thu, 15 Nov 2012, Neal Murphy wrote:
At a guess, I would assume a configuration problem. Or no problem. Is
your machine sluggish or unresponsive? How do you know it stays at 800
MHz? What tool do you use to monitor it? Maybe your monitor is wrong. I
am not sure how to troubleshoot
On Tue, 06 Nov 2012, Erwan David wrote:
On Mon, Nov 05, 2012 at 09:12:53PM CET, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh
h...@debian.org said:
Microcode updates will be applied immediately when the microcode
packages are installed or updated: you don't have to reboot. You will
have to keep
On Tue, 06 Nov 2012, Jon Dowland wrote:
On Mon, Nov 05, 2012 at 06:12:53PM -0200, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
Microcode updates will be applied immediately when the microcode
packages are installed or updated: you don't have to reboot. You will
have to keep the packages installed
On Tue, 06 Nov 2012, Stephan Seitz wrote:
On Mon, Nov 05, 2012 at 06:12:53PM -0200, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
I would like to bring to your attention the improved support for system
processor (CPU) microcode updates, for x86/i686/x86-64/amd64 systems
that was recently added to [non
On Tue, 06 Nov 2012, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
So I'm left assuming that this initiative is the result of more and more
Debian users purchasing systems sufficiently new enough that errata are
being discovered, and new microcode being issued, after they receive
their systems, and these folks aren't
Hello all,
I would like to bring to your attention the improved support for system
processor (CPU) microcode updates, for x86/i686/x86-64/amd64 systems
that was recently added to [non-free] Wheezy.
System Processors from Intel and AMD may need updates to their microcode
(sort of a control
On Mon, 05 Nov 2012, Dr Beco wrote:
Hoping to add some 'reference', so we can compare actual microcode
versions, I find myself with
$ cat /proc/cpuinfo | grep microcode
microcode 0x1b
...
Now, what is the version of the updated microcode?
cpuinfo lists the current microcode running on
On Fri, 02 Nov 2012, peasth...@shaw.ca wrote:
We have a Linksys WRT54G in a community hall and want to extend
the range. Candidate devices are the Linksys RE1000 and the
PLWK400. The PLWK400 is just a PLE400 and PLW400 together.
1. Which if any of these things uses the 110 V wiring as an
On Sun, 23 Sep 2012, Neal Murphy wrote:
I must agree that that was a somewhat braindead decision. 'Failure by design'
is never an valid option.
If a problem is important enough to require an admin's attention, a daemon
should demand it via the console and the system logs. Nag repeatedly
On Thu, 20 Sep 2012, Mark Allums wrote:
Very few LCD monitors have a refresh setting other than 60Hz. So
few, in fact, that I have never seen one of them. I am sure that it
Usually the native resolution is at 60Hz, but not always. And if you are
running at a lower resolution than native,
On Thu, 20 Sep 2012, Lisi wrote:
On Tuesday 18 September 2012 22:31:21 Lionel Trésaugues wrote:
I am experiencing a physical pain whenever I am in front of my
computer running either Debian (Wheezy) or Debian-based distributions
(such as Mint LMDE, XFCE or MATE edition). Switching from XFCE
On Mon, 17 Sep 2012, Hartwig Atrops wrote:
I need a simple server for my private network, but with support for anonymous
file upload (my backup scripts work that way).
vsftpd. You will need to configure it to enable anonymous file upload,
though.
--
One disk to rule them all, One disk to
On Thu, 13 Sep 2012, John Martius wrote:
Sabem algum programa (pacote do Debian) para que ao clicar no botão power
ele desligue ou reinicie o sistema?
Preciso de algo assim porque estou usando somente terminal modo texto e
fica ruim digitar um comando sempre que necessario.
Só funciona em
On Tue, 11 Sep 2012, Fred Maranhão wrote:
Creio que o mais provável seja que você tenha 2 GPUs e cada uma
pode interfacear com uma conexão, daí não é possível usar as 3
conexões ao mesmo tempo, tente procurar por algo assim...
como eu vejo as configurações de GPU na minha
On Sat, 08 Sep 2012, Jon Dowland wrote:
On Fri, Sep 07, 2012 at 04:06:08PM -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
Kernel patches from Lennart were properly reviewed, and accepted only after
the maintainers and subsystem maintainers approved them as an acceptable
solution for the general
On Fri, 07 Sep 2012, Jon Dowland wrote:
If you are determined to avoid Lennart's code, you're going to have to
stop running the Linux kernel:
...
Kernel patches from Lennart were properly reviewed, and accepted only after
the maintainers and subsystem maintainers approved them as an acceptable
On Mon, 03 Sep 2012, songbird wrote:
somehow (i can't say what happened or i'd
have the answer), now it looks like:
crw--w 1 me tty 136, 0 Sep 3 20:05 0
crw--w 1 me tty 136, 1 Sep 3 20:10 1
crw--w 1 root tty 136, 2 Sep 4 2012 2
crw--w 1 me tty 136, 3 Sep 3
On Tue, 04 Sep 2012, songbird wrote:
Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Mon, 03 Sep 2012, songbird wrote:
somehow (i can't say what happened or i'd
have the answer), now it looks like:
crw--w 1 me tty 136, 0 Sep 3 20:05 0
crw--w 1 me tty 136, 1 Sep 3 20:10 1
crw
On Sat, 01 Sep 2012, Garrett McLean wrote:
Here is a partial list of some of the many addresses I have gotten on
wheezy amd64:
00:0F:1F:C7:E4:39
00:1F:1F:CF:F4:39
00:1F:0F:CF:E6:39
00:1F:1F:8F:F0:3F
00:0F:0F:87:F0:1F
80:1F:0F:CF:F0:3F
80:1F:0F:CF:F0:3F
00:0F:0F:87:E6:3F
The device
On Sat, 01 Sep 2012, Bob Proulx wrote:
I have no idea why that is there. I don't know what nook that
configures. I would let it lie dormant. It might be some legacy
xerox or token ring network interface for all I know.
Not really. And the kernel does require DNS capabilities, but it uses
On Tue, 28 Aug 2012, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
Sadly, due to market realities and diminished customer demand for large
monolithic servers, the biggest x86 box Unisys now sells is an 8-way 4U
Xeon box. Though with up to 80 cores, 332x times the memory bandwidth,
and similarly higher IO bus
On Wed, 22 Aug 2012, Dr Beco wrote:
Does anyone knows how to protect against unauthorized change of .htaccess?
If you have root access, try to use chattr to mark that file as
immutable (chattr +i).
But really, if they keep changing your .htaccess, it means they have
compromised the box, and
On Wed, 22 Aug 2012, Dr Beco wrote:
For this system I don't have root access. It is managed abroad by a
host farm. I already wrote to them to report the (second) problem.
I suggest you take your business elsewhere. You don't want to risk your
name/site/domain being associated with criminals
On Wed, 22 Aug 2012, Stephen Powell wrote:
Hmm. Well, it appears that CPUIDs are not unique. I've done some more
No, indeed they're not. But there is no 64-bit processor with CPUID
0F27h. Fortunately, there are precious few cpuids that are shared by 32
and 64-bit processors.
The CPUID of
On Mon, 20 Aug 2012, Listeiro 037 wrote:
Se for usado um repositório e tiver que ser adicionada uma chave
baixada e instalada com apt-key, como se confirma que a chave não é
verdadeira e que veio para ser usada com uma outra chave que não é
verdadeira?
Pela teia de confiança.
--
One disk
On Mon, 06 Aug 2012, Paul Zimmerman wrote:
I prefer the alternative. tcpdump is a much smaller package. :)
So, I did this for several minutes and looked at the log. Doesn't
look like it needs much technical expertise to interpret. The
content of the packets is printed in plain text and very
On Sun, 05 Aug 2012, Camaleón wrote:
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012 19:48:35 -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012, Camaleón wrote:
I've never read about linux boxes being used as bots, can you please
indicate any report/stats about that fact?
We've cleaned up a few work
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012, Camaleón wrote:
I know the constant connection is a multicast address, but what is this
other stuff? It looks like something is broken/misconfigured or an
outright hack of the Debian repository has occurred and many Debian
systems are now part of a botnet.
Linux as
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012, Paul Zimmerman wrote:
JulHer jul...@escomposlinux.org writes:
239.255.255.250 maybe is SSDP
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Simple_Service_Discovery_Protocol The other
stuff I don't know,
That's a possibility, I guess. But it's not an intermittent
or occasional thing.
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012, Camaleón wrote:
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012 17:40:53 -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Sat, 04 Aug 2012, Camaleón wrote:
I know the constant connection is a multicast address, but what is
this other stuff? It looks like something is broken/misconfigured
On Wed, 01 Aug 2012, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Mi, 01 aug 12, 02:22:40, Mark Panen wrote:
Google is not my friend today.
Does anyone know more or less when Squeeze 6.0.6 will be released?
Probably when there are enough (security) updates to warrant a new point
release. But why do you
On Mon, 30 Jul 2012, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Du, 29 iul 12, 22:27:08, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Sun, 29 Jul 2012, Brian wrote:
used. But if it can be demonstrated that a twenty character password can
be forced in a time-frame which makes sense I'll stop doing it and most
On Mon, 30 Jul 2012, Andrew Peng wrote:
I've been working with the Intel E1000 development team in trying to
find the cause of a hardware hang in my kern.log:
Jul 24 02:49:45 gaia kernel: [806292.204500] e1000e :02:00.0:
eth1: Detected Hardware Unit Hang:
Meh, we've just seen those in
On Tue, 31 Jul 2012, Mark Fletcher wrote:
Paul E Condon pecondon at mesanetworks.net writes:
Having posted this, which I thought was reasonable, I went and looked at
the
archives to see what OP (Mark Fletcher) had written. It turns out that all
of his investigation was done using
On Sun, 29 Jul 2012, Brian wrote:
On Sun 29 Jul 2012 at 13:12:31 -0400, Tom H wrote:
On Sun, Jul 22, 2012 at 11:31 AM, Brian a...@cityscape.co.uk wrote:
No default configuration file will ever suit everyone or fit their
needs, but the Debian sshd_config doesn't seem to me to be have any
On Sun, 29 Jul 2012, Brian wrote:
used. But if it can be demonstrated that a twenty character password can
be forced in a time-frame which makes sense I'll stop doing it and most
That depends. Are you using any dictionary words or easy character
permutations thereof to make a pass-phrase? If
On Wed, 25 Jul 2012, Sthu Deus wrote:
Good time of the day.
Heh.
) I found a solution, requiring setting
KLOGD=-k /boot/System.map-$(uname -r) -c4
in
/etc/init.d/klogd
file. Unfortunately, wheezy (that I have the problem on) does not have
FORTUNATELY, wheezy deprecates the crap
On Mon, 23 Jul 2012, Gary Dale wrote:
compressible. You can also zero the empty space on the main
partition, which should make it also compress quite well.
BitShredder can do this. If the partition has the free space zeroed,
it should compress down to a manageable size.
On most filesystems
On Mon, 23 Jul 2012, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Mon, 23 Jul 2012, Gary Dale wrote:
compressible. You can also zero the empty space on the main
partition, which should make it also compress quite well.
BitShredder can do this. If the partition has the free space zeroed
On Sun, 22 Jul 2012, lina wrote:
strangely my netstat showed my 139 and 445 ports are open.
tcp0 0 0.0.0.0:445 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN
tcp0 0 0.0.0.0:139 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN
Do I need specify
-A INPUT -p tcp --dport 139
On Sun, 22 Jul 2012, Brian wrote:
The ssh and webserver daemons are available on the network. Presumably
this is what you want. Their security will depend on how you have
configured them. Debian sshd can be run safely with the default install.
Sort of. The recommended almost worry-free
On Tue, 17 Jul 2012, peasth...@shaw.ca wrote:
* From: Henrique de Moraes Holschuh h...@debian.org
* Date: Sat, 18 Feb 2012 10:54:11 -0200
Although it is more likely that r128 is broken. You might want to contact
upstream and register with them as a X.org driver tester for r128
On Fri, 13 Jul 2012, Listeiro 037 wrote:
Pareceu-me aqui ser o lugar mais fácil de se encontrar essa resposta.
Na verdade, no debian-br (que não é lista de ajuda de usuário), mas tem
vários membros do cipsga aqui também.
O site do CIPSGA está fora do ar. Fora há um bom tempo.
Sim, os
On Thu, 12 Jul 2012, Flávio Oliveira wrote:
Procuro algum aplicativo que consiga mostrar (analisando um gateway
com Debian Squeeze) em tempo real o uso da net por host. Preciso
iftop, iptraf mostram em tempo real. Consumo por host, talvez com ntop
fique melhor. Detalhe: consomem recurso.
--
On Mon, 09 Jul 2012, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 7/9/2012 12:38 AM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Sun, 08 Jul 2012, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
EXT3 should be fine. Use data=journal if you want maximum filesystem
I'd recommend staying away from ext3 in data=journal mode, unless you hear
On Sun, 08 Jul 2012, Markus Schönhaber wrote:
08.07.2012 13:59, Camaleón:
While imaps (tcp/993), pop3s (tcp/995) and smtps (tcp/587) make use of
smtps was defined as 465/tcp. 587/tcp is message submission which does
not provide encryption on the transport layer.
Yeah, and 465/tcp use for
On Sun, 08 Jul 2012, Camaleón wrote:
SMTPS (and SMTP over SSL/TLS) is standarized as always has been, what
Actually, at least on port 465, it is deprecated with prejudice as it has
been assigned to something else.
happens is that it was updated to use starttls extension and the older
RFC
On Sun, 08 Jul 2012, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
EXT3 should be fine. Use data=journal if you want maximum filesystem
I'd recommend staying away from ext3 in data=journal mode, unless you hear
the opposite from Ted T'so.
AFAIK, nobody upstream pays much (any?) attention to ext3 data=journal,
you'll
On Thu, 05 Jul 2012, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
Any proper sysadmin also knows that end users want and need the short
simple answer/solution, the one that is good enough to get the job
done, even if it's not the optimal solution. They don't want to be
bogged down with the technical details of
On Wed, 04 Jul 2012, Nick Lidakis wrote:
Once the OP asked about alignment I knew he needed a dose...
I don't need a dose, thank you. All my questions are valid and you did
Indeed, you don't need any dose of reality, and your questions are
valid. Any proper sysadmin knows of alignment, it
On Mon, 02 Jul 2012, Richard Owlett wrote:
Camaleón wrote:
On Sun, 01 Jul 2012 09:30:21 -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
I'm having various random problems installing from Live CD's. The
problems are weird, inconsistent, and intermittent. The first thing is
to determine whether or not I have
On Sat, 30 Jun 2012, Andy Smith wrote:
Has anyone been seeing this sort of thing in the last 22-ish hours?
http://serverfault.com/questions/403732/anyone-else-experiencing-high-rates-of-linux-server-crashes-today
No problems with the kernel in _up-to-date_ Debian userspace and kernels, at
On Wed, 13 Jun 2012, John Magolske wrote:
I edited /etc/laptop-mode/laptop-mode.conf and changed this line [1] :
BATT_HD_POWERMGMT=1
Yikes, that kills HDDs!
I suppose battery life will take a hit...guess the tradeoff here is a
stuttering user-interface vs. battery life. Sooner or later
On Tue, 22 May 2012, Matej Kosik wrote:
This almost-monopolizing should be safe as long as I run my process on
a CPU where no other process runs.
It is easy for user processes. It is not easy for kernel threads.
Affinity of some processes cannot be modified. E.g.:
[migrate/0]
On Mon, 21 May 2012, Ramon Hofer wrote:
On Sun, 20 May 2012 23:35:58 -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion, Henrique!
The PSU is a 750 W so I think it should be enough for now.
Yes, it is probably enough. You have to do a lot to overpower a *good*
750W
On Sun, 20 May 2012, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 5/19/2012 11:05 AM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Sat, 19 May 2012, Ramon Hofer wrote:
And after a while there are more messages which I don't understand. I
have taken a picture:
http://666kb.com/i/c3wf606sc1qkcvgoc.jpg
It shows
On Sun, 20 May 2012, Ramon Hofer wrote:
On Sat, 19 May 2012 13:06:40 -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Sat, 19 May 2012, Ramon Hofer wrote:
On Sat, 19 May 2012 04:19:33 -0500, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 5/19/2012 2:52 AM, Ramon Hofer wrote:
On Fri, 18 May 2012 17:57:56 -0500
On Sat, 19 May 2012, Ramon Hofer wrote:
And after a while there are more messages which I don't understand. I
have taken a picture:
http://666kb.com/i/c3wf606sc1qkcvgoc.jpg
It shows that udev is having serious trouble handling one of the USB
devices.
Yes but only when the lsi card
On Sat, 19 May 2012, Ramon Hofer wrote:
On Sat, 19 May 2012 04:19:33 -0500, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 5/19/2012 2:52 AM, Ramon Hofer wrote:
On Fri, 18 May 2012 17:57:56 -0500, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 5/18/2012 9:39 AM, Shane Johnson wrote:
After that I would look to see if
something
On Mon, 14 May 2012, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
On 5/13/2012 7:02 PM, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
On Fri, 11 May 2012, Seyyed Mohtadin Hashemi wrote:
On 5/10/2012 1:16 PM, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
If this doesn't fix the issue, and memtest and other utils can see all
64GB just fine, then I'd
On Fri, 11 May 2012, Seyyed Mohtadin Hashemi wrote:
If this doesn't fix the issue, and memtest and other utils can see all
64GB just fine, then I'd say you're dealing with a BIOS bug.
The very top of /var/log/dmesg has the kernel debug output about the memory
map. It might well tell us
On Thu, 10 May 2012, Stan Hoeppner wrote:
If this doesn't fix the issue, and memtest and other utils can see all
64GB just fine, then I'd say you're dealing with a BIOS bug.
The very top of /var/log/dmesg has the kernel debug output about the memory
map. It might well tell us very quickly who
On Thu, 10 May 2012, Tony van der Hoff wrote:
I've learned a lot about GPG signing during the last few days. I can see
there are benefits where the recipient needs to be absolutely certain
that the sender is known to him.
Yes. Or that the sender belongs to a certain group, for which an
On Sun, 22 Apr 2012, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Du, 15 apr 12, 16:28:28, Camaleón wrote:
As I thought, verifying PGP/MIME detached signatures can be also done from
command line with GPG. I have tried with some posts from this same mailing
list coming from users that use detached signatures
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