On Sat, 25 Dec 2004, dorn hetzel wrote:
> I wound up using a PATA boot disk and just use the 4 SATA
> disks after booting. When I have more time, I do hear it's
There's no need for that. As soon as you can get a kernel that suports SATA
right to execute on system startup, you need no PATA disks a
On Sun, 26 Dec 2004, roy wrote:
> I've never installed Debian (or linux) before, just wanted to make sure this
> is going to work (as for as the HD's concerned)...
> Has anyone done this before or can confirm SATA should not be a problem?
It will work. But you will need the correct kernel for what
On Thu, 23 Dec 2004, Paul Johnson wrote:
> On Thursday 23 December 2004 4:13 pm, John Hasler wrote:
> > Brian Pack writes:
> > > Then it's not the font I thought it was, which predated MS by nearly
> > > 50 years.
> >
> > If you know of a free typeface that looks enough like the one in the
> > l
On Tue, 21 Dec 2004, Roberto Sanchez wrote:
> If you really desperately need saslauthd, you will need Postfix 2 and
> SASL2. You can get them for Woody from backports.org:
Too bad that someone, in a moment of utter *in*sanity, decided that postfix
2 from backports.org should *NOT* use SASL2.
Arg
On Tue, 21 Dec 2004, William Ballard wrote:
> published. When you're getting started you're way too stupid to
"Stupid"? I may not be a native speaker, but that certainly doesn't look
like the correct term at all for "someone who does not know enough yet, but
will learn".
Try "unexperienced", o
On Sun, 19 Dec 2004, Ron Johnson wrote:
> Paul Johnson made a foolish, reflexively anti-MSFT blanket state-
> ment, and I presented contrary evidence (which you conveniently
> snipped in your reply). That's all.
He made a stupid blanket statement, as he did not specify WHAT version of
Outlook ha
On Sun, 19 Dec 2004, Robert Ian Smit wrote:
> not work with it. There is so much mail that IMAP would be way to
> slow. Mutt is very fast once the mailbox is open. Reading and
Ha! Trash like uw-imap would be slow. Try it with Cyrus IMAPd 2.1, it is
packaged and if you follow the README.Debian.si
On Sat, 18 Dec 2004, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On Sat, 2004-12-18 at 15:27 -0800, Paul Johnson wrote:
> > On Saturday 18 December 2004 1:50 pm, Ron Johnson wrote:
> >
> > > However, disks are measured in 10s of GBs. If your mbox file is
> > > getting so big as to fill up /home, you have a problem. Af
On Sun, 19 Dec 2004, Sam Watkins wrote:
> > The system is mainly used as a dropbox for a huge amount of mail.
> > Mutt is opening and working on a 1.5 GB mbox. Considering this
> > usage, should we apply special configuration or should a 'vanilla
> > system' be able to cope with this?
Mutt might w
On Fri, 17 Dec 2004, Robert Vangel wrote:
> >I know it is caused by iptables, but I can't seem to figure out how to
AND by the (IMHO completely braindead) default console level set by klogd.
> them going to /var/log/messages and not the console.
Edit /etc/init.d/klogd, and add "-c 4" to the klo
On Wed, 15 Dec 2004, William Ballard wrote:
> recommends using login to chroot because otherwise "lots of
> environment varibles" are left around and has "other issues."
/bin/su - should be just as good.
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
them all and in
On Wed, 15 Dec 2004, Walter Tautz wrote:
> Bad page state at prep_new_page (in process 'cron_idreg', page c19a29c8)
I haven't read the other messages, so please excuse me if I am repeating
what others already said.
Test your memory using memtest86+ for at least 24h, immediately. If you
have appl
On Tue, 14 Dec 2004, Roberto Sanchez wrote:
> Additionally, Samsung actually supports almost all their printers under
> Linux. This is more than can be said of pretty much every other printer
> manufacturer.
Except HP (for all new printer products, I don't know how many of their old
products are
On Tue, 14 Dec 2004, David Purton wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 13, 2004 at 04:42:00PM -0200, Frederico Rodrigues Abraham wrote:
> > Why do the EPS files exported by OpenOffice have opaque colors in
> > the place of transparent objects ? Is this an OpenOffice bug or a
>
> behind? Or do you mean a trans
On Thu, 09 Dec 2004, Dan Jacobson wrote:
> Constructive me says: Debian's at(1) is so bad, one can't even do
It is not only bad. It has a fame of being sort of a security bomb
(currently the fuse is believed to be unlit, but we never know if there
isn't a hidden one lit in there somewhere).
Wethe
On Tue, 30 Nov 2004, Rogério Brito wrote:
> laptop-mode even for my i386 Desktop (since I can't stand the noise of its
> HD).
This is likely to shorten the life of your old HD enough that the noise
won't be an issue for too long.
Spin-up and spin-down cycles on old equipment is *never* a good ide
On Mon, 29 Nov 2004, Marco Correia wrote:
> I'm having trouble with arts+timidity.
Someone that is used to ARTS really should spend some time improving the
ARTS support in TiMidity++, it basically sucks...
> TiMidity++ version 2.13.2
> kde 3.3
> Gentoo Linux
Unless gentoo uses the debian packag
On Thu, 25 Nov 2004, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> operation, the load average is growing drastic. The log level is -1 but I
Make it zero. It won't help.
> slapd and the end I restarted the machine. The slapd is starting corectly
> but any operation have the same result. But if I make a dpkg -P slap
On Thu, 25 Nov 2004, Rogério Brito wrote:
> The only problem that I see is that, for my printer to give me the results
> I expect, I have to use gs-esp (because it has the pcl3 driver in it),
> while gs-gpl doesn't support it and going the route of using other drivers
See http://home.vrweb.de/mart
On Wed, 24 Nov 2004, Paul Johnson wrote:
> I got an interesting message out of cron today
> /etc/cron.daily/checksecurity:
> find: /home/baloo/.kde/share/config/kcmartsrc: Permission denied
>
> ...and I started thinking, "Oh, maybe if I get rid of that file, I might be
> able to get arts to s
On Wed, 24 Nov 2004, michael wrote:
> >Increase the ARP cache, or wait for 2.4.29, or get 2.6.10 :)
Make that 2.4.28. I think the 2.6.10 dynamic ARP table sizing code went in
2.4.28.
> wow, there's 1024 such entries as below... is this correct??? (or have I
How big are the directly attached net
On Wed, 24 Nov 2004, michael wrote:
> localhost kernel: Neighbour table overflow.
Increase the ARP cache, or wait for 2.4.29, or get 2.6.10 :)
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond
where the s
On Tue, 23 Nov 2004, Shaul Karl wrote:
> What will happen when a daemon process with no controlling terminal
> tries to print to its stdout?
It depends. Many daemons guard against this by opening /dev/null on
descriptors 0, 1 and 2.
Otherwise, they will get a write error. Most code doesn't ch
On Tue, 23 Nov 2004, Greg Trounson wrote:
> Does sysv-rc replace sysvinit or something? Is it safe to overwrite
An old version of it, yes. There's something wrong, are you doing a full
update to newest sarge or sid?
> this file with the version distributed by sysv-rc, or is this a
> temporary
On Sun, 21 Nov 2004, Antonio Rodriguez wrote:
> > Here's where the X notion of client/server can be confusing. If you
> > consider a server which provides programs to clients, then this server
> > would be running X client programs, and each terminal an X server. :)
>
> Yeap, confusing. H cr**
On Sun, 21 Nov 2004, Antonio Rodriguez wrote:
> How do you set up X to run in a machine without monitor, or even may
> be without video card? About this last one I am not sure. A hosted server, to
> forward X through ssh you still need X there.
You don't need the X server to run any X clients (the
On Sat, 20 Nov 2004, Christian Christmann wrote:
> I've just installed Cyrus-imap and sasl2-bin from the Sarge packages.
> Everthing works fine, but in the /var/log/mail.log I get permanently the
> error message:
> server cyrus/deliver[14580]: connect(/var/run/cyrus/socket/lmtp)
> failed: Permissio
On Fri, 19 Nov 2004, Ron Johnson wrote:
> Since I'm an xterm kinda guy instead of a nautilus user, what is
> the best package to use to automatically recognize & mount these
Autofs :-) Make some directories under /media for your devices, and teach
autofs to automount them. The devices won't be
On Fri, 19 Nov 2004, Steve Spiller wrote:
> and Windows XP). However, the two Sarge boxes cannot ping each other or
> other systems by name, only by IP address (local net range 192.168.0.x). I
This means your name resolution is busted. Things that have to do with it
need to be checked:
/etc/nss
On Fri, 19 Nov 2004, martin f krafft wrote:
> So I am wondering what some strategies would look like to make sure
> they print b/w instead. We do not have a username or machine policy,
> so we cannot work with lpd accounting. Some approaches that have
> come to my mind:
Add username and machine po
On Wed, 17 Nov 2004, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> On Wed, 17 Nov 2004, Jacco Hoeve wrote:
> > ERROR
> > -
> > Nov 17 22:36:55 server01 postfix/master[15177]: fatal: getaddrinfo: Servname
> > not supported for ai_socktype
>
> Translation:
> You
On Wed, 17 Nov 2004, Jacco Hoeve wrote:
> ERROR
> -
> Nov 17 22:36:55 server01 postfix/master[15177]: fatal: getaddrinfo: Servname
> not supported for ai_socktype
Translation:
You're missing something in /etc/services.
In other words, you're telling postfix to connect to something like
192.
On Wed, 17 Nov 2004, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I have a system running sarge with 2 SATA - disks configured with lvm.
Your problem is not LVM. Ignore it (unless your root is on LVM, in which
case, *all* your kernels better have initrd images capable of booting off a
LVM root). This is a separate
On Tue, 16 Nov 2004, Juha Siltala wrote:
> On 2004-11-16, Shawn McCuan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Are there any good open source AntiVirus, Spyware, Adware programs for
> > linux? I have just recentley decided to make a total switch to Linux. I
Yes. http://www.clamav.net (packaged in sarge
On Sun, 14 Nov 2004, Dan McCullough wrote:
> I'm rebuilding a server that is in my home office, yes I built it myself.
> I'm at my wits end. When I download, load from a cd the files are always
> corrupt. If I take the har drives out and install in another machine I
> can install without any issu
On Fri, 12 Nov 2004, Manou Rabary wrote:
> i don't know if my problem is already show in this mailing-list or not.
> Last january, my debian woody hangs but no a complete freeze: it
> answered ping, pop3.. but not smtp(postfix), ssh, no console login...
> I had nothing special in logs but many cron
On Wed, 10 Nov 2004, Justin Guerin wrote:
> I would recommend installing smartmontools and checking the health of your
> hard drive. This many errors suggests hardware problems. You should not
> need to check your drives once a day.
Also, install memtest86+ (packages in sarge and sid, and also
On Sun, 07 Nov 2004, Charlie Zender wrote:
> 1. The pcmcia card beeping is really loud and always evokes evil
>stares from others in the library, airplan, etc.
That is probably something to fix kernel-side :( But if the PCMCIA stuff is
a module that is being loaded by hotplug (ick), get the A
On Mon, 18 Oct 2004, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> Can we remove cyrus-sasl and libsasl7 packages from sarge and sid? Moving
It is now the 6th of November, and no-one commented on this. I have to
assume cyrus-sasl can finally be left behind. And it is about time, too...
I am theref
On Thu, 04 Nov 2004, Fraser Campbell wrote:
> Does anyone know if sarge installers support SATA chipset on Dell's 420SC?
lspci output, please (or cat /proc/pci if lspci ain't available...)
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
them all and in the darkness
On Wed, 03 Nov 2004, Justin M wrote:
> root of the problem is that Postfix's license doesn't qualify as
> DFSG-free, and is therefore not appropriate for inclusion as the
> default MTA.
If it fails the DFSG, wtf would is it doing in Debian main?
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find
On Wed, 03 Nov 2004, ROBERTOJIMENOCA wrote:
> Lately, I've seen how Debian is not following the wishes of many users.
Debian as a whole has never done that. Maintainers most often do, but we
are actually supposed to ignore user requests if we have a technical reason
to. That the technical reason
On Tue, 02 Nov 2004, Robert Tilley wrote:
> Now that I know the specifics of From and To about the traffic, how does that
> help me in terms of identifying the offending process IDs?
Using lsof, you can track down which process has the local socket of the
flow you're after.
--
"One disk to ru
> >you could try higher RAID levels (RAID 5) for data integrity. RAID 1
> >will only mirror disks - and that would also mean should there be
> >errors in one disk it gets propagated to the mirror as well.
Indeed this is false. It also shows a complete lack of understanding the
very basic principl
This is a call for help of all TiMidity++ users that use it with aRts mode
(KDE).
I have just uploaded a TiMidity++ release to unstable (2.13.2-3) that tries
to fix some troublesome aRts issues. It will go into testing in 10 days, if
everyhing is alright with the dependencies.
I am very strict
On Sun, 31 Oct 2004, Vadim wrote:
> >>I am setting cyrus on sarge, and I want to send some (but not all)
> >>messages through spamassassin (smapc). in procmail I would just pipe it
That is not available in Sieve yet, not even on 2.2 CVS. It will be, in a
few months I think.
> >>after I run all
On Thu, 28 Oct 2004, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On Thu, 2004-10-28 at 17:21 -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> > It has little to do with USB. It has all to do with the hotplug kernel
> > interface, though.
>
> That's interesting.
> CONFIG_HOTPLUG=y
>
On Thu, 28 Oct 2004, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On Thu, 2004-10-28 at 12:22 -0400, William Ballard wrote:
> > On Wed, Oct 27, 2004 at 11:23:07AM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
> > > > Anything promising using the PCI hotplug facility?
Cardbus is PCI hotplug, AFAIK.
> The question about PCI hotplug was very
On Mon, 25 Oct 2004, David Berg wrote:
> > >either since I plan on doing it shortly (only using half of harddrive
> > >and fdisk for some reason won't let me put a partition on the rest)
> >
> > Did you by any chance create 4 primary partitions of which none is
> > extended? If so then you shoul
On Sun, 24 Oct 2004, William Ballard wrote:
> Some strange thing happened. Best I can surmise is someone's
> misconfigured challenge-response system is sending this to everyone who
> sends mail to d-u. This look familiar to anyone?
Yes. It is TMDA in the MOST annoying possible version, where
On Sun, 24 Oct 2004, Ron Johnson wrote:
> On Sun, 2004-10-24 at 14:11 +1000, Ross Tsolakidis wrote:
> > Currently only using one of them. The 2nd just houses some data as a
> > backup.
> > Unfortunately I've never done anything like this, everytime you create
> > a Raid set in Hardware, you initi
As of this writing, all packages in Debian have transitioned to the newer
libsasl2 (cyrus-sasl2). The last user of libsasl7 (sendmail-wide) is being
removed from sid at the request of its maintainer.
Cyrus-SASL 1.5 (libsasl7) has been deprecated upstream for years.
Can we remove cyrus-sasl and l
On Fri, 15 Oct 2004, Adi Linden wrote:
> I am trying to build cyrus-imap from sources on Sarge. For some reason the
> ./configure script complains that -ldb-4.2 does no contain a db_create
> function. Why would that be? /usr/lib/libdb-4.2.so certainly exists.
Upstream source for Cyrus IMAPd, or th
On Wed, 13 Oct 2004, Micha Feigin wrote:
> I don't know enough about hyperthreading vs. real SMP but IIRC 2.6
> kernels are much better at smp then 2.4
They are extremely better at SMT (HyperThreading) than 2.4 kernels are.
But HT works just fine on 2.4, I am typing this from a Intel D875PBZ with
On Wed, 13 Oct 2004, Paolo Alexis Falcone wrote:
> > I've got P4 3GHz Hyperthreading on Intel 865PERL
> > mainboard,
> > hyperthreading enable on BIOS.
> > I'm currently using sid 2.4.27 kernel with alsa
> > compiled.
> > I had tried to use 2.4.27-smp kernel and debian just
> > freeze at boot.
>
>
On Thu, 07 Oct 2004, Andrew Schulman wrote:
> Jamie, try my troubleshooting page at
> http://home.comcast.net/~andrex/Debian-nVidia/troubleshooting.html.
Andrew,
Are you still interested in adding my findings about TRNGs to your pages?
I found some "compatible" FWHs (that are not from Intel) wit
On Thu, 07 Oct 2004, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> I've currently set fsck to run pretty much on every other boot.
Install the memtest86+ package, activate it in lilo/grub, reboot.
Let it test your main memory for at least 12h.
> 3. Could this be a bug in fsck ? Why doesn't fsck actually tell me
On Tue, 05 Oct 2004, Nick Hastings wrote:
> I've had a bit of a look at the ATI web site and it seems that the
> "FireGL Z1-128" [2] might suit me well.
Either that, or any nVidia card with dual outputs. You can have it dual-DVI
or DVI+VGA (the DVI port has the VGA signals as well, and the cards c
On Sun, 03 Oct 2004, Ed Sutherland wrote:
> Is there any way to set ink density, through CUPS, perhaps? Pages
Depends on the printer. If the PPD in www.linuxprinting.org has the data
for ink density, then yes, you can. Otherwise, your chances are slim.
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk
On Sun, 03 Oct 2004, Curt Howland wrote:
> On Sunday 03 October 2004 14:11, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh was heard
> to say:
> > Is usblp loading and finding the printer ? It needs to.
>
> usblp is loaded, but this is all I can find:
See the kernel logs. You need to find someth
On Sun, 03 Oct 2004, Curt Howland wrote:
> correct new ports. USB thumb-drives and memory-sticks function. By
> this I assume that the usb subsystem is working.
Probably it is.
> However, hpoj simply does not detect the printer.
Is usblp loading and finding the printer ? It needs to.
Is /dev co
On Wed, 22 Sep 2004, Nayyar Ahmed wrote:
> I want to install HTB,IMQ , I am worried about
The debian kernel and iproute packages in unstable have HTB support.
IMQ support you will have to patch in on both, and compile them.
IMQ is not safe.
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them
On Thu, 23 Sep 2004, Dave Carrigan wrote:
> On Thu, Sep 23, 2004 at 05:10:38PM +0200, Stefan Gößling-Reisemann wrote:
> > "Spurious 8259A interrupt: IRQ7"
>
> This particular message is probably because you have nothing connected
> to your parallel port. Disable your parallel port in your BIOS or
On Sat, 11 Sep 2004, Brendon Higgins wrote:
> Executive summary:
> KPPP is to blame, pon does not have the behaviour I described.
Well, PPP can have weird interactions with the network and the host on the
other side if misconfigured.
Chech the MTU and MRU that kppp is trying to negotiate as oppos
On Fri, 10 Sep 2004, Vadik wrote:
> I run my own email server which support 5 accounts, but a few of the
> accounts have a lot of messages (4000 in the a single sub-folder is not
> uncommon), in addition to this I often need to run search for words in
[...]
> Any recommendation of server with go
On Fri, 03 Sep 2004, Craig Jackson wrote:
> Sorry, but I meant to say that the 3c59x driver doesn't work. Installing it failed
> using modconf.
lspci -v and lspci -n output, please...
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
them all and in the darkness grind
On Wed, 01 Sep 2004, Kirk Strauser wrote:
> So install Leafnode and use that as your local server.
In which case he might be better off with email anyway.
> > For usenet, it is equal to a network access as the body
> > needs to be fetched from a usenet server. I suppose that you could
> > pre-f
On Fri, 27 Aug 2004, Brendon Higgins wrote:
> I'd remember, but I don't remember doing anything regarding that particular
> acronym. At least, not manually.
A new kernel could have it enabled by default, or something...
> Well, my computer can talk to any other, to a degree. For some reason larg
On Thu, 26 Aug 2004, Brendon Higgins wrote:
> Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> > Looks like the TCP window scaling bug on subclass routing equipment bug to
> > me.
> >
> > Find the tcp_window_scale (or something similar) option under /proc/sys/net
> > a
On Wed, 25 Aug 2004, Kevin Mark wrote:
> On Wed, Aug 25, 2004 at 09:48:23AM -0300, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> > On Wed, 25 Aug 2004, Kevin Mark wrote:
> > > here is snip of http://www.ovislink.com.tw/DRIVERS/8139/linux-help.htm
> > tg3 is not rtl8139.
> used
On Wed, 25 Aug 2004, Kevin Mark wrote:
> here is snip of http://www.ovislink.com.tw/DRIVERS/8139/linux-help.htm
tg3 is not rtl8139.
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond
where the shadows lie.
On Wed, 25 Aug 2004, Jacob Friis Larsen wrote:
> How can I make my system run with full duplex?
Assuming your switch ain't a piece of crap like the old Cajuns we have at
work, which *won't* talk 100Mbps full-duplex (only half-duplex), and that
the cabling and EMI is within acceptable limits...
we
On Wed, 25 Aug 2004, Gabriel Granger wrote:
> make use of SATA controller on this Mobo so that I could HW raid and
> have the benefit of larger and fasters disks I've had nothing but
> problems installing Debian it using Wood 2.4 Kernel and using Sarge 2.6
> kernel. In the end I had to use
On Wed, 25 Aug 2004, Brendon Higgins wrote:
> Me again, same problem quoted below. Doesn't anyone have any ideas about this?
Looks like the TCP window scaling bug on subclass routing equipment bug to
me.
Probably, there is some trash routing your traffic to these sites. As
usual, your chances o
On Tue, 24 Aug 2004, Thomas Adam wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 24, 2004 at 08:23:16AM -0500, John Hasler wrote:
> > Just off the top of my head I see no reason why these files could not be
> > included in the package empty and filled in by the scripts. This would
> > identify the files as belonging to the
On Tue, 24 Aug 2004, Thomas Adam wrote:
> On Tue, Aug 24, 2004 at 10:28:09PM +1000, Paul Gear wrote:
> > Is it fairly common, then, that packages only create their config files,
> > and don't include them in the package originally. I can see times when
>
> Of course it is. There are *hundreds* of
On Mon, 16 Aug 2004, Alvin Oga wrote:
> > What are benefits of having swap on raid?
>
> none .. i suppose ...
>
> but if /dev/hda dies .. you can still be working off /dev/hdc
> along with all your data
Exactly. If the drive that hosts the swap partition dies, the kernel
goes completely craz
On Thu, 12 Aug 2004, Clement wrote:
> botio wrote:
> >Clement wrote:
> >>I can boot up with kernel-image-2.6.7-1-686 but not
> >>kernel-image-2.6.7-1-686-smp. The booting just half soon after
> >>starting. Can you give me some suggestions?
> >>
> >>The hardware is, Intel m/b w 875r chip set and P4
On Tue, 10 Aug 2004, Murali Krishnan Ganapathy wrote:
>Till last week, my Debian/Testing installation was working very well.
> Last week I did an "apt-get upgrade". For the last few days, every time
> I boot, it goes all the way to the login prompt (disabled X for now),
> and even lets me log
On Sun, 08 Aug 2004, Tim Connors wrote:
> Has anyone else who has upgraded within the last few days seen this?
I upgrade every day, and had a fresh reboot 3 days ago. Ntp is working fine
with about 6 higher strata servers.
Check and make sure something weird didn't happen in anything common to
yo
On Sun, 25 Jul 2004, Curt Howland wrote:
> What is "tmpfs"? Is it using any resources that would be better used
> elsewhere? (Using Sid, 2.6.7)
tmpfs will keep everything in RAM. It's disk storage backup is your swap
partitions. Here, I keep /tmp in tmpfs (with a 512MB limit) and let it swap
to
On Fri, 09 Jul 2004, Michael Bernhard Sørensen wrote:
> I've installed foomatic-db-hpijs(I presume that it's the right package)
> to make my hp photosmart 7150 working:
http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2004/06/msg01939.html
PPDs available at www.linuxprinting.org will work. Use the testing or
On Fri, 09 Jul 2004, Ian Douglas wrote:
> I guess if you really wanted to get fancy you could setup postscript
> rendering as service in a chrooted jail, so it doesn't really matter if
> anything runs as it will not have access to the OS file system or
> services.
Doesn't just about anything that
On Wed, 07 Jul 2004, Michael B Allen wrote:
> *default-printer-resolution: 600
This mean, of course, that we need to get xprt-xprintorg to *directly*
inteface to CUPS properly, to get that information (and other supported
spooling systems that can provide such info). And that requires the ability
Always use find (blah) -print0 | xargs -0
It is safer.
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to bring
them all and in the darkness grind them. In the Land of Redmond
where the shadows lie." -- The Silicon Valley Tarot
Henrique Holschuh
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email
On Mon, 21 Jun 2004, martin f krafft wrote:
> The recommended way to disable a service, or to move its
> initialisation priority is update-rc.d. However, when the package is
update-rc.d is for THE PACKAGING SYSTEM. It is not meant as an
admin tool. It could be made smarter, like dpkg-divert, and
On Mon, 14 Jun 2004, Curt Howland wrote:
> Ok, I'm begging.
>
> On sid, USB HP PSC2210. KInfo sees the printer when plugged in and
> powered up. Kprint has the HP driver. All print jobs vanish, however
> and nothing prints.
Note: I do not use KDE or GNOME, and I have my deskjet 5550 (similar to
On Sun, 13 Jun 2004, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh wrote:
> > i8xx TCO timer: initialized (0x1060). heartbeat=30 sec (nowayout=0)
>
> nowayout=0 means it should shutdown the watchdog on close. You have
> a kernel bug. Someone else reported the same problem here. You're the
On Sun, 13 Jun 2004, Hendrik Fuss wrote:
> I've just installed sarge (testing) on a new Fujitsu-Siemens R610 Dual
> Xeon workstation, but it took me quite a while to find out why the
> machine would power cycle every two minutes *only* when running under a
> 2.6 kernel (kernel-image 2.6.6-1-686-smp
Hi List!
On Wed, 26 May 2004, List User wrote:
> someone tell me, what the current status of the packing is? On the official
> Cyrus web site version 1.x is declared obsolete, 2.1 security-fixes only and
> 2.2 the current stable release.
The state is nonexistant in an usable form. I hope I wil
On Thu, 20 May 2004, Andrei Badea wrote:
> just upgraded to the 2.6 kernel (2.6.6) and when I reboot, the hard
> drives are turned off. They are then powered on during the boot
Kernel bug. I hope it will be fixed in 2.6.7.
--
"One disk to rule them all, One disk to find them. One disk to br
On Sat, 01 May 2004, Bill Moseley wrote:
> On Mon, Apr 26, 2004 at 04:35:51PM -0300, Broughton, Derek wrote:
> > When I boot, I experience a number of filesystem related delays.
> >
> > All of my HD partitions are Reiser, but I get:
> > VFS: Can't find ext3 filesystem on dev hda2.
> > VF
On Wed, 21 Apr 2004, Izso Benedek wrote:
> Why loads debian automatically i810-tco module, and restart my computer?
That shouldn't happen unless something opens /dev/watchdog, and fails to pat
it every so often. And if something else is already using /dev/watchdog,
i810-tco should fail to load.
On Fri, 09 Apr 2004, martin f krafft wrote:
> also sprach martin f krafft <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004.04.09.0034 +0200]:
> > > No. nmi_watchdog=1 means IOAPIC, nmi_watchdog=2 means LAPIC. You
> > > need to have the NMI Watchdog compiled into the kernel.
> >
> > This is my problem. I have looked arou
On Thu, 08 Apr 2004, Pigeon wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 07, 2004 at 08:30:29PM -0700, William Ballard wrote:
> > On Thu, Apr 08, 2004 at 05:04:46AM +0200, Christian Schnobrich wrote:
> > > IIRC, ntpdate (and ntpd and chrony) will not set your clock if it is off
> > > by too much. I think by default it is
On Thu, 08 Apr 2004, Kirk Strauser wrote:
> At 2004-04-08T03:04:46Z, Christian Schnobrich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > Oh, and... everybody suggests chrony as a far superior and more stable
> > solution than ntpd.
For certain situations, yes. Chrony is much better for high latency,
inconstant
wn at least
> > once a week or so
>
> I believe this is wrong. Lithium-Ion Batteries actually suffer from
> complete discharge cycles.
Any references? This is an important topic.
> also sprach Henrique de Moraes Holschuh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004.04.08.0630 +0200]:
> &g
On Thu, 08 Apr 2004, martin f krafft wrote:
> also sprach Henrique de Moraes Holschuh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004.04.08.0108 +0200]:
> > No. It is a machine totally dead, CPU won't even NMI, soundboard
> > will keep looping whatever is in its buffer kind of bug. Probab
On Wed, 07 Apr 2004, Antonio Rodriguez wrote:
> Now, putting together what you and Roberto said, what about if the
> machine is in your home, then what, leave it on for days and months
> and months is better than shutting it down once in a while? Who takes
> it better, AMD or INTEL, or even Cru
On Thu, 08 Apr 2004, martin f krafft wrote:
> also sprach Henrique de Moraes Holschuh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004.04.07.1633 +0200]:
> > Let me guess: VIA chipset? I have a A7V motherboard that does the
> > same, unpredictably. The PCI bus just hangs the entire machine.
&
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