are those that leverage market opportunities faster than
their competitors. Guided by this principle, we support gaining a competitive
advantage by providing comprehensive IT support.
May I present what we can do for you?
Best regards
Ray Galt
On 2022-09-24 13:52, Dan Ritter wrote:
Ray Andrews wrote:
To whom might read this. I can't boil this down to a formal bug report but
for what it's worth:
BULLSEYE INSTALL, 2022-09-23:
Decided to do a virgin install of bullseye to my /dev/sdb while keeping
/dev/sda devoted to St
To whom might read this. I can't boil this down to a formal bug report
but for what it's worth:
BULLSEYE INSTALL, 2022-09-23:
Decided to do a virgin install of bullseye to my /dev/sdb while keeping
/dev/sda devoted to Stretch. Got the installer onto a USB stick, and
proceeding normally. The
Thank you for your reply. I am trying to set up this configuration to run Xen
which seems to require manual management.
to 255.255.255.255 port 67 interval 8
DHCPDISCOVER on wlp2s0 to 255.255.255.255 port 67 interval 8
DHCPREQUEST of 192.168.43.247 on wlp2s0 to 255.255.255.255 port 67
DHCPOFFER of 192.168.43.247 from 192.168.43.206
DHCPACK of 192.168.43.247 from 192.168.43.206
bound to 192.168.43.247 -- renewal in 1527 seconds.
Ray
I am installing Debian 9.3 non-free on anamd64 machine. During installation of
the base system, it asks to choose a kernel
Linux-image-4.9.0-4-amd64
Linux-image-amd64
What is the difference of these?
VGs. I have a
quandary about this each time I rebuild, I have a challenge with the Debian
installer on where to put the new system. It seem like I rebuild the LVM each
time which means I would wipe out the previous system.
Ray
Ray
On Sunday, August 27, 2017 at 6:50:06 AM UTC-5, hdv@gmail wrote:
> On 2017-08-26 05:14, ray wrote:
> > I would like to find a way to keep track of changes I make to my system.
> > ...snip
> Hi Ray,
>
> I just returned from a short holiday, so I am a bit late to the p
e there may be value in using both a config mgr and a version
control system. I will start checking into these to better understand.
Thank you,
Ray
On Saturday, August 26, 2017 at 4:50:06 AM UTC-5, Nemeth Gyorgy wrote:
...
> I use etckeeper. Of course in tracks changes in /etc (and
> subdirectories) only, but it is enough for me.
Nemeth,
Thank you. I like the idea of using a version control system.
Ray
nd install it manually with
> apt, configure the files with an editor etc. But I do always at
> least try to "go back" and recreate the working config with
> config management so it's repeatable.
Andy, Thank you. I did not know these existed. I am going to study these
opportunities.
Ray
ld the OS. The laptop I am
building to run Xen is on its 28th build.
I would appreciate any suggestions.
Ray
e rules set
and how might I back them out or comment them out.
> You stopped the network managers?
I removed network manager and I am only using /etc/network/interfaces, I hope.
>
>
> Greetings
>
>
>
>
> 2017. aug. 25. 18:06 ezt írta ("ray" ):
> I am
I don't know what is causing my wireless to be brought up. Where might this be
happening?
Ray
--parity=no
--stop=1"
GRUB_TERMINAL="console serial"
GRUB_TIMEOUT=5
GRUB_CMDLINE_XEN="com1=19200,8n1 console=com1,vga"
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX="console=tty0 console=hvc0"
*** From the above, I expected to see a console with progress. A console did
not come up.
Should a console have come up?
How to I determine what the problem was?
Thanks,
Ray
which interface is up?
Thanks,
Ray
Thus I cannot tell how to use it or
if it is necessary.
I appreciate all input.
Ray
tionally, there is a parameter 'iburst' which I did not find in the Debian
docs but found at http://doc.ntp.org/4.1.1/confopt.htm
Thanks,
Ray
On Tuesday, May 24, 2016 at 9:20:04 PM UTC-5, ray wrote:
> On Tuesday, May 24, 2016 at 2:20:04 PM UTC-5, Sven Joachim wrote:
>
> This will be my next step.
>
> Thanks again,
>
I could not get this to work. I probably have something wrong in
/etc/default/grub:
GRUB_DEFAUL
;
> or edit /etc/default/console-setup directly.
This will be my next step.
Thanks again,
Ray
en as the grub statement is GRUB_GFXMODE.
But I thought the payload = keep was supposed to be 'keep' this mode for
everything after GRUB.
How do I get control of the resolution and font at the console? What about the
terminal?
Ray
How about booting a Live stick1. Download the ISO you want to the stick1.
Plug in another stick2 and dd the ISO to the other stick2. Boot stick2.
27226014.vg
-rw--- 1 root root 1735 Oct 30 04:35 xenvg_00011-1925204888.vg
Some of these seem like duplicates. This may be due to multiple attempts to
build the volumes. Is there a way to determine if all of the are useful?
Ray
254:1032G 0 lvm /xenfs
├─xenvg-test01--pv--guest--swap 254:20 128M 0 lvm
└─xenvg-test01--pv--guest--disk 254:30 4G 0 lvm
How do I make space for the vms?
How might I better set-up/manage the disk space on this laptop?
Thanks in advance,
Ray
Thomas,
Thank you, there was a lot of options for filtering/selection.
Ray
Johan,
Thank you, that works great for duplicates, gives all the info on one line.
Ray
in advance,
Ray
recover. Being able
to identify changes and roll them back would be great.
While Etckeeper keeps metadata for /etc, it may be sufficient for a standard
git version control on other directories.
I would appreciate any examples, models, recommendations along this line.
Ray
I would like to get sound to my headset.
I have jessie running. Watching youtube, I could hear the sound. I install
bluetooth so I could listen on my Plantronics Legend. The installation went
fine including pairing and reporting that the Legend was connected.
I do not hear anything from the
rible gangrenous growth on his neck.
It would have taken him out if Booth had not tried so hard to make a name for
himself.
I know what I am doing, I do it all the time and I use the best tools and I
don't need to account for my methods; I've got a job and take care of my family.
Ray at the Razor's Edge
Felix,
Thank you, that worked great.
> This is expected as a result of the absence of any video config options on
> kernel cmdline. I just wanted to confirm this is what was actually occurring.
I made the xorg.conf to put in the configuration. But there is still no
cmdline entry for this conf
Felix,
Thank you for descriptions.
> > # cat /proc/cmdline
> > placeholder root=/dev/mapper/mycomp--vg-root ro
> > initrd=/install/gtk/initrd.gz quiet
>
> Rather sparse, with nothing attempting to impact display configuration, other
> than hiding init messages (quiet). Did you do that as user
Felix,
Thank you for following up.
> what is output from
>
> #
# cat /proc/cmdline
placeholder root=/dev/mapper/mycomp--vg-root ro initrd=/install/gtk/initrd.gz
quiet
> what is output from
>
> # fbset
# fbset
bash: fbset: command not found
> Is your desired desktop result p
Felix,
Here is an interesting twist. I have reverted both grub and 00_header to the
original (no 1920x1080 parameters) and executed update-grub2, and rebooted. The
desktop comes in at 1920x1080. Currently, the only artifacts directing
1920x1080 are the xrandr scripts in:
/home/user4/.config/a
Felix,
Here is an interesting twist. I have reverted both grub and 00_header to the
original (no 1920x1080 parameters) and executed update-grub2, and rebooted. The
desktop comes in at 1920x1080. Currently, the only artifacts directing
1920x1080 are the xrandr scripts in:
/home/user4/.config/a
I am using jessie.
Here is my experiment plan:
Goal:
Now that grub update ~works, see how to get xrandr to work.
Method:
Save /etc/default/grub as the latest rev.
Reinstantiate the latest version.
Save /etc/grub.d/00_header as the latest rev.
Reinstantiate the latest version.
Run update-grub2
I found this link:
http://askubuntu.com/questions/18444/how-do-i-increase-console-mode-resolution
With some tweaking, it worked. But:
http://www.gnu.org/software/grub/manual/grub.html#Simple-configuration
Says the payload command should be:
GRUB_GFXPAYLOAD_LINUX
The orginal method did not includ
On Saturday, November 7, 2015 at 10:30:05 AM UTC-6, Felix
> That "somewhere" looks to be e.g.
> /etc/X11/Xsession.d/my1920x1080toOverride3840x2160Xsetup in Wheezy or Betsy.
>
> Before you try that, I fail to notice evidence you tried my 2015-11-01 22:11
> -0500 thread suggestion to append the vi
On Saturday, November 7, 2015 at 12:40:05 AM UTC-6, Felix Miata wrote:
>
> If a change from 1960 to 1920 does not help, try putting that xrandr command
> in /etc/X11/ somewhere.
>
> If still no joy, share an Xorg.0.log here.
Felix,
Thank you for the post. You are correct, the 1960 was just a
xfce4 reports the display to be eDP1.
There is now a
~/.screenlayout
with a file
cDP1_1960x1080.sh
with the one line
xrandr --output HDMI1 --off cdP1 --mode 1960x1080 --pos 0x0 --rotate normal
This line was generated by the arandr.
On rebooting, it comes up in 3840x2160.
Openning up arandr, it
Thank you all for the info. That is challenging to understand. But I see
xrandr being used and Xfce (which looks like is needed to get xrandr). So I:
apt-get install Xfce4
with no errors.
I did not include any of the added packages.
I ran xrandr and selected a different configuration sinc
I have a LAN connection on a laptop with jessie designed for a Xen
installation. The /etc/network/interfaces looks like:
auto lo
iface lo inet loopback
allow-hotplug usb0
iface usb0 inet manual
auto xenbr0
iface xenbr0 inet dhcp
bridge_ports usb0
I would like to add wifi to this such that tran
> > On Monday, November 2, 2015 at 10:30:04 PM UTC-6, Reco wrote:
> > >
> > > auto lo
> > > iface lo inet loopback
> > > allow-hotplug usb0
> > > iface usb0 inet manual
> > > auto xenbr0
> > > iface xenbr0 inet dhcp
> > > bridge_ports usb0
> > >
> > > Oh, and remove network-manager while you're a
On Monday, November 2, 2015 at 10:30:04 PM UTC-6, Reco wrote:
>
> Your /etc/network/interfaces does not try to bring usb0 up, so not
> working xenbr0 is to be expected. You need something like this instead:
>
> auto lo
> iface lo inet loopback
> allow-hotplug usb0
> iface usb0 inet manual
> auto
I would like to get the network functioning again. This is a laptop with
jessie. The laptop does not have a Ethernet port. It is connected to a
Dynadock USB 3.0. Ifconfig shows the Ethernet port to be usb0. This system
has been working. I updated it to configure the network for Xen. Immed
On Sunday, November 1, 2015 at 11:20:04 AM UTC-6, Lisi Reisz wrote:
Lisi,
Thank you for the post. The challenge I have with changing the font is there
are many places where this seems must be done. For example, I can set the
desktop font but not the panel font nor the fonts of the pop ups.
On Sunday, November 1, 2015 at 10:50:06 AM UTC-6, Charlie Kravetz wrote:
Charlie,
Thank you that looks good. My challenge to implement it is the response to an
attempted
apt-get install xrandr
which produces
Package xrandr is not available, but is referred to by another package.
This may mean
I would like to change the user desktop displays to 1960x108 from 3800x 2400 as
the font is not readable.
The setup for root is appropriately sized. So I copied the files from:
/etc/xdg/openbox/ lsxde-rc.xml, menu.xml, rc.xml and autostart
to
/home/me/.config/openbox
Then changed owner CHOWN
I would like to thank everyone to helping.
Looks like it is working. Here is the action:
With Live GParted, reduce sda5 to minimum ~ 60GB.
Create new partition, sda6 ~420GB.
Booted back to Debian.
pvcreate /dev/sda6
vgcreate xenvg /dev/sda6
lvcreate -l +100%FREE xenvg -n xenlv
mkfs.ext4 -m 0 /de
Mario,
Thank you for the review.
Yes, there is free space in the LVM. I have gone through the manual many times
(today and the last several months) and don't see a method to add a pv or vg.
It seems to add a pv, it needs a device. And to add a vg, it needs a pv. How
can I add either?
Disp
Now that the /home logical volume has been reduced, I would like to add a
partition in the remaining space or reduce the LV's size to fee the unused
space and create a new logical volume. Since the existing LV totally occupies
the SSD, I don't see how to do this.
I would appreciate any suggesti
On Sunday, October 25, 2015 at 10:00:08 AM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> (...)
> I thought that logging as root was prohibited by GUI display managers.
That is what I have read. But I tried it anyway and found it to work.
> (...)
> I hope you reran the resize2fs command successfully before doin
I would like to than everyone for the input. Here is how it was completed:
Boot into GUI mycomp as root
# df -h
FilesystemSize Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/dm-0 8.2G 2.9G 4.9G 38% /
udev 10M 0 10M 0% /dev
tmpfs
I would like to resize the /home partition but it is mounted, and when umount
is run, it errors with 'busy'.
System Configuration:
I installed jessie on a laptop with one SSD. I used guided partitioning and
selected the whole drive with multiple partitions. The /home now takes up 420
GB. I
Reco,
Thank you for the info. Can you suggest how this can help resolve the issue?
> control-alt-f7 gets you back to graphical mode. On Sun, 18 Oct 2015, ray
> wrote:
The system does not respond to cntrl-alt-f7
Just to clarigy, the system is at the grub prompt in a CSM boot.
The BIOS has two settings for function key implementation. I have tried this
under both.
It is my understanding that UEFI is appropriate for systems with HDD > 2TB.
I have stretch installed on a Toshiba and I am not able to reinstall it.
The first instance was installed using the BIOS mode CSM. I want to reinstall
using UEFI.
Now, I am using the a USB stick which Rufus was used to install stretch 64 DVD
disk 1. I changed the BIOS from CSM to UEFI. Af
OK, I have network connnectivitiy.
While reveiwing desktop functions and properties, I found the network app. All
the availabe networks were listed. I selected the one I want to use, input the
password and it connected. So I will hunt down how to provide this as an
automatic connection.
Using lspci -v
produces a report of the Intel 7265 which states, and
Kernel driver in use: iwlwifi.
ip a
1: lo: mtu 65536 qdisc noqueue state UNKNOWN group
default
link/loopback 00:00:00:00:00:00 brd 00:00:00:00:00:00
inet 127.0.0.1/8 scope host lo
valid_lft forever preferred_lf
This is very close. Debian is installed via Live. The network is not
functioning.
History:
With the non-free iso -
Booting in CSM:
Isolinux.bin missing or corrupt.
No bootable device -- insert boot disk and press any key
Booting in UEFI:
No bootable device -- Please restart system
That sounds great, I will try that right now.
Can files be added to the USB?
I am guessing that since the USB is not mounted, DD does not require any type
of prep.
> This seems very strange- if you are able to get the free version to boot you
> should be able to get the non-free ISO to boot as well. They are identical,
> save the inclusion of non-free firmware.
Yes.
>
> The 'no bootable device' message- does this occur when you select the hard
> drive as t
> But I still can't understand what your problem with the non-free iso is.
> First you appeared to say it was the same as the other (?) now you seem to
> say that you haven't been able to try it. (Why?) I'm confused.
>
Lisi
I have used the non-free firmware on a separate USB stick and the re
moxalt wrote:
> 'built the iso'- what do you mean by this? I presume you meant 'wrote the
> iso'?
Yes, you are correct, I wrote the iso to a USB stick.
> I'm not sure what you're referring to as 'the GUI'- if you're using the
> netinstall CD with non-free firmware as recommended by Sven, you shou
> Reasoning: there was an issue reported that it searched IIRC /dev/sdc
> but not /dev/sdc1 (appropriate for a partitioned stick).
>
> Cheers,
> David.
I had tried inserting the stick (before I read your post), but did not know to
check VC4. Now when I check it, it is streaming errors continuo
> Why not just use
>
> http://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage/unofficial/non-free/cd-including-firmware/
>
> as Sven suggested?
>
> Lisi
I reported on that attempt yesterday - I obtained the same results as the free
version.
> The contents are:
>
> LICENSE.iwlwifi-7265-ucode
> README.iwlwifi-7265-ucode
> iwlwifi-7265-14.ucode
> iwlwifi-7265D-14.ucode
>
> You need to unpack with tar, and put these files themselves in your
> firmware directory on the stick (rather than the whole archive).
I placed these unpacked files
> /lib/firmware/iwlwifi-7265D-10.ucodefirmware-iwlwifi
>
> Thus the package "firmware-iwlwifi" might be what you need?
t--
I have directly loaded the .ucode file on a second USB stick. There was not
change in the system response. Is there another method to do this?
On Monday, October 12, 2015 at 7:20:04 AM UTC-5, Sven Arvidsson wrote:
> On Mon, 2015-10-12 at 04:48 -0700, ray wrote:
> Hi,
>
> It might be easier to simply use installation media with the firmware
> included:
>
> http://cdimage.debian.org/cdimage/unofficial/non-free/
Installing stretch stops at detecting network devices. This is an attempt to
install stretch over the top of Windows 10 on a Toshiba Radius 15 with 2 each
USB2 ports and 2 each USB3 ports, and no RJ-45. Its wireless is based upon the
Intel 7265.
I tested this laptop with the latest Debian L
Lisi,
I like the idea of changing the display manager. I chose LXDE for sufficient
functionality and light weight and because I have read the Gnome did not
support remote desktop in jessie or stretch.
Do you have a suggestion for choices? Maybe it doesn't matter, I can always
change. That
Thank you all for the input.
My 1.5 TB disk is not full; I only have Debian on it.
I found I can login with the shell. As Lisi points out, this is probably a
display manager issue.
I logged in as root so I could use the GUI to make it easier to follow
suggestions and record the results. Here
Sven
Thank you very much. I have installed LXDE and I don't know how to open a
console. Please suggest how I might learn to do that.
Lisi
Thank you.
Another approach I tried was to log in as root (I did not expect that to work).
So I issued:
passwd .
I responded to the two password queries and received a success signal. I would
expect that to solve the issue.
After logging off, I attempted to log in with the updated pa
I cannot log on. I don't know if this is related, I was setting up for remote
desktop, setup a password for the remote session. After rebooting, my normal
user and password do not work and my rdp password does not work.
What can I do to recover?
This is Debian stretch with LXDE.
On Wednesday, September 16, 2015 at 2:50:05 AM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> ray a écrit :
> >
> > Using Linux software RAID0, my speed (MB/s) findings are:
> > Single SSDRAID0, 2 SSDs
> > Intel SATA III540 960
> > Intel SATA II
To follow-up:
The SATA controllers are on an Asus P9X79-E WS. The controllers consist of:
Intel SATA III, 2 ports
Intel SATA II, 4 ports
Marvel SATA III, 4 ports
I had previously benchmarked controller based RAID0 and Linux RAID0 and found
the software solution on this box was 10% slower than th
New install of old pieces. Running stretch.
I have 3 pairs of SSDs. The components are 30, 60, and 120GB modules. There are
two of each size in an array.
In all cases, using the LXDE 'disk' for benchmarking, all three sizes have
similar single module read speeds of 520 to 540 MB/sec. In the RA
I have found that I can copy an existing entry in EFI, EFI/debian for example,
past it in parallel with a new name, EFI/test, update-grub and when I reboot, I
have a new choice to the same debian instance.
This suggests that I can now delete the debian instance, update grub, only have
on instan
On Thursday, September 10, 2015 at 11:10:05 AM UTC-5, David Wright wrote:
> Quoting ray :
> > On Wednesday, September 9, 2015 at 2:10:04 PM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> > > ray a écrit :
> [...]
> > > > A baffling point: In rEFInd the path is
> &g
On Thursday, September 10, 2015 at 10:00:06 AM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> ray a écrit :
> > I have only been able to boot the HDD instance. When I navigate to
> > the SSD instance, nothing is there.
>
> Sorry, I should have mentionned that I never used rEFInd (fortunat
On Thursday, September 10, 2015 at 10:00:06 AM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> ray a écrit :
> > I have only been able to boot the HDD instance. When I navigate to
> > the SSD instance, nothing is there.
>
> Sorry, I should have mentionned that I never used rEFInd (fortunat
On Wednesday, September 9, 2015 at 2:10:04 PM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> ray a écrit :
> > On Tuesday, September 8, 2015 at 8:10:08 AM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> >
> >> After booting the HDD system with rEFInd, running 'grub-install' should
> >
On Tuesday, September 8, 2015 at 3:50:04 AM UTC-5, Rick Thomas wrote:
> Hi Ray,
>
> I'll try to answer your questions...
>
> On Sep 7, 2015, at 4:36 PM, ray wrote:
>
> > Rick,
> >
> > Thank you for responding and providing all the info.
> >
>
On Tuesday, September 8, 2015 at 8:10:08 AM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> After booting the HDD system with rEFInd, running 'grub-install' should
> reinstall the bootloader properly. See also useful options in my
> previous message.
Yes, it is now booting. This is with the rEFInd stick:
root@m
On Monday, September 7, 2015 at 8:40:05 PM UTC-5, ray wrote:
> Update:
I would like to clarify that I was able to boot the HDD instance from the
rEFInd stick. But, after rebooting and removing the stick, nothing will boot -
still.
On Tuesday, September 8, 2015 at 5:40:04 AM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> ray a écrit :
> > On Monday, September 7, 2015 at 3:40:05 AM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> >>
> >> Did the Debian installer boot in EFI or BIOS/legacy mode ?
> >
> > The motherboa
Update:
I booted up a rEFInd stick. Two boots were found, the first one was the HDD
Debian instance and it booted. The second would not boot so I could not
identify it.
I opened the EFI shell and found:
Fs0: no content
Fs1: no content
Fs2: no content
Fs3: rEFInd stick
Fs4 - 7: no content
Fs8
Rick,
Thank you for responding and providing all the info.
On Monday, September 7, 2015 at 6:20:07 AM UTC-5, Rick Thomas wrote:
> On Sep 5, 2015, at 7:24 PM, ray wrote:
>
> > I would like to configure LVMs for everything including boot.
>
> Is it "just for fun"
On Monday, September 7, 2015 at 3:40:05 AM UTC-5, Pascal Hambourg wrote:
> ray a écrit :
> >
> > AMD64 32G RAM
> > sda, sdb 32GB + 32GB, RAID0 - md0, LVM, GParted shows 1MB reserved, 1 GB
> > (EFI)
> > sdc, sdd 64GB + 64GB, RAID0- md1, md127, LVM, GParted s
Pascal,
Thank you for the informative response. I would like to assure I address your
concerns it this recovery.
> (...)
> > System description:
> > amd64 with a HDD and 3 pairs of SSDs. The SSD are set up as RAID0 in
> > pairs. The HDD currently hosts Debian 8. I used this to configure the
>
I would like to configure LVMs for everything including boot. I have read that
others have done this but an I have not found the method.
While my desire is to boot from the LVM, I would consider an alternative, if I
could find one.
System description:
amd64 with a HDD and 3 pairs of SSDs. The
>
> Change that symlink to point to poweroff.target:
>
> # ln -s
/lib/systemd/system/poweroff.target/etc/systemd/system/ctrl-alt-del.target
That worked fine to change ctrl-alt-del to 'poweroff' butis it possible
to return to the old 'cold reboot' behavior? I like to go right back to
the bootl
lectable? It would seem that
without the i386 components, it really wouldn't be a multiarch solution. Or
did I miss something (again)? Is there a sequence that these need to be
installed under?
Ray
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "u
Marko,
> Of course you are, in one of previous posts you got a solution but looks
> like you missed it :)
Thank you for responding. I have overlooked it a couple times now; going back
through, I don't see it. Please suggest what it was, I can't see what I am
missin
initial error of not finding the
architecture was persistent.
Ray
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive:
https://lists.debian.org/e0a29707-c069-4c60-bb69-c7efe79cb...@googlegroups.com
old but it addressing building the driver package. Is there any
problem with this approach?
Thanks for all the input,
Ray
Ray
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-user-requ...@lists.debian.org
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact listmas...@lists.debian.org
Archive:
https://lists.debian.org/c654bac5-f549-4f22-9a7b-ff3ba3e77...@googlegroups.com
-packager.sh:
dpkg-architecture: not found
Error: unsupported architecture:
Removing temporary directory: fglrx-install.hrcfIz
I have looked but can't find what 'dpkg-architecture: not found' means, none
the less, how to address it.
Ray
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to debian-u
chitecture:
Just to confirm:
lsb_release -a
No LSB modules are available.
Distributor ID:Debian
Description:Debian GNU/Linux 7.4 (wheezy)
Release:7.4
Codename:wheezy
Yes, wheezy is stable; today. But at the time the driver package was built,
what would have been 'stable'?
Ra
1 - 100 of 1274 matches
Mail list logo