Quoting Paul Sutton (2019-04-16 20:59:54)
> On 16/04/2019 19:19, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> > GTK
> > * listaller
> > * synaptic (but not in Buster)
Synaptic seems targeted Buster again, since yesterday:
https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/synaptic
- Jonas
--
* Jonas Smedegaard - idealist &
On 04/16/2019 12:36 PM, Matthew Crews wrote:
On 4/16/19 10:32 AM, Michael Stone wrote:
On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 06:27:34PM +0100, Paul Sutton wrote:
There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain this
in the presentation as
Apt - 1.8.0 - command line tool (universal)
Quoting Jonas Smedegaard (2019-04-16 20:19:15)
> Quoting Paul Sutton (2019-04-16 19:27:34)
> > There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain this
> > in the presentation as
> >
> > Apt - 1.8.0 - command line tool (universal)
> > Gnome-packagekit - used for gnome desktop
Quoting Richard Hector (2019-04-17 03:55:44)
> On 17/04/19 6:19 AM, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> > GTK
> > * listaller
> > * synaptic (but not in Buster)
>
> Just looked up listaller.
>
> It seems to be
> * not in buster
> * only on arm64?
> * an installer for its own kind of packages, not
On 17/04/19 6:19 AM, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> GTK
> * listaller
> * synaptic (but not in Buster)
Just looked up listaller.
It seems to be
* not in buster
* only on arm64?
* an installer for its own kind of packages, not debs.
That's just from reading its page on packages.debian.org.
Quoting Gene Heskett (2019-04-16 21:00:04)
> On Tuesday 16 April 2019 13:32:10 Michael Stone wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 06:27:34PM +0100, Paul Sutton wrote:
> > >There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain
> > > this in the presentation as
> > >
> > >Apt - 1.8.0
Quoting Paul Sutton (2019-04-16 20:59:54)
>
>
> On 16/04/2019 19:19, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> > Quoting Paul Sutton (2019-04-16 19:27:34)
> >> There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain this
> >> in the presentation as
> >>
> >> Apt - 1.8.0 - command line tool
On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 03:00:04PM -0400, Gene Heskett wrote:
if you are damned carefull, I had it destroy 3 installs already, so badly
I had to do a full reinstall.
You have to really try, since it tells you what it's going to do before
it does anything. But you have a history of odd
On Tuesday 16 April 2019 13:32:10 Michael Stone wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 06:27:34PM +0100, Paul Sutton wrote:
> >There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain
> > this in the presentation as
> >
> >Apt - 1.8.0 - command line tool (universal)
> >Gnome-packagekit -
On 16/04/2019 19:19, Jonas Smedegaard wrote:
> Quoting Paul Sutton (2019-04-16 19:27:34)
>> There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain this
>> in the presentation as
>>
>> Apt - 1.8.0 - command line tool (universal)
>> Gnome-packagekit - used for gnome desktop
Quoting Paul Sutton (2019-04-16 19:27:34)
> There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain this
> in the presentation as
>
> Apt - 1.8.0 - command line tool (universal)
> Gnome-packagekit - used for gnome desktop environment
> Synaptic - 0.84.5 used for most other Desktop
On Tue, 16 Apr 2019 18:27:34 +0100
Paul Sutton wrote:
Hello Paul,
>I understand that KDE is going to be using Wayland too (Wayland
>website), does this mean it will use synaptic or does KDE and use its
Currently, I run Synaptic with KDE. No problems.
There's also muon - a QT based package
On 4/16/19 10:32 AM, Michael Stone wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 06:27:34PM +0100, Paul Sutton wrote:
>> There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain this
>> in the presentation as
>>
>> Apt - 1.8.0 - command line tool (universal)
>> Gnome-packagekit - used for gnome
On Tue, Apr 16, 2019 at 06:27:34PM +0100, Paul Sutton wrote:
There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain this
in the presentation as
Apt - 1.8.0 - command line tool (universal)
Gnome-packagekit - used for gnome desktop environment
Synaptic - 0.84.5 used for most other
Hi
Just a few questions for clarity.
There are 3 main ways to install packages, I have tried to explain this
in the presentation as
Apt - 1.8.0 - command line tool (universal)
Gnome-packagekit - used for gnome desktop environment
Synaptic - 0.84.5 used for most other Desktop Environment(s)
I
Hello Debian users :)
I have googled a little bit and came to the conclusion that cgroups
should be managed with systemd. (Thanks to Nicolas George for the
systemd hint :^) )
For anyone who is interested here is a good guide from RedHat about
resource management with cgroups and systemd:
I have found a Fedora guide to cgroups (I know this is Debian.. but i
could really not find anything specific to Debian)
They mention that there is a cgconfig service for systemd.. My problem
is that i could not find a equivalent service for my Debian system.
Listing all the units with
Le quintidi 25 fructidor, an CCXXIV, mo a écrit :
Should i even attempt to manage cgroups this way? (Sorry, this must sound
quite "noobish")
Have you checked whether systemd can do the kind of control over users that
you want to? I know it uses cgroups intensively, so perhaps it already has a
Le quintidi 25 fructidor, an CCXXIV, mo a écrit :
> Should i even attempt to manage cgroups this way? (Sorry, this must sound
> quite "noobish")
Have you checked whether systemd can do the kind of control over users that
you want to? I know it uses cgroups intensively, so perhaps it already has a
Hello fellow Debian users :)
First off, some general information regarding my Debian install:
$ lsb_release -a
Distributor ID: Debian
Description:Debian GNU/Linux 8.5 (jessie)
Release:8.5
Codename: jessie
Now to my problems:
I'm currently looking into cgroups. (Planning to use
Depo Catcher wrote:
I've played around with this a bit and considering switching over my
workstation to Debian.
Currently I use FreeBSD - but the Virtual Machine software I use
(VMWare) it's supported as well as on Linux.
Few questions I have:
During install there is an option to install
Depo Catcher wrote:
I've played around with this a bit and considering switching over my
workstation to Debian.
Currently I use FreeBSD - but the Virtual Machine software I use
(VMWare) it's supported as well as on Linux.
Few questions I have:
During install there is an option to install
Quoth Depo Catcher:
During install there is an option to install to encrypted disk which is
pretty sweet sounding.
How does that work, I'm assuming everything but /boot is encrypted? Does
it use GELI or something else?
I'll go down that road soon, too. I'm still on unencrypted fs' but am
On Mon, Jan 21, 2008 at 04:55:25PM +0100, ??.
wrote:
Quoth Depo Catcher:
Say I want
to apply all the security patches [or to get all updates] for my version,
is there an easy way to do that?
Debian stable is already very secure, the maintainers do
I've played around with this a bit and considering switching over my
workstation to Debian.
Currently I use FreeBSD - but the Virtual Machine software I use
(VMWare) it's supported as well as on Linux.
Few questions I have:
During install there is an option to install to encrypted disk
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/PCI-X
It seems so.
However, according to this page, the DL380 G2 does, in fact, have 2
USB ports on it. Are they only v1.1?
http://h18004.www1.hp.com/products/quickspecs/10902_div/10902_div.html
Yes 1.1 only
Kelly
Hi,
Having now got Debian 'etch' installed and working nicely on my compaq
DL380G2 (4*36Gb using RAID5 on the intergrated SmartArray 5i works
flawlessly and fast), I now am thinking about some of the tasks I need this
machine to ideally perform.
One of them is as a print server. Unfortuately
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On 05/19/07 19:39, Kelly Harding wrote:
Hi,
Having now got Debian 'etch' installed and working nicely on my compaq
DL380G2 (4*36Gb using RAID5 on the intergrated SmartArray 5i works
flawlessly and fast), I now am thinking about some of the tasks
On 20/05/07, Ron Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 05/19/07 19:39, Kelly Harding wrote:
Anyway, I used to have my old HP LaserJet 6L on my Beige G3 PowerMac
running OS X 10.2. Worked fine till I retired the machine due to being
too old, the machine that replaced it (733Mhz G4
On Sat, May 19, 2007 at 07:56:40PM -0500, Ron Johnson wrote:
If the DL380G2 has an open PCI slot, then you could buy a Firewire
card. But I'd bet that the DL380 requires cards with a proprietary
form factory that only Compaq/HP sells.
Actually, we have a bunch of DL380G2 machines at work.
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On 05/19/07 20:04, Kelly Harding wrote:
On 20/05/07, *Ron Johnson* [EMAIL PROTECTED]
mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 05/19/07 19:39, Kelly Harding wrote:
Anyway, I used to have my old HP LaserJet 6L on my Beige G3
Second question is regarding adding USB2.0 /Firewire to the
machine to
enable use of USB2.0/Firewire external drives, which would allow
me to
move drives easily between machines. Does anyone have any
recommendation
for combined USB2.0/firewire PCI
If the DL380G2 has an open PCI slot, then you could buy a Firewire
card. But I'd bet that the DL380 requires cards with a
proprietary
form factory that only Compaq/HP sells.
It has 3 open PCI 64bit PCI slots. Before buying a Firewire card I
want
PCI or PCI-X?
To
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On 05/19/07 23:02, Kelly Harding wrote:
If the DL380G2 has an open PCI slot, then you could buy a Firewire
card. But I'd bet that the DL380 requires cards with a
proprietary
form factory that only Compaq/HP sells.
It
i've switched to opensource ati drivers as proprietary ones are broken
in sid (conflicts with xorg 7.1). whatever...
but you didn't answer ? is aiglx now part of debian ? will there be a
compiz package soon ?
I didn't find the answer to this question with google so I'm asking
here.
thanks
On Sat, Sep 23, 2006 at 02:58:36PM +0200, Nicoco Kinlidex wrote:
i've switched to opensource ati drivers as proprietary ones are broken
in sid (conflicts with xorg 7.1). whatever...
but you didn't answer ? is aiglx now part of debian ? will there be a
compiz package soon ?
I didn't find
Hi everyone !
I've noticed that Xorg 7.1 is now in sid.
I'm using ATI's proprietary drivers with a Radeon 9250 and i'm wondering
if updating is safe. Has anyone tried ?
I've read on Wikipedia that AIGLX is part of Xorg since 7.1
Does this mean that hardware accelerated desktop is now part of
http://fedoraproject.org/wiki/RenderingProject/aiglx
AIGLX only supported open source ATI and Intel drivers
+ new Nvidia drivers 1.0-9* are supported
В Чтв, 21/09/2006 в 23:33 +0200, Nicoco Kinlidex пишет:
Hi everyone !
I've noticed that Xorg 7.1 is now in sid.
I'm using ATI's proprietary
Hi,
I had automount with SMBFS working with Suse, now I have installed Sarge
and cannnot get it to work.
In /etc/auto.master
#/misc /etc/auto.misc --timeout=60
/smb/etc/auto.smb -v -d
#/misc /etc/auto.misc
#/net /etc/auto.net
In /etc/auto.smb (all on one line):
test
On Wed, Dec 08, 2004 at 06:33:28AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 01:41 -0500, Kevin Mark wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 10:26:54PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 21:28 -0800, Marc Wilson wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 08:20:58PM -0800, Rich Rudnick
On Thu, 2004-12-09 at 06:48 -0500, Kevin Mark wrote:
On Wed, Dec 08, 2004 at 06:33:28AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 01:41 -0500, Kevin Mark wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 10:26:54PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 21:28 -0800, Marc Wilson wrote:
Steve Block wrote:
Chris Lale wrote:
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 15:44, Sridhar M.A. wrote:
On Wed, Dec 08, 2004 at 07:13:50AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
Last I checked, v2.8 is not in Sarge, yet. Besides, I run Sid,
so don't care that much about Sarge.
I think about 4 days back it made it
Steve Block wrote:
Chris Lale wrote:
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 15:44, Sridhar M.A. wrote:
On Wed, Dec 08, 2004 at 07:13:50AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
Last I checked, v2.8 is not in Sarge, yet. Besides, I run Sid,
so don't care that much about Sarge.
I think about 4 days back it made it
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 01:41 -0500, Kevin Mark wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 10:26:54PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 21:28 -0800, Marc Wilson wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 08:20:58PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
[snip]
Hi Rich,
I have met a few of the ubuntu Developers
Ron Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 01:41 -0500, Kevin Mark wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 10:26:54PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 21:28 -0800, Marc Wilson wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 08:20:58PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
[snip]
Hi Rich,
I have met a few of the ubuntu
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 12:42 +, Jerome BENOIT wrote:
Ron Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 01:41 -0500, Kevin Mark wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 10:26:54PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 21:28 -0800, Marc Wilson wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 08:20:58PM
On Wed, Dec 08, 2004 at 07:13:50AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
Last I checked, v2.8 is not in Sarge, yet. Besides, I run Sid,
so don't care that much about Sarge.
I think about 4 days back it made it into sarge. I have it on my system.
$ apt-cache policy gnome-session
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 15:44, Sridhar M.A. wrote:
On Wed, Dec 08, 2004 at 07:13:50AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
Last I checked, v2.8 is not in Sarge, yet. Besides, I run Sid,
so don't care that much about Sarge.
I think about 4 days back it made it into sarge. I have it on
That doesn't negate the fact that Knoppix isn't Debian. It's based on
ok, but when the OS ignores changes to inittab and XF86Config is that knoppix
or debian?
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On Wednesday 08 December 2004 1:31 pm, you wrote:
That doesn't negate the fact that Knoppix isn't Debian.
ok, but when the OS ignores changes to inittab and XF86Config is that
knoppix or
Chris Lale wrote:
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 15:44, Sridhar M.A. wrote:
On Wed, Dec 08, 2004 at 07:13:50AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
Last I checked, v2.8 is not in Sarge, yet. Besides, I run Sid,
so don't care that much about Sarge.
I think about 4 days back it made it into sarge. I have
It depends, and this question demands another. What did you install,
Knoppix or Debian?
ARRGH! I'm lost in a novel by Kafka!
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On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 16:17 -0600, Steve Block wrote:
Chris Lale wrote:
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 15:44, Sridhar M.A. wrote:
On Wed, Dec 08, 2004 at 07:13:50AM -0600, Ron Johnson wrote:
Last I checked, v2.8 is not in Sarge, yet. Besides, I run Sid,
so don't care that much about
Hi all,
I migrated from slack8 to debian? via a knoppix3.4 livecd which I installed on
a K6 500 box.
I apologize if these seem obvious to you.
Where are the drivers? the c files? I looked everywhere. Found lots of h
files, no c's. On the CD there's a big knoppix file. Are the files I'm
On Tuesday 07 December 2004 10:40 am, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Where are the drivers? the c files? I looked everywhere. Found lots of
h files, no c's. On the CD there's a big knoppix file. Are the files
I'm looking for in there? How do I access them?
Knoppix is not Debian. You'll probably
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I migrated from slack8 to debian? via a knoppix3.4 livecd which I
installed on a K6 500 box.
Knoppix is not Debian - it is a LiveCD that is a mixture of Stable, Testing,
and Unstable that does not correspond to any actual Debian version.
If you want an actual version
Knoppix is not Debian -
depends what you mean by not ;-) When the OS boots the splashscreen has the
debian spiral logo and the word debian prominently displayed
searches for knoppix return with many references to debian
near the top of search results for knoppix + list I find
[EMAIL
On Tuesday 07 December 2004 4:11 pm, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Knoppix is not Debian -
depends what you mean by not ;-) When the OS boots the splashscreen
has the debian spiral logo and the word debian prominently displayed
searches for knoppix return with many references to debian
On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 16:11 -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Knoppix is not Debian -
depends what you mean by not ;-) When the OS boots the splashscreen has the
debian spiral logo and the word debian prominently displayed
searches for knoppix return with many references to debian
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 08:20:58PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
'Debian' consists of the packages in main. The fundamental essence
(IMHO) of main is that these are packages put together by individuals
who have undergone a peer review process before getting commit rights to
main. Knoppix, ubunto,
On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 21:28 -0800, Marc Wilson wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 08:20:58PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
'Debian' consists of the packages in main. The fundamental essence
(IMHO) of main is that these are packages put together by individuals
who have undergone a peer review
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 10:26:54PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 21:28 -0800, Marc Wilson wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 08:20:58PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
'Debian' consists of the packages in main. The fundamental essence
(IMHO) of main is that these are packages
On Wed, 2004-12-08 at 01:41 -0500, Kevin Mark wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 10:26:54PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
On Tue, 2004-12-07 at 21:28 -0800, Marc Wilson wrote:
On Tue, Dec 07, 2004 at 08:20:58PM -0800, Rich Rudnick wrote:
'Debian' consists of the packages in main. The
Hello Debian User,
Q1:
I am using GNOME and Debian woody updated from unstable distro. When I
right click on the date and time (displayed at the right-top of the
GNOME) I got error:
Failed to locate a program for configuring the date and time. Perhaps
none is installed?
What kind of program
Failed to locate a program for configuring the date
and time. Perhaps none is installed?
What kind of program should I install?
Maybe ntp-simple would do it.
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On Thu, 29 Jan 2004 07:53:16 -0700
Matt Miller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Failed to locate a program for configuring the date
and time. Perhaps none is installed?
What kind of program should I install?
Maybe ntp-simple would do it.
Try tzconfig.
Regards,
David.
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* Phillipus Gunawan [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2004-01-29 12:10:54]:
Hello Debian User,
Q1:
I am using GNOME and Debian woody updated from unstable distro. When I
right click on the date and time (displayed at the right-top of the
GNOME) I got error:
Failed to locate a program for configuring
Hi Neal,
On Sunday, August 3, 2003, at 12:50 PM, Neal Lippman wrote:
1) Which lvm package to install? There are two obvious choices, lvm10
and lvm2. While lvm2 is the new rewrite, which is supposedly stable,
it apparently lacks some features and according to the debian.org
description of the
I am looking at installing the lvm layer on my file server, which is
presently running woody. I have two 80GB hd's, one of which presently
stores my /home partition (exported via both nfs and samba to the other
systems on my home lan), and another which I just installed. (Actually,
there's a third
On Fri, Oct 18, 2002 at 10:23:52AM -0500, Wathen, Metherion wrote:
2.) How do I find out what resolution mode X is running in (i.e. 640x480,
800x600, etc.)?
xwininfo, and then click on the root window (the desktop, that is).
3.) How do find out where programs are installed?
I ran dpkg
On Fri, 18 Oct 2002 14:34:15 -0500
Wathen, Metherion [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks, I really appreciate for your help.
I have limited space on my harddrive is there a way to see how much space a
package is going to take before installing it?
If you use aptitude (I'd recommend it) then you
Matthew Weier O'Phinney [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2002-10-18 13:35:05 -0400]:
-- Wathen, Metherion [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
(on Friday, 18 October 2002, 10:23 AM -0500):
2.) How do I find out what resolution mode X is running in (i.e. 640x480,
800x600, etc.)?
I'm sure there are other ways, but if
Hello all,
I have a few of config questions:
1.) How do I fix the problem of program windows that are too big for my
screen?
Whenever I open gmc, windowmaker control panel, or any other app the window
is huge,I mean like off the screen big; using the resize command I can only
make the windows
-- Wathen, Metherion [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
(on Friday, 18 October 2002, 10:23 AM -0500):
2.) How do I find out what resolution mode X is running in (i.e. 640x480,
800x600, etc.)?
I'm sure there are other ways, but if you look in your
/etc/X11/XF86Config file, you'll see an area towards the
Hello,
I've got just a few questions that maybe someone can help me out with. Thanks
for any help.
1. What's the command line option to record mp3's (on my hard drive) to cds
(that can be played in cd players) using mkisofs, cdrecord, mpg123, etc? I
have tried a couple frontends, but none
High,
On Fri, 8 Mar 2002, Greg Murphy wrote:
Hello,
I've got just a few questions that maybe someone can help me out with. Thanks
for any help.
1. What's the command line option to record mp3's (on my hard drive) to cds
(that can be played in cd players) using mkisofs, cdrecord, mpg123
On Wednesday 20 February 2002 12:18 am, Francis Pineda
wrote:
Greetings Debian Community!
I am currently a computer networking student researching
different flavours of Unix/Linux. From the advice of my
instructor, I have shosen to research Debian. He says
it's, Really Cool I find it
Hi,
1. What is the user base targeted? Is it simply geared towards the
home-user looking for a free OS? Or is it geared more towards the
power-user?
Definately more power user oriented. While my opinion may not be popular on
here, I would probably recommend going with Mandrake Linux 8.1
Greetings Debian Community!
I am currently a computer networking student
researching different flavours of Unix/Linux. From the advice of my
instructor, I have shosen to research Debian. He says it's, "Really
Cool" I find it very appealing and hope to install it as soon as my system
is set
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On Tuesday 11 December 2001 10:49 am, Dougie Nisbet wrote:
I usually use kmail for my e-mail, but I have exim installed too. I mean to
learn about it some day. I'm getting some puzzling internet connections
that appear to be initiated by exim, but
I usually use kmail for my e-mail, but I have exim installed too. I mean to
learn about it some day.
I'm getting some puzzling internet connections that appear to be initiated by
exim, but I can't see where it's doing it.
The syslog shows:
Dec 11 10:23:01 tbird2 /USR/SBIN/CRON[29960]: (mail)
On Tue, 2001-12-11 at 10:49, Dougie Nisbet wrote:
I usually use kmail for my e-mail, but I have exim installed too. I mean to
learn about it some day.
I'm getting some puzzling internet connections that appear to be initiated by
exim, but I can't see where it's doing it.
The syslog shows:
Hello,
I have a few questions about Debian-packages:
- Is there an easy way (not ar+tar) to see what files a package will
install bevor it is installed? (after install 'dpkg -L' will do it)
More then one. For example:
dpkg-deb -c deb
- If I build a debian-package
Quoth M G Berberich,
Hello,
I have a few questions about Debian-packages:
- Is there an easy way (not ar+tar) to see what files a package will
install bevor it is installed? (after install 'dpkg -L' will do it)
eval `/usr/bin/lesspipe`
less filename.deb
is one way...
cheers,
damon
Hello,
I have a few questions about Debian-packages:
- Is there an easy way (not ar+tar) to see what files a package will
install bevor it is installed? (after install 'dpkg -L' will do it)
- If I build a debian-package for a program that needs p.e.
/var/log/ppplog. Should '/var/log/ppplog
M G Berberich [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
- Is there an easy way (not ar+tar) to see what files a package will
install bevor it is installed? (after install 'dpkg -L' will do it)
Yes, 'dpkg -c foo.deb' (--contents). 'dpkg -I foo.deb' (--info) shows
you some other information about the package.
-
Stallman [EMAIL PROTECTED] -
Date: Tue, 14 Nov 2000 09:50:13 -0700 (MST)
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From: Richard Stallman [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: a few questions
Reply-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED
Rotten 4. How is Linux pronounced: lih-nucks or lie-nucks?
lih-nucks i think is the 'real' way but i always say LIE NUCKS. some hate
me for it..but i dont care :)
nate
Linux is based on Minix, and Linus' name (which is not pronounced
LIE-nus, but the finnish LEE-noos). You really have
Dwayne C . Litzenberger said:
LYE-nucks is totally unfounded (you just don't
pronounce his name that way).
Don't know where you're from, but, yes, in the US, Linus _is_ normally
pronounced line-us. True, it's not the way Mr. Torvalds is likely to
say his name, but it's no more incorrect than
I have a few questions about installing Debian Linux 2.0
(NOTE: I am using the Debian CD, and am currently running Windoze
98):
1. When I run the boot.bat file it always says that I don't
have enough memory available. I find this odd, considering that I have 256MB of
RAM.
2. I have
Tom Gray wrote:
3. Should I defragment my hard drive?
If your Windows C: is using the whole drive and you want to break it up
to let Linux use some, then yes.
4. How is Linux pronounced: lih-nucks or lie-nucks?
Why not listen to Linus himself say it?
On Wed, 3 Nov 1999, Tom Gray wrote:
Rotten I have a few questions about installing Debian Linux 2.0 (NOTE: I am
using the Debian CD, and am currently running Windoze 98):
Rotten
Rotten 1. When I run the boot.bat file it always says that I don't have enough
memory available. I find this odd
Tom Gray said:
4. How is Linux pronounced: lih-nucks or lie-nucks?
Linus's name is pronounced (in Finnish) lih-nus, so the 'offical'
pronunciation is lih-nux. However, he has said that, since his name is
pronounced lye-nus in English, it is appropriate for English-speakers to
pronounce it
On Thu, 9 Sep 1999, Aaron Solochek wrote:
I have the panel starting in my windowmaker environment via
(GNUstep/Library/WindowMaker/autostart) panel .
I also load the gen_util_applet and gmc the same way.
Question 1) Very often when I load windowmaker it says there is already
a panel
I have the panel starting in my windowmaker environment via
(GNUstep/Library/WindowMaker/autostart) panel .
I also load the gen_util_applet and gmc the same way.
Question 1) Very often when I load windowmaker it says there is already
a panel running, and do I want to continue. I can see that
John Gay wrote:
Thanks for the info, but I think you over looked a few items.
The reason I want to upgrade to potato is, I installed x11amp, which required
newer libs than slink uses. This has broken apt. I've seen this problem
mentioned before and the recommended fix was to upgrade to
On Sun, Jun 20, 1999 at 07:49:32PM +0100, Frankie wrote:
If there is not an x11amp package in slink, then a solution would be to
download the
(debianised) source and compile it. Almost all of the debian sources (in my
experience) seem to compile straight away, with no problems. This way the
Thanks for the info, but I think you over looked a few items.
The reason I want to upgrade to potato is, I installed x11amp, which required
newer libs than slink uses. This has broken apt. I've seen this problem
mentioned before and the recommended fix was to upgrade to potato. Also, my
video
I've been following this list fro a while and currently have 2.1 installed on my
PC at home. I got a CD from a friend who provides various CD's for the asking
here in Ireland. I choose Debian because I like the philosophy, though I don't
subscribe to some of the extremist views I've heard RE:
John Gay wrote:
I've been following this list fro a while and currently have 2.1 installed on
my PC at home. I got a CD from a friend who provides various CD's for the
asking here in Ireland. I choose Debian because I like the philosophy
Welcome! I'll try to answer a couple of your
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