On 9/21/25 8:22 AM, John Hasler wrote:
I wrote:
It wants the password for "debian" on 192.168.0.213. What is
192.168.0.213?
COMCAST writes:
It's the address for my attached Rasperrypi.
Ask on a RaspberryPi forum. Raspberry Pi OS is derived from Debian but
they make changes.
I suspect t
Try https://raspberryexpert.com/raspberry-pi-default-login-password/
--
John Hasler
j...@sugarbit.com
Elmwood, WI USA
I wrote:
> It wants the password for "debian" on 192.168.0.213. What is
> 192.168.0.213?
COMCAST writes:
> It's the address for my attached Rasperrypi.
Ask on a RaspberryPi forum. Raspberry Pi OS is derived from Debian but
they make changes.
--
John Hasler
j...@sugarbit.com
Elmwood, WI USA
On 9/18/25 12:58, John Hasler wrote:
It wants the password for "debian" on 192.168.0.213. What is
192.168.0.213?
It's the address for my attached Rasperrypi.
Sent by iPhone 7.
> On Sep 18, 2025, at 16:46, debian-u...@howorth.org.uk wrote:
>
> COMCAST wrote:
>> The question is. What password am I being asked? I dearly need to
>> know! I've tried my servers password of "fast" and my remote
>> password of "raspberry". And it still gives me the same
Please answer the other questions you've been asked. Until you do so we
cannot help you.
--
John Hasler
j...@sugarbit.com
Elmwood, WI USA
On Thu, Sep 18, 2025 at 9:33 AM COMCAST wrote:
> The question is. What password am I being asked?
It would appear you're attempting to ssh in to access user debian on
whatever that
ssh server on 192.186.0.213 is on or connected to. 192.168.0.0/16 is
RFC 1918 Address Allocation for Private Interne
This thread may be of interest:
https://forums.raspberrypi.com/viewtopic.php?t=389228&hilit=default+password&sid=229698e6880c32cea798cd7e8f30f419
--
John Hasler
j...@sugarbit.com
Elmwood, WI USA
Are you saying that the computer that you are attempting to ssh to is a
Raspberry Pi? If so it would be much better to ask on a Raspberry Pi
forum. Raspberry Pi OS is derived from Debian but they make changes.
Look at https://forums.raspberrypi.com/
--
John Hasler
j...@sugarbit.com
Elmwood, WI
On 9/18/25 15:53, Joe wrote:
On Thu, 18 Sep 2025 14:28:50 -0400 (EDT)
Robert Heller wrote:
If it is a beagle board. the password is debian.
Raspberry was mentioned, which used to be the default password of the
default user pi on the Raspberry Pi, but I think the policy has changed
recently
On 18/09/2025 17:40, COMCAST wrote:
The question is. What password am I being asked? I dearly need to know!
I've tried my servers password of "fast" and my remote password of
"raspberry". And it still gives me the same permission error..
root@debian:/etc/ssh# ssh debian@192.168.0.213
Debian
COMCAST wrote:
> The question is. What password am I being asked? I dearly need to
> know! I've tried my servers password of "fast" and my remote
> password of "raspberry". And it still gives me the same permission
> error..
>
>
> root@debian:/etc/ssh# ssh debian@192.168.0.213
> Debian GNU/Linu
On Thu, 18 Sep 2025 14:28:50 -0400 (EDT)
Robert Heller wrote:
> If it is a beagle board. the password is debian.
>
Raspberry was mentioned, which used to be the default password of the
default user pi on the Raspberry Pi, but I think the policy has changed
recently.
--
Joe
If it is a beagle board. the password is debian.
At Thu, 18 Sep 2025 11:58:12 -0500 j...@sugarbit.com (John Hasler) wrote:
>
> It wants the password for "debian" on 192.168.0.213. What is
> 192.168.0.213?
--
Robert Heller -- Cell: 413-658-7953 GV: 978-633-5364
Deepwoods Software
On Thu, Sep 18, 2025 at 12:59:13PM -0500, John Hasler wrote:
> Are you subscribed to the debian-user mailing list? If not you won't
> see any of the replies you've gotten unless people cc you.
They are not, it seems. (no LDOSUBSCRIBER in the spam status). That
is why I usually group-reply here, i
mputer at 192.168.0.213 exists, the
password is the one for that account. A new Debian installation does
not have this user account, if it exists then someone has created it,
and set a password for it.
You might indeed get 'help with your problem' if you offer some details
about what you are trying to do.
--
Joe
Are you subscribed to the debian-user mailing list? If not you won't
see any of the replies you've gotten unless people cc you.
In any case you've give far too little information.
--
John Hasler
j...@sugarbit.com
Elmwood, WI USA
running "ssh" from, or why you
believe (apparently) that there is a user named "debian" on the target
system.
We don't even know why you're trying to ssh into it.
You have to reveal more details if you expect anyone to help you.
A LOT more details.
On 9/18/25 12:40, to...@tuxteam.de wrote:
On Thu, Sep 18, 2025 at 12:15:29PM -0400, COMCAST wrote:
The question is. What password am I being asked? I dearly need to know! I've
tried my servers password of "fast" and my remote password of "raspberry".
And it still gives me the same permission
The question is. What password am I being asked? I dearly need to know!
I've tried my servers password of "fast" and my remote password of
"raspberry". And it still gives me the same permission error..
root@debian:/etc/ssh# ssh debian@192.168.0.213
Debian GNU/Linux 12
debian@192.168.0.21's pa
On Thu, Sep 18, 2025 at 12:15:29PM -0400, COMCAST wrote:
> The question is. What password am I being asked? I dearly need to know! I've
> tried my servers password of "fast" and my remote password of "raspberry".
> And it still gives me the same permission error..
>
>
> root@debian:/etc/ssh# ssh
It wants the password for "debian" on 192.168.0.213. What is
192.168.0.213?
--
John Hasler
j...@sugarbit.com
Elmwood, WI USA
On Sat, Aug 16, 2025 at 01:01:43PM -, Greg wrote:
> I go to Configuration/Built-in Audio/ and select 'Analog Stereo Duplex',
> which the widget states dishearteningly is (unplugged) and
> (unavailable), and yet it works.
On the Mate desktop get there:
System -> Preferences -> Other -> Volume
On 2025-08-15, alain williams wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 15, 2025 at 03:43:28PM -, Greg wrote:
>> On 2025-08-14, alain williams wrote:
>> > Sound works when I boot from the live CD/memory-stick -
>> > debian-live-13.0.0-amd64-mate.iso
>> > It does not work on the installed system.
>> >
>>
>> On m
On Fri, Aug 15, 2025 at 03:43:28PM -, Greg wrote:
> On 2025-08-14, alain williams wrote:
> > Sound works when I boot from the live CD/memory-stick -
> > debian-live-13.0.0-amd64-mate.iso
> > It does not work on the installed system.
> >
>
> On my box I always have to use the PulseAudio Volum
On 2025-08-14, alain williams wrote:
> Sound works when I boot from the live CD/memory-stick -
> debian-live-13.0.0-amd64-mate.iso
> It does not work on the installed system.
>
On my box I always have to use the PulseAudio Volume Control widget to
select the Built-In audio profile because if I d
Sound works when I boot from the live CD/memory-stick -
debian-live-13.0.0-amd64-mate.iso
It does not work on the installed system.
My speakers are plugged in by a 3.5mm green audio plug (ie not HDMI).
I have compared /proc/asound/ in the live & installed environments, they look
the same (eyebal
do appear to be subscribed asr...@cegetel.net. I don't
know why the unsubscription is not working for you. I think you'll have
to ask thelistmas...@debian.org address for help.
Ok, thank you Andy, I'll do that.
Rudu
I don't.
Nope, you really do appear to be subscribed as r...@cegetel.net. I don't
know why the unsubscription is not working for you. I think you'll have
to ask the listmas...@debian.org address for help.
Here's the headers where you can see your address:
> Return-Path:
(translate
On Sat, Jul 26, 2025 at 08:02:58 -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> (I'm not the OP) Oh, that's interesting -- I've always had trouble with the
> term "Envelope" address, and looking at the headers in the email I'm replying
> to, I see that the first header is "Delivered-To:" and
> there
> is
On Sat 26 Jul 2025 at 12:32:35 (+), Andy Smith wrote:
> On Sat, Jul 26, 2025 at 08:02:58AM -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > (I'm not the OP) Oh, that's interesting -- I've always had trouble with the
> > term "Envelope" address, and looking at the headers in the email I'm
> > replying
>
Hi,
On Sat, Jul 26, 2025 at 11:56:58AM +0200, rudu wrote:
> Yes the address I use is r...@cegetel.net, sorry for my imprecision.
>
> I join my first attempt to this mail.
It looks okay. So guesses I have left are:
a) r...@cegetel.net is not the actual address you are subscribed as. I
already
Hi,
On Sat, Jul 26, 2025 at 08:02:58AM -0400, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> (I'm not the OP) Oh, that's interesting -- I've always had trouble with the
> term "Envelope" address, and looking at the headers in the email I'm replying
> to, I see that the first header is "Delivered-To:" and
> there
(I'm not the OP) Oh, that's interesting -- I've always had trouble with the
term "Envelope" address, and looking at the headers in the email I'm replying
to, I see that the first header is "Delivered-To:" and there
is no header labeled "Envelope".
I'm guessing / assuming that is what's known a
e I use right here.
Again to no avail.
Looking for help, I read here :
https://www.debian.org/MailingLists/#subglitches
... that I could try to send a mail from another address with subject
unsubscribeq...@exemple.com
... with of course the mail address I use here again.
Aain I find the ab
RIBED TO THE LIST.
> Nothing happened.
If, on the other hand, the address you sent it *from* is *not*
subscribed to the list, then silence is what would be expected. It won't
work.
> So I went to https://lists.debian.org/debian-user/ where I put my mail
> address, the same I use right h
re I put my mail
address, the same I use right here.
Again to no avail.
Looking for help, I read here :
https://www.debian.org/MailingLists/#subglitches
... that I could try to send a mail from another address with subject
unsubscribe q...@exemple.com
... with of course the mail address I use her
on debian 11 i just install firetools and firejail
docs say both are setuid
firejail works, firetools doesn't
firejail is setuid, firetools isn't
if i sudo chmod u+s /usr/bin/firetools i get
FATAL: The application binary appears to be running setuid, this is a security
hole.
Aborted
is this a pr
Jeffrey Walton (HE12025-07-01):
> However, setuid on a script is considered a security
> flaw.
Was. Now it just does not have any effect.
Regards,
--
Nicolas George
On Tue, Jul 1, 2025 at 2:29 PM wrote:
>
> on debian 11 i just install firetools and firejail
> docs say both are setuid
> firejail works, firetools doesn't
> firejail is setuid, firetools isn't
> if i sudo chmod u+s /usr/bin/firetools i get
>
> FATAL: The application binary appears to be running s
I think you want delete, rather than erase, so use tput dch1 or tput dch 1.
Erase simply replaces the character(s) with blank(s),
whereas delete removes the character(s), shifting those to the right,
to the left.
E.g.:
(row=3; sleep=2; cols=$(tput cols) && tput clear && (while [ $row -gt
0 ]; do e
On Sat, Jun 28, 2025 at 18:28:31 -0400, Eben King wrote:
> A while back I wrote a script to take the output of dd and make a graph of
> the transfer rate. It worked, but since it scrolls up I wasn't happy with
> it.
>
> In a bash script, I'm trying to use tput commands to delete column 1 (tput
>
On 6/28/25 19:04, Jeffrey Walton wrote:
On Sat, Jun 28, 2025 at 6:29 PM Eben King wrote:
A while back I wrote a script to take the output of dd and make a graph
of the transfer rate. It worked, but since it scrolls up I wasn't happy
with it.
In a bash script, I'm trying to use tput com
On Sat, Jun 28, 2025 at 6:29 PM Eben King wrote:
>
> A while back I wrote a script to take the output of dd and make a graph
> of the transfer rate. It worked, but since it scrolls up I wasn't happy
> with it.
>
> In a bash script, I'm trying to use tput commands to delete column 1
> (tput cup $r
A while back I wrote a script to take the output of dd and make a graph
of the transfer rate. It worked, but since it scrolls up I wasn't happy
with it.
In a bash script, I'm trying to use tput commands to delete column 1
(tput cup $row 1 && tput el1), scoot the rest of the line left, then
d
On Mon, Jun 16, 2025 at 3:15 PM Uroš Mikanovič
wrote:
>
> Thanks for the tips, I figured something out.
>
> Seems like mdns4_minimal is "shy". In the case of the "minimal" version
> of `nss-mdns`, from the README:
>
> > * If the request does not end with `.local` or `.local.`, it is
> > reject
* 2025-06-16 00:31:48+0200, Uroš Mikanovič wrote:
> I can't get my network discovered printer to print. CUPS finds and adds
> my printer easily with "Find New Printers" on the web interface. But
> every job fails with:
> Unable to locate printer "BRNBCF4D4182ECD.local".
That reminds me of issu
On 17/06/2025 00:03, Uroš Mikanovič wrote:
`host -t SOA local` returns:
local has SOA record local. nobody.invalid. 1 3600 1200 604800 10800
It is either from your router or from your ISP. Try to add an ISP DNS
server address to the "host" command. You may try to adjust dnsmasq
configuration
Thanks for the tips, I figured something out.
Seems like mdns4_minimal is "shy". In the case of the "minimal" version
of `nss-mdns`, from the README:
> * If the request does not end with `.local` or `.local.`, it is
> rejected. Example: `example.test` is rejected.
>
> * If the request has more
On 16/06/2025 05:31, Uroš Mikanovič wrote:
hosts: files mdns4_minimal [NOTFOUND=return] dns
[...]
`ping` can't resolve `BRNBCF4D4182ECD.local`, not sure if it's supposed to.
It should (while host, dig, nslookup, and other DNS tools shouldn't).
However a more direct test for libc res
member=Free
dbus-protocol.c: client :1.134 vanished.
dbus-protocol.c: interface=org.freedesktop.Avahi.Server, path=/,
member=GetAPIVersion
dbus-protocol.c: interface=org.freedesktop.Avahi.Server, path=/,
member=GetState
dbus-protocol.c: interface=org.freedesktop.Avahi.Server, path=/,
member=AddressResolverNew
dbus-async-address-resolver.c:
interface=org.freedesktop.Avahi.AddressResolver,
path=/Client17/AddressResolver1, member=Free
dbus-protocol.c: client :1.135 vanished.
```
I'm using Debian Trixie. The same printer has already worked on a
different install of Debian. Would appreciate help with this. Let me
know if any more info would be useful for troubleshooting. And thanks in
advance!
DM composed on 2025-06-12 10:58 (UTC+0200):
> schrieb Felix Miata:
>> DM composed on 2025-06-09 15:03 (UTC+0200):
>>> (I couldn't get Debian Trixie to start wayland session when setting
>>> "nomodeset", only X11 session)
>>> And in this situation: i.e. Fedora, Kernel 6.14, Wayland, I could rotat
well as your
report.
Something you might try is to download the latest Knoppix CD, and try
that from USB. It's a few years old now, so it may not help, but if it
does you can investigate the modules in use and anything else you can
find in the X log to see what it's doing that's differ
en, I'll do that.
Not having done that before, I assume the best way would be to use the
"reportbug" tool, right? I am not sure, which package I should specify, so
that the report will be read by the relevant people. I would go with "linux-
image". But any hints about where I should report this to are very welcome.
Many thanks again for your help!
DM
DM composed on 2025-06-09 15:03 (UTC+0200):
> Trixie with kernel 6.14:
> System:
> Kernel: 6.14.10-zabbly+ arch: x86_64 bits: 64 compiler: gcc v: 14.2.0
> clocksource: tsc avail: acpi_pm
> parameters: BOOT_IMAGE=/vmlinuz-6.14.10-zabbly+
> root=/dev/mapper/capys--vg-root ro quiet i915
e for needed support.
>
> Whether or not you have already tried the guc/huc command line options there
> I suggest you visit <https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Intel_graphics> and
> give all the help there a try.
>
> Debian 13 Trixie is well along in development with full version fr
nlikely to be present in 12.11. Newer kernel and/or
X
packages from backports are unlikely adequate for needed support.
Whether or not you have already tried the guc/huc command line options there I
suggest you visit <https://wiki.archlinux.org/title/Intel_graphics> and give all
the help ther
Am Samstag, 7. Juni 2025, 12:15:48 CEST schrieb Marco Moock:
> > I have installed Debian 12.11 using non-free-firmware,
> > During the installation, both the internal screen and an external
> > HDMI monitor worked, although the internal monitor was rotated by 90°.
>
> IIRC those displays are portr
Am Samstag, 7. Juni 2025, 14:25:14 CEST schrieb Charles Curley:
>
> > However, when booting the installed system, I see the following:
> > Grub menu on both screens, but internal screen rotated by 90°
> > After "Loading initial RAM disk", the internal monitor goes blank
> > (backlight still on). T
On Sat, 07 Jun 2025 10:04:43 +0200
Dietrich Meyer wrote:
> However, when booting the installed system, I see the following:
> Grub menu on both screens, but internal screen rotated by 90°
> After "Loading initial RAM disk", the internal monitor goes blank
> (backlight still on). The HDMI monitor
On 07.06.2025 10:40 Uhr Dietrich Meyer wrote:
> I have installed Debian 12.11 using non-free-firmware,
> During the installation, both the internal screen and an external
> HDMI monitor worked, although the internal monitor was rotated by 90°.
IIRC those displays are portrait type and you need t
Dear all,
I am trying to install Debian on a mini laptop with 8" screen - the laptop is
a "noname" product from China.
The laptop is equiped with an Intel Alder Lake N100 processor:
Architecture:x86_64
CPU op-mode(s): 32-bit, 64-bit
Address si
Matt Timpson wrote:
> Hello,
>
> I wanted to follow up on some problems I had running an x64 emulator on a
> Raspberry Pi. I've tried paying for computer help, but no one I spoke to
> worked with Linux.
You can ask specific questions here, or on the Box mailing list
(o
Hello,
I wanted to follow up on some problems I had running an x64 emulator on a
Raspberry Pi. I've tried paying for computer help, but no one I spoke to worked
with Linux.
Thanks,
Matt Timpson 🍉
Sent with Proton Mail secure email.
On Wednesday, 9 April 2025 at 15:15, Matt Timpson
On Sun, Apr 13, 2025 at 7:30 AM Timothy M Butterworth <
timothy.m.butterwo...@gmail.com> wrote:
> *Push the below role, The user in the IOS will get the level 15
> Privilege.This would be applicable for all the users who are member of
> group cisco-rw*
>
> *DEFAULT Group == cisco-rw, Auth-Type =
*Push the below role, The user in the IOS will get the level 15
Privilege.This would be applicable for all the users who are member of
group cisco-rw*
*DEFAULT Group == cisco-rw, Auth-Type = System, Service-Type =
NAS-Prompt-User, **cisco-avpair :="shell:priv-lvl=15"*
When I add the above comma
>
>
> 'dpkg-query -L scanner' will display the installed files.
>
> >
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Matt Timpson 🍉
> >
> >
> > Sent with Proton Mail secure email.
> >
> > --- Forwarded Message ---
> > From: Matt Timpson
And also check this link:
https://pi-apps.io/install-app/install-box64-on-linux-arm-device/[1]
Hans
[1] https://pi-apps.io/install-app/install-box64-on-linux-arm-device/
Hi Matt,
take a look at this link:
https://community.fydeos.io/t/topic/26128[1]
Maybe it will help you.
And please note: You need packages fro arm or arm64, packages for amd64 do not
work on
this hardware.
But the good thing: Debian has an arm port and most packages are
ready-for-install
Stefan Monnier writes:
> My N°1 search engine nowadays is Wikipedia (protected from ads and SEO
> madness), and here again it offers one of the best answers to the
> question of what is "numpy".
In this context, it's probably enough to say that numpy is a numeric
library which will be part of th
Greg Wooledge [2025-04-09 15:41:05] wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 09, 2025 at 19:15:31 +, Matt Timpson wrote:
>> I'd also like to know what "numpy" is and what is does.
> apt-cache show python3-numpy
> or do a Google/Duckduckgo/Bing search for it.
My N°1 search engine nowadays is Wikipedia (protected f
On Wed, Apr 09, 2025 at 19:15:31 +, Matt Timpson wrote:
> I'd also like to know what "numpy" is and what is does.
apt-cache show python3-numpy
or do a Google/Duckduckgo/Bing search for it.
Certainly. I used this command:
cd /opt/scanner
and get this error when I follow it up with either
box64 scanner
or
box64 run_scanner.sh
I'd also like to know what "numpy" is and what is does.
Thanks,
Matt Timpson 🍉
Sent with Proton Mail secure email.
On Wednesday, 9 April 2025 at 03:22,
and failed to
> pay computer technicians online to help me because most of them don't work
> in Linux.
>
To install .deb packages on Debian run the following commands:
'cd ~/Downloads' This assumes the download is in the Downloads folder on
your home directory.
'sudo a
On Tue Apr 8, 2025 at 10:04 PM BST, Matt Timpson wrote:
Original error was: Cannot
dlopen("/opt/scanner/numpy.core._multiarray_umath.so"/0x604e20ac, 2)
[6369] Failed to execute script main
Can I ask what this means?
That most likely is you trying to indirectly run an executable in x86_64
f
and run it. I think it's
> "scanner:amd".
>
'dpkg-query -L scanner' will display the installed files.
>
>
> Thanks,
> Matt Timpson 🍉
>
>
> Sent with Proton Mail secure email.
>
> --- Forwarded Message ---
> From: Matt Timpson
>
On Tue, Apr 08, 2025 at 02:37:25PM +, Matt Timpson wrote:
> Hello,
>
> Dan told me to send this to the mailing list instead of individual people.
> This command worked:
>
> sudo apt install ./scanner_x86_64_1.7.2312301E.deb
>
> However, I still need to find the executable and run it. I thin
ith Proton Mail secure email.
--- Forwarded Message ---
From: Matt Timpson
Date: On Monday, April 7th, 2025 at 19:34
Subject: Re: Can you help me run Box64 on my Raspberry Pi 5?
To: Timothy M Butterworth
> Hello,
>
> Never mind, it worked the second time for some reason! Howeve
Hi Matt, all
Am 07.04.2025 um 18:54 schrieb basti:
Hello,
Raspberry pi uses arm and aarch64 (arm64). This is not x64 like Intel or
AMD.
From what I just learnt, Box64 (mentioned in this mail#s subject) is
actually an emulator to run on arm and then used to run x86 code.
So, my question h
Matt Timpson wrote:
You seem to have forgotten to copy the debian-user list, so I
have helpfully corrected that for you.
(Questions on the list are not an invitation to a personalized
support experience. Everyone is a volunteer here, including
you.)
> Hello,
>
> I bought a book scanner from a
o...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> >
> >
> > On Mon, Apr 7, 2025 at 12:24 PM Matt Timpson
> wrote:
> >
> > > Hello all,
> > >
> > > I want to run a .deb file written for x64 processors on my Raspberry
> Pi 5, which I run Linux on. Unfortunate
and
> failed to pay computer technicians online to help me because most of
> them don't work in Linux.
>
>
> Thanks,
> Matt Timpson 🍉
> And also check this link:
> https://pi-apps.io/install-app/install-box64-on-linux-arm-device/[1]
You may also want to just `apt install box64` since according to
https://tracker.debian.org/pkg/box64 it's in Debian testing.
Stefan
; technicians online to help me because most of them don't work in Linux.
>
Best to start by telling us which .deb package you want to run
and where it comes from.
-dsr-
Timpson:
Hello all,
I want to run a .deb file written for x64 processors on my Raspberry Pi 5,
which I run Linux on. Unfortunately I don't know a damn thing about computers
and need step-by-step instructions. I have tried and failed to pay computer
technicians online to help me because mo
Hello all,
I want to run a .deb file written for x64 processors on my Raspberry Pi 5,
which I run Linux on. Unfortunately I don't know a damn thing about computers
and need step-by-step instructions. I have tried and failed to pay computer
technicians online to help me because most of
On Wed, Mar 26, 2025 at 07:48:16AM -0500, Richard Owlett wrote:
> On 3/26/25 6:55 AM, Greg Wooledge wrote:
> > [SNIP]
> >
> > I normally use "sudo -s", which is the closest sudo approximation to
> > the traditional behvior of "su" (before it was broken in buster).
> >
>
> I don't understand the
Greg (HE12025-03-27):
> I'm certain sudo has its use cases, but all I do personally is su to
> root and update and upgrade my stable Bookworm using apt, so I feel no
> need to complexify the issue with sudo.
The fallacy in here being assuming, without stating it and without
justifying it that sudo
>
> "sudo -i" is meant to approximate the behavior of "su -". Before buster,
> nobody would have used that on a Debian system. It's horrible. The
> fact that people are now embracing it as a norm is even worse.
>
Why horrible?
David Wright writes:
> host!auser 09:57:47 /somewhere/that/is/obnoxiously/long/program-1.2.3$
> /bin/su --login
> Password:
> bullseye on /dev/sda5 toto05
> host 09:57:59 ~# cd /somewhere/that/is/obnoxiously/long/program-1.2.3
> host 09:58:08 /somewhere/that/is/obnoxiously/long/progra
On Wed, Mar 26, 2025 at 02:55:11PM -, Greg wrote:
> On 2025-03-26, Richard Owlett wrote:
>
> >> If he hasn't noticed yet, I doubt it.
> >
> > I agree.
> > If I understand what people want to accomplish by using command-line
> > options, I would likely have gone to System->Log Out ... and the
On 21/03/2025 20:38, J wrote:
But i must mention that *this passage from Debian Wiki seems incorrect*
Bind mount various virtual filesystems:
# for i in /dev /dev/pts /proc /sys /sys/firmware/efi/efivars /run;
do mount -B $i /mnt/$i; done
https://wiki.debian.org/GrubEFIReinstall#
On 20/03/2025 03:22, J wrote:
But before this oopsie deletion I have saved as a back-up at least
something from /boot folder, or maybe even everything.
Copy files from backup to /boot and to the EFI system partition
EFI/debian/BOOTX64.CSV
EFI/debian/fbx64.efi
EFI/debian/grub.cfg
EFI/debian/g
Greg Wooledge wrote:
...
> Maybe. If you haven't created an /etc/default/su file, then something
> like this:
>
> $ su
> # adduser richard
>
> may fail. You could work around it in various ways (e.g. explicitly
> typing out /usr/sbin/adduser richard).
>
> My recommendation is to create a
On Fri, Mar 28, 2025 at 8:42 PM Pier Antonio Corradini
wrote:
>
> I think I got it: the final step is to compare the fingerprint of the primary
> key, at the end of the command output
>
> PS C:\Users\CP\Documents\Linux\Debian12.10.0\HTTPVersion> gpg --verify
> SHA512SUMS.sign SHA512SUMS.txt
> gp
thenticated themselves by gpg --verify or alike.
If i'd knew a good solution then i'd post it to
debian...@lists.debian.org and be obstinate until i get a good answer.
But as it is, i cannot do more than offer human help and above wiki
page.
Have a nice day :)
Thomas
Hi,
Pier Antonio Corradini wrote:
> So now the authenticity check is complete and the authenticity is completely
> sure?
Yes. Until a quantum computer cracks the riddle how to generate an own
key with the same fingerprint.
(There are other risks, too, which are not prevented by signature with
unc
thenticity is completely
sure?
Thanks!
PA
Da: Thomas Schmitt
Inviato: Venerdì, 28 Marzo, 2025 18:04
A: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Cc: pierantonio.corrad...@gmail.com
Oggetto: Re: Help: debian-12.10.0-amd64-netinst.iso autenticity test
Hi,
i realize that i posted t
___
Da: Thomas Schmitt
Inviato: Venerdì, 28 Marzo, 2025 18:04
A: debian-user@lists.debian.org
Cc: pierantonio.corrad...@gmail.com
Oggetto: Re: Help: debian-12.10.0-amd64-netinst.iso autenticity test
Hi,
i realize that i posted the content of the wrong SHA512SUMS file.
The one i posted was from
Hi,
i realize that i posted the content of the wrong SHA512SUMS file.
The one i posted was from debian 12.7.0.
Nevertheless the SHA512 sums which i posted earlier are of the files
from 12.10.0 which i downloaded yesterday.
Pier Antonio Corradini wrote:
> The content of these links, seen now, is
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