On Wed 09 Dec 2020 at 19:10:53 (+), Mark Fletcher wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 07, 2020 at 06:06:43PM -0700, Charles Curley wrote:
> > On Tue, 8 Dec 2020 00:00:54 + Mark Fletcher wrote:
> >
> > > 1. Does anyone have any advice (or a link to offcial advice)
> > > regarding whether a new bullseye in
On Wed, 9 Dec 2020 19:10:53 +
Mark Fletcher wrote:
> On Mon, Dec 07, 2020 at 06:06:43PM -0700, Charles Curley wrote:
> > On Tue, 8 Dec 2020 00:00:54 +
> > Mark Fletcher wrote:
> >
> > > 1. Does anyone have any advice (or a link to offcial advice)
> > > regarding whether a new bullseye
On Mon, Dec 07, 2020 at 06:06:43PM -0700, Charles Curley wrote:
> On Tue, 8 Dec 2020 00:00:54 +
> Mark Fletcher wrote:
>
> > 1. Does anyone have any advice (or a link to offcial advice)
> > regarding whether a new bullseye install is better done with the
> > testing installer at this time, or
On Tue, 2020-12-08 at 11:48 +0200, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Lu, 07 dec 20, 18:06:43, Charles Curley wrote:
> > On Tue, 8 Dec 2020 00:00:54 +
> > Mark Fletcher wrote:
> >
> > > 1. Does anyone have any advice (or a link to offcial advice)
> > > regarding whether a new bullseye install is bett
On Lu, 07 dec 20, 18:06:43, Charles Curley wrote:
> On Tue, 8 Dec 2020 00:00:54 +
> Mark Fletcher wrote:
>
> > 1. Does anyone have any advice (or a link to offcial advice)
> > regarding whether a new bullseye install is better done with the
> > testing installer at this time, or by first inst
On Tue, 8 Dec 2020 00:00:54 +
Mark Fletcher wrote:
> 1. Does anyone have any advice (or a link to offcial advice)
> regarding whether a new bullseye install is better done with the
> testing installer at this time, or by first installing buster and
> then upgrading?
In general, you are bette
Hello list
I am currently amassing the hardware for a new PC build as a Christmas
present to myself, and plan to install Bullseye on it when the hardware
is all here.
My current system runs Buster and I thought it would be interesting to
see what's coming.
I have two questions:
1.
On Sat 19 Sep 2020 at 14:09:07 (-0700), David Christensen wrote:
> On 2020-09-19 07:57, David Wright wrote:
> > The fuse documentation is so fragmentary, scattered and sparse that
> > I haven't really got a good feel for what is is or how it works.
> > I'm always thinking that I've missed some opti
On Sb, 19 sep 20, 09:57:37, David Wright wrote:
>
> Do you know if fuse exFAT is a stopgap, and support in the kernel is
> eventually coming, or was a fuse implementation necessarily chosen
> to support exFAT on account of some particular problem. It seems odd
> that pmount, for example, doesn't s
On 2020-09-19 07:57, David Wright wrote:
On Thu 17 Sep 2020 at 13:32:16 (-0700), David Christensen wrote:
On 2020-09-16 14:38, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 16 Sep 2020 at 12:56:36 (-0700), David Christensen wrote:
On 2020-09-16 01:59, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
If I change the mode of the mount po
On Thu 17 Sep 2020 at 13:32:16 (-0700), David Christensen wrote:
> On 2020-09-16 14:38, David Wright wrote:
> > On Wed 16 Sep 2020 at 12:56:36 (-0700), David Christensen wrote:
> > > On 2020-09-16 01:59, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
>
> > > If I change the mode of the mount point to :
>
> > > Is the
On 2020-09-16 14:38, David Wright wrote:
On Wed 16 Sep 2020 at 12:56:36 (-0700), David Christensen wrote:
On 2020-09-16 01:59, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
If I change the mode of the mount point to :
Is there some advantage other than making a long listing visually
distinctive when the mount
On Wed 16 Sep 2020 at 12:56:36 (-0700), David Christensen wrote:
> On 2020-09-16 01:59, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> > On Sb, 12 sep 20, 15:00:57, Bob Weber wrote:
> > >
> > > Warning: If you forget to open and mount the file encrypted.img to
> > > $HOME/Private/ and you copy files to $HOME/Private/ it
On 2020-09-16 01:59, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
On Sb, 12 sep 20, 15:00:57, Bob Weber wrote:
Warning: If you forget to open and mount the file encrypted.img to
$HOME/Private/ and you copy files to $HOME/Private/ it will appear to work
correctly but they will not be encrypted! If you don't move the
On Sb, 12 sep 20, 15:00:57, Bob Weber wrote:
>
> Warning: If you forget to open and mount the file encrypted.img to
> $HOME/Private/ and you copy files to $HOME/Private/ it will appear to work
> correctly but they will not be encrypted! If you don't move the files out
> of $HOME/Private/ before y
On Mon, 14 Sep 2020 at 01:10, David Wright wrote:
> Create a permanent mount point with the permissions set to ugo=
> ie nothing.
I do this for all my permanent mountpoints and then set the
immutable bit on them.
This prevents accidental writes and the bonus is that
ls -l /mnt
shows clearly w
On Sat 12 Sep 2020 at 12:10:48 (-0400), rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> I'm thinking about putting my backup encrypted files in a LUKS filesystem
> within
> a file instead of on a dedicated partition (for a few reasons).
>
> I have two questions about that:
>
>*
Thank you!
(Nothing new below this line.)
On Saturday, September 12, 2020 06:14:33 PM David Christensen wrote:
> On 2020-09-12 09:10, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
> > I'm thinking about putting my backup encrypted files in a LUKS filesystem
> > within a file instead of on a dedicated partition (for
On 2020-09-12 12:14, Charles Curley wrote:
On Sat, 12 Sep 2020 12:10:48 -0400
rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm thinking about putting my backup encrypted files in a LUKS
filesystem within a file instead of on a dedicated partition (for a
few reasons).
Why do you want a file system inside a file?
On 2020-09-12 09:10, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm thinking about putting my backup encrypted files in a LUKS filesystem within
a file instead of on a dedicated partition (for a few reasons).
I have two questions about that:
* if I don't have that LUKS filesystem "mounted&
think of to do that is to emulate the file system of another computer,
e.g. a virtual machine. But in that case, I wonder why you want to feed
your backups to a VM.
>
> I have two questions about that:
>
>* if I don't have that LUKS filesystem "mounted" and open and
On 9/12/20 12:10 PM, rhkra...@gmail.com wrote:
I'm thinking about putting my backup encrypted files in a LUKS filesystem within
a file instead of on a dedicated partition (for a few reasons).
I have two questions about that:
* if I don't have that LUKS filesystem "mounted&
Am Samstag, 12. September 2020, 18:10:48 CEST schrieb rhkra...@gmail.com:
Hi,
> I'm thinking about putting my backup encrypted files in a LUKS filesystem
> within a file instead of on a dedicated partition (for a few reasons).
>
> I have two questions about that:
>
>
I'm thinking about putting my backup encrypted files in a LUKS filesystem
within
a file instead of on a dedicated partition (for a few reasons).
I have two questions about that:
* if I don't have that LUKS filesystem "mounted" and open and I write to it,
I assume (o
On Nov 30, 2016, at 3:40 AM, Kamil Jońca wrote:
> Rick Thomas writes:
>
>> Hi Kamil,
>>
>> You’d get a bit more space by configuring your 4 drives as a RAID5
>> array (3TB usable for RAID5, vs 2TB usable for RAID10). The downside
>> of RAID5 is that the RAID10 (or the one LV with two RAID1 P
Rick Thomas writes:
> Hi Kamil,
>
> You’d get a bit more space by configuring your 4 drives as a RAID5
> array (3TB usable for RAID5, vs 2TB usable for RAID10). The downside
> of RAID5 is that the RAID10 (or the one LV with two RAID1 PVs — they
> amount to the same thing for this discussion) can
Andy Smith writes:
> Hi Kamil,
>
> On Tue, Nov 29, 2016 at 01:26:55AM +0100, Kamil Jońca wrote:
>> My first plan was somehow migrate to RAID10. I thought that is simply
>> "raid0 over some raid1 arrays" so it should be legal to use 2*1TB +
>> 2*1GB devices and then extend 2*1G => 2*1TB. But it no
Hi Kamil,
You’d get a bit more space by configuring your 4 drives as a RAID5 array (3TB
usable for RAID5, vs 2TB usable for RAID10). The downside of RAID5 is that the
RAID10 (or the one LV with two RAID1 PVs — they amount to the same thing for
this discussion) can survive loosing two drives at
Hi Kamil,
On Tue, Nov 29, 2016 at 01:26:55AM +0100, Kamil Jońca wrote:
> My first plan was somehow migrate to RAID10. I thought that is simply
> "raid0 over some raid1 arrays" so it should be legal to use 2*1TB +
> 2*1GB devices and then extend 2*1G => 2*1TB. But it not work that
> way. All device
kjo...@poczta.onet.pl (Kamil Jońca) writes:
[...]> 2. there is md0 (raid1) with two disk in it. It is PV for lvm.
> I want to extend space by adding another two disks. Is it possible somehow
> extent md0? Or the only way is to create second md device, and assign it
> to volume group?
My first pl
On Tuesday 22 November 2016 18:10:53 Kamil Jońca wrote:
> 2. there is md0 (raid1) with two disk in it. It is PV for lvm.
> I want to extend space by adding another two disks. Is it possible somehow
> extent md0? Or the only way is to create second md device, and assign it
> to volume group?
I can
Dan Ritter writes:
> http://serverfault.com/questions/43677/best-way-to-grow-linux-software-raid-1-to-raid-10
Yes. And it was my idea (except rsync I plan to do pvmove to new aray)
Thanks for confirmation.
KJ
--
http://stopstopnop.pl/stop_stopnop.pl_o_nas.html
The sweeter the apple, the blacker
> Unfortunately I cannot see how from raid1 of 2*1TB disks migrate to
> raid1(raid10?) of 4*1TB disks
I don't think you can reshape a RAID 1 to a RAID 10.
mdadm can reshape RAID 1/5/6. You can move from RAID 5 to 6 or the other
way around.
*Maybe* you can even reshape from 1 to RAID 5/6.
I see
On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 09:10:50PM +0100, Kamil Jońca wrote:
> Dan Ritter writes:
>
> >> I want to extend space by adding another two disks. Is it possible somehow
> >> extent md0? Or the only way is to create second md device, and assign it
> >> to volume group?
> >
>
> Unfortunately I cannot
Dan Ritter writes:
>> I want to extend space by adding another two disks. Is it possible somehow
>> extent md0? Or the only way is to create second md device, and assign it
>> to volume group?
>
Unfortunately I cannot see how from raid1 of 2*1TB disks migrate to
raid1(raid10?) of 4*1TB disks
K
On Tue, Nov 22, 2016 at 06:10:53PM +0100, Kamil Jońca wrote:
> (I do not know it is proper place to ask these questions.)
> 1.
> man mdadm has some info about CONTAINER-s.
>
> I think, that I understand how to use it, but I cannot imagine use case
> of containers.
> Can someone explain whent it is
(I do not know it is proper place to ask these questions.)
1.
man mdadm has some info about CONTAINER-s.
I think, that I understand how to use it, but I cannot imagine use case
of containers.
Can someone explain whent it is desirable to use containers, especially
DDF instead of free mdX devices?
On Tue 12 Apr 2016 at 20:16:05 -0400, Alan McConnell wrote:
> First, about my .iso downloads. I have debian-8.4.0-i386-DVD-2.iso,
> containing
> 4560861184 bytes, and debian-8.4.0-i386-DVD-3.iso, containing 4649361408
> bytes.
> Are the byte counts correct? [ Yes, I know I should use checksum
On Tuesday 12 April 2016 20:16:05 Alan McConnell wrote:
> First, about my .iso downloads. I have debian-8.4.0-i386-DVD-2.iso,
> containing 4560861184 bytes, and debian-8.4.0-i386-DVD-3.iso,
> containing 4649361408 bytes. Are the byte counts correct? [ Yes, I
> know I should use checksums or som
Alan McConnell composed on 2016-04-12 20:16 (UTC-0400):
First, about my .iso downloads. I have debian-8.4.0-i386-DVD-2.iso, containing
4560861184 bytes, and debian-8.4.0-i386-DVD-3.iso, containing 4649361408 bytes.
Are the byte counts correct? [ Yes, I know I should use checksums or something
First, about my .iso downloads. I have debian-8.4.0-i386-DVD-2.iso, containing
4560861184 bytes, and debian-8.4.0-i386-DVD-3.iso, containing 4649361408 bytes.
Are the byte counts correct? [ Yes, I know I should use checksums or something
like that, but I don't know anything about that ]
Second
On Fri, 22 Feb 2013, Steven Chamberlain wrote:
On 22/02/13 05:49, Bret Busby wrote:
On Thu, 21 Feb 2013, Steven Chamberlain wrote:
[...]
vm.swappiness controls the balance of RAM/swap used, on some 0 to 100
scale.
I am not sure how or where I set it, but, from memory, I had set it to 80.
On 22/02/13 05:49, Bret Busby wrote:
> On Thu, 21 Feb 2013, Steven Chamberlain wrote:
>> [...]
>> vm.swappiness controls the balance of RAM/swap used, on some 0 to 100
>> scale.
>>
> I am not sure how or where I set it, but, from memory, I had set it to 80.
It's a sysctl, so you adjust it like thi
On Fri, 4 Dec 2009 14:13:11 -0800
Tyler MacDonald wrote:
> Tudod Ki wrote:
...
> > - Can anyone sniff the traffic of computer "B"? e.g.: B computer is at a
> > - server farm [others in the farm can see the traffic?] - I think yes, but
> > - I'm not sure :O
>
> Yes, that's possible. However,
On Fri, 4 Dec 2009 14:13:11 -0800
Tyler MacDonald wrote:
...
> I believe when you use SOCKS, your browser stops doing DNS resolution and
> just hands the hostnames directly to the SOCKS server. So all they would be
> able to sniff is your encrypted SSH session, which they (hopefully) can't
> d
Tudod Ki wrote:
> but what's with cam attack?
>
> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAM_Table#Attacks
>
> they could attack a switch, and it will act as a hub? and then they can
> set promiscuous mode on their cards and sniff
Hmm. I didn't know about that one! I suppose it's possible. Of course, i
but what's with cam attack?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CAM_Table#Attacks
they could attack a switch, and it will act as a hub? and then they can set
promiscuous mode on their cards and sniff
--- On Fri, 12/4/09, Tyler MacDonald wrote:
From: Tyler MacDonald
Subject: Re: two questions
Tudod Ki wrote:
> if I:
>
> ssh -fND localhost:6000 someb...@192.168.56.5 -p PORTNUMBER
>
> from computer "A" to computer "B" [B = 192.168.56.5] then I can set the SOCKS
> proxy for e.g.: Firefox to use "localhost:6000" on computer "A". Ok. I can
> surf the web through "B".
>
> But:
> - Can
if I:
ssh -fND localhost:6000 someb...@192.168.56.5 -p PORTNUMBER
from computer "A" to computer "B" [B = 192.168.56.5] then I can set the SOCKS
proxy for e.g.: Firefox to use "localhost:6000" on computer "A". Ok. I can surf
the web through "B".
But:
- Can anyone sniff the traffic of "A"? [e.g.
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Jochen Schulz writes:
> Merciadri Luca:
>>
>> I am a fervent user of your `F.lux' program. I am running Debian Lenny
>> with kernel 2.6.26-2-686 on various computers, and here are two
>> questions whose answers c
Merciadri Luca:
>
> I am a fervent user of your `F.lux' program. I am running Debian Lenny
> with kernel 2.6.26-2-686 on various computers, and here are two
> questions whose answers could enhance the next version of F.lux:
Since F.lux isn't distributed by Debian, you a
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Hi,
I am a fervent user of your `F.lux' program. I am running Debian Lenny
with kernel 2.6.26-2-686 on various computers, and here are two
questions whose answers could enhance the next version of F.lux:
1. When the screen is progressively bla
On Sat February 16 2008 09:44:12 am alexandre suzuki wrote:
> I want to upgrade to the latest Sarge r7 and then
> upgrade to Debian 4.0r2 and I am not sure about
> two things:
>
> 1) I installed apt_0.5.28.6 and aptitude_0.2.15.9-2
> (from Sarge r7) and I don´t know if they do the
> security ch
On Sat, Feb 16, 2008 at 09:44:12AM -0800, alexandre suzuki wrote:
> I want to upgrade to the latest Sarge r7 and then
> upgrade to Debian 4.0r2 and I am not sure about
> two things:
>
> 1) I installed apt_0.5.28.6 and aptitude_0.2.15.9-2
> (from Sarge r7) and I don?t know if they do the
> secu
I want to upgrade to the latest Sarge r7 and then
upgrade to Debian 4.0r2 and I am not sure about
two things:
1) I installed apt_0.5.28.6 and aptitude_0.2.15.9-2
(from Sarge r7) and I don´t know if they do the
security checks.Check Release.gpg and then the
md5 automatically.I have the idea t
On Saturday 03 February 2007 12:33, Figaro wrote:
> (2): I notice that the SID kernel -image packages do not seem to be
> getting the frequent updates that I remember was the norm a year ago or
> so ago. Any ideas? Or do I need a special apt repository?
> Thank you,
> matthew
It is probably due
Need suggestions for question (1), and just a brief response to question
(2).
(1): Preparing to install Matrox QID Pro video card in Tyan ThunderK7
2468UGN (scsi) / 2@ Athlon MP 2400+ / 3g ecc reg. sdram / 5 scsi hard
drives / Matrox G450-32m video /etc. Debian SID - 2.6.18-5k7-smp
(when th
On Fri, Oct 13, 2006 at 10:57:25AM -0500, cothrige wrote:
> I don't particularly like gdm and so I made the script in init.d
> nonexecutable. I feel, though, this was likely the wrong way. What
> is the right way to do it? The whole Debian bootscript system is
> somewhat intimidating to a Slackw
* Mumia W.. ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
>
> Install the Debian Reference (debian-reference-en) and read §§ 2.4.2 and
> 2.4.3 and 8.1.4 from /usr/share/doc/Debian/reference/reference.en.txt.gz .
I am hoping to sit down this weekend and read through the reference.
It looks to be a rather complete c
On 10/13/2006 10:57 AM, cothrige wrote:
I don't particularly like gdm and so I made the script in init.d
nonexecutable. I feel, though, this was likely the wrong way. What
is the right way to do it? The whole Debian bootscript system is
somewhat intimidating to a Slackware user, and so I am he
* Dekxter ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> GDM is disabled by running:
> # update-rc.d -f gdm remove
Thanks a lot. I can't believe how much trouble I was having just
trying to figure that little item out.
Patrick
--
To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trou
* derek ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote:
> Hello
> create the script in /etc/init.d/
> lets say its named myscript
> make it executable
> then do /usr/sbin/update-rc.d myscript defaults
> that will create a sym link in all the run levels
> Derek
That sounds straightforward enough. Many thanks.
Patrick
GDM is disabled by running:
# update-rc.d -f gdm remove
On 10/13/06, cothrige <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I don't particularly like gdm and so I made the script in init.d
nonexecutable. I feel, though, this was likely the wrong way. What
is the right way to do it? The whole Debian bootscript s
Hellocreate the script in /etc/init.d/lets say its named myscriptmake it executablethen do /usr/sbin/update-rc.d myscript defaultsthat will create a sym link in all the run levelsDerek
On 10/13/06, cothrige <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I don't particularly like gdm and so I made the script in init.dn
I don't particularly like gdm and so I made the script in init.d
nonexecutable. I feel, though, this was likely the wrong way. What
is the right way to do it? The whole Debian bootscript system is
somewhat intimidating to a Slackware user, and so I am hesitant to go
in there willy-nilly.
Also,
On Monday 14 August 2006 04:55 pm, Joe Indigo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > My second question is about the dealer I am leaning towards:
> > SW Technology at http://www.swt.com Can anyone provide feedback
> > about them?
I have purchased a tower and a laptop from them, both with sarge installed
> How can I find out what version number KDE would call this
> Debian "kde" package? OR, how could I find out what version
> number Debian would call KDE 3.5.4?
>
> I suspect the same situation exists with other packages, so I'm
> hoping for a general procedure I can follow, not simply the
> answ
Leonid Grinberg told me:
| Stable gets old very quickly, but is, like its name implies,
| very stable.
This led me to wonder, just how far out of date are the Debian
packages? For example, I would like to work using KDE. On the
KDE website at http://kde.org/ it says that KDE 3.5.4 is the
latest
On Mon, Aug 14, 2006 at 04:47:35PM -0500, Hugo Vanwoerkom wrote:
> It's already been mentioned, but putting your own system together is by
> far cheaper and more satisfactory.
That makes the value judgement that one's time is valueless and that one
likes farting around with hardware.
I used to
David J Bush wrote:
I can't afford it now, but in a couple months maybe, probably
after 4.0 comes out, I may buy a system with Debian pre-installed.
But I have a nice soundcard I want to keep from my old system,
the Turtle Beach Santa Cruz. There is a very helpful page about
my card at http://tin
On Monday 14 August 2006 20:19, David J Bush wrote:
[snip]
> My first question is, will Debian 4.0 come with soundcore
> compiled, or will I need to recompile?
It would seem so. I'm presently running testing Etch which will become 4.0
when when the next stable release comes out. Modinfo on a stoc
My first question is, will Debian 4.0 come with soundcore
compiled, or will I need to recompile?
I run Debian Etch. Although it is the testing distribution now, it
will be the next stable, version 4.0.
$ /sbin/modinfo soundcore
filename: /lib/modules/2.6.15-1-686/kernel/sound/soundcore.ko
On Monday 14 August 2006 20:19, David J Bush wrote:
> I can't afford it now, but in a couple months maybe, probably
> after 4.0 comes out, I may buy a system with Debian pre-installed.
Assuming you have a network connection, then it doesn't matter what version of
Debian is installed, it almost co
I can't afford it now, but in a couple months maybe, probably
after 4.0 comes out, I may buy a system with Debian pre-installed.
But I have a nice soundcard I want to keep from my old system,
the Turtle Beach Santa Cruz. There is a very helpful page about
my card at http://tinyurl.com/znro7 Quoting
On 8/29/05, David A. Cobb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm building 2.6.12 kernels for my own machine. Two things are ratherproblematical:The content of .config looks like a Makefile snippet. If it is one, canI add to it the values I want for CC & CFLAGS so they are tied to a
particular build confi
I'm building 2.6.12 kernels for my own machine. Two things are rather
problematical:
The content of .config looks like a Makefile snippet. If it is one, can
I add to it the values I want for CC & CFLAGS so they are tied to a
particular build configuration when I need to re-do it?
and
The "
Hi,
I have a Touchstream keyboard that also functions as a
mouse. It uses a USB port. I also have a regular
keyboard and mouse plugged into my computer.
1) After I reboot my computer, my Touchstream
keyboard is not recognized until I hit a key on my
regular keyboard. How do I get my Touchstre
xeno wrote:
>Johnny Ernst Nielsen wrote:
>> >2. Is there a painless place to get ahold of this jdk-118 thingy? I try
>>
>> >the internet address given, and it puts me somewhere which is
>> >bewildering, and I haven't found the download page yet.
>>
>> Do you mean a java development kit (jd
Johnny Ernst Nielsen wrote:
> >2. Is there a painless place to get ahold of this jdk-118 thingy? I try
>
> >the internet address given, and it puts me somewhere which is
> >bewildering, and I haven't found the download page yet.
>
> Do you mean a java development kit (jdk) or a java runtime
>1. Is kdebase the main symbol for starting an apt-get install of kde, or
>if not what is it?
kdebase gives you only the libraries needed to run KDE applications, plus
the panel and the window manager (and perhaps a few other very basic things)
so you can start "a desktop".
If you want appli
1. Is kdebase the main symbol for starting an apt-get install of kde, or
if not what is it?
2. Is there a painless place to get ahold of this jdk-118 thingy? I try
the internet address given, and it puts me somewhere which is
bewildering, and I haven't found the download page yet.
--
On Wed, Nov 28, 2001 at 12:10:08AM -0200, Vitor Silva Souza wrote:
| At 20:28 27/11/2001 -0500, dman wrote:
| >A GUI can do the things the designer thought of quite easily, but they
| >can't do anything else easily. Pipes and filters allow fairly simple
| >programs to be combined to perform comple
At 20:28 27/11/2001 -0500, dman wrote:
A GUI can do the things the designer thought of quite easily, but they
can't do anything else easily. Pipes and filters allow fairly simple
programs to be combined to perform complex and unique operations quite
easily, once the learning curve of the utiliti
On Tue, Nov 27, 2001 at 09:57:46PM -0200, Vitor Silva Souza wrote:
| At 14:49 27/11/2001 -0800, Brian Nelson wrote:
| > > Question two: I'm looking for a good graphical frontend for
| > > dpkg, sort of like a dselect for X. Any suggestions? I'm using potato
| > > and don't want to upgrade to
At 14:49 27/11/2001 -0800, Brian Nelson wrote:
It probably didn't show any matches because the string "dpkg frontend
for X" didn't appear in the archives. Try separating the words with ;.
Thanks. I'll try that.
> Question two: I'm looking for a good graphical frontend for
> dp
Vitor Silva Souza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Hello everyone,
>
> Question one: when I'm using the archive search form on
> http://lists.debian.org/search.html, if I select all quarters on the
> Date Filter, does it search in all quarters or just the first quarter
> of the selection? I se
Hello everyone,
Question one: when I'm using the archive search form on
http://lists.debian.org/search.html, if I select all quarters on the Date
Filter, does it search in all quarters or just the first quarter of the
selection? I searched for "dpkg frontend for X" and it returned "No
matche
* sheine ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [011015 12:09]:
> 2. Is there a linux equivalent to presizer, a way change a partition
> size non-destructively?
check out GNU ext2resize and parted. Both are packaged for all of
{{un,}stable,testing}.
for future reference, also try http://www.google.com/search?q=ext
1. Without going into details of how I did it, I fouled up lpd or lpr.
When I try to print something, I get:
Connection refused
jobs queued, but cannot start daemon
How do I correct whatever is wrong? I tried magicfilterconfig and it did
not help.
2. Is there a linux equivalent to presizer,
On Sat, Jul 07, 2001 at 02:07:34PM +0300, Shaul Karl wrote:
> > Here's another quetion. The system I'm compiling on is
> > missing.
> >
> > /usr/include/floatingpoint.h
What's it? Anything like "float.h" in standard C?
> > /usr/include/math.h
libc
AIL PROTECTED]
> > Sent: Friday, July 06, 2001 6:36 PM
> > To: David R. Van Sandt
> > Cc: debian-mentors@lists.debian.org
> > Subject: Re: Two questions
> >
> >
> > > We are using dpkg on Solaris to manage packages. I am having a
> > >
On (08/06/01 17:29), Vittorio wrote:
> I've installed Mutt and am using as my pet e-mail composer emacs.
Me too! I use mutt-alias.el and post.el which are both available from
http://www.davep.org/mutt/
post.el is a mail mode for Emacs that contains various functions
including automatic line wrapp
> > On Fri, Jun 08, 2001 at 05:29:26PM +, Vittorio wrote:
> > > 2) Is that possible to configure emacs to wrap lines at, say, 72 char?
For accents put
(set-language-environment "Latin-1")
in .emacs.
To wrap text mode lines at 72, try
(add-hook 'text-mode-hook 'turn-on-auto-fi
John R Lenton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Fri, Jun 08, 2001 at 05:29:26PM +, Vittorio wrote:
> > 2) Is that possible to configure emacs to wrap lines at, say, 72 char?
>
> I don't know how you'd put it in your .emacs, but C-x f is
> set-fill-column, so C-u 72 C-x f would do that for you.
On Fri, Jun 08, 2001 at 05:29:26PM +, Vittorio wrote:
> 2) Is that possible to configure emacs to wrap lines at, say, 72 char?
I don't know how you'd put it in your .emacs, but C-x f is
set-fill-column, so C-u 72 C-x f would do that for you.
--
John Lenton ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) -- Random fortu
Vittorio <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I've installed Mutt and am using as my pet e-mail composer emacs.
Why don't you use one of the emacs mail tools? :)
> 2) Is that possible to configure emacs to wrap lines at, say, 72
> char?
Add to your .emacs:
;; for mail modes and text modes, turn on a
I've installed Mutt and am using as my pet e-mail composer emacs.
1) I'm experiencing problems with the accented characters so frequent in
Italian.
When I save an e-mail to be sent (C-x C-s) emacs invariably says that there
are the accented characters and compells me to give a charset. Select
Make a boot floppy:
As root, issue
mkboot /vmlinuz
(see also man page for mkboot). this will make a faster booting floppy.
Lars
On Fri, 8 Jun 2001, GARGIULO Eduardo INGDESI wrote:
> Hi, this is my first message to the list.
> I had installed debian potato 2.2 and I'm new to debian.
>
GARGIULO Eduardo INGDESI wrote:
> - the kernel version is 2.2.17, but I want to compile 2.4.5. I have
> the tar.bz2 kernel file, but I don't know which packages I need to
> compile the kernel. Where can I find the list of packages needed to
> do it?
see /path/to/kernelversion/Documentation/Change
GARGIULO Eduardo INGDESI wrote:
>
> Hi, this is my first message to the list.
> I had installed debian potato 2.2 and I'm new to debian.
> The questions are:
> - the kernel version is 2.2.17, but I want to compile 2.4.5. I have
> the tar.bz2 kernel file, but I don't know which packages I need to
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