Oh, well. We should be off to fixing that bug, then.
2014/1/7 Steve Langasek
> On Sun, Jan 05, 2014 at 10:50:35PM -0200, pabloalmeida...@gmail.com wrote:
> > We really don't have a way to have the packages installed but the service
> > stopped/unavailable until the user needs it?
>
> It could b
On Sun, Jan 05, 2014 at 10:50:35PM -0200, pabloalmeida...@gmail.com wrote:
> We really don't have a way to have the packages installed but the service
> stopped/unavailable until the user needs it?
It could be done, but that's not the way Debian packages are put together by
default. It would be a
We really don't have a way to have the packages installed but the service
stopped/unavailable until the user needs it?
2014/1/5 Steve Langasek
> On Sun, Jan 05, 2014 at 12:47:47PM -0500, Stéphane Graber wrote:
> > Ubuntu has a no open port by default policy at least for the Desktop
> > installa
On Sun, Jan 05, 2014 at 12:47:47PM -0500, Stéphane Graber wrote:
> Ubuntu has a no open port by default policy at least for the Desktop
> installation. If you look at a default Ubuntu Desktop system the only
> exceptions you should see to that rule are the DHCP client (which needs
> to listen on ud
On Sun, Jan 05, 2014 at 03:08:32AM +, Dimitri John Ledkov wrote:
> On 27 December 2013 00:59, pabloalmeida...@gmail.com
> wrote:
> > As suggested by a triager of a bug I reported on this issue, I'm bringing
> > this idea for discussion on this list. If this is the wrong place, feel free
> > to
On 27 December 2013 00:59, pabloalmeida...@gmail.com
wrote:
> As suggested by a triager of a bug I reported on this issue, I'm bringing
> this idea for discussion on this list. If this is the wrong place, feel free
> to point me to the right one.
>
> When one tries to share a folder in the network