[03:51] Hey guys. i'm trying to add lubuntu to my pxe server. What should I do for the kernel and append lines? [03:52] It is worth noting that I will be using NFS === jussi01 is now known as jussi [06:58] hi [06:58] slight problem when i view or play any movie i am allways getting sound through one speaker [07:01] /join #ubuntu [07:51] Hey is there not a irc log from lubuntu uds. please give a link [09:05] uds? === doctord90 is now known as DoctorD90 [13:53] Hey lubuttbutt [15:02] does anyone here know how to change IO schedulers for LVM volumes? [15:02] I see that dm-x devices have "none" while my sda has "deadline". [15:03] Now I am wondering, if LVM manager is the process that accesses sda to provide the dm-x volumes, how does deadline know which process asks for what? Or deadline doesn't need such info? Does it prioritize per IO access operation? [15:04] Or perhaps LVM is not a process at all, which is more likely, so when some userland program asks for IO the kernel simply translates that to proper IO on sda. So in fact deadline is aware of which process issued each IO operation. [15:05] In any case, wouldn't it make more sense to have "none" for sda and "deadline" or whatever for each dm-x? [15:06] Tritonio: dm devices are eventually backed by physical devices which can have the IO scheduler set. [15:07] i'm not sure if lvm has similar / different ways to tweak it. Check the lvm.conf file? [15:17] xnox: I'll check that now, thanks. [15:19] Tritonio: see a debian wiki on tweaking for SSD optimal performance, if this is what you are after [15:30] no I have a regular laptop HDD. I just want to mess around with io schedulers. [15:30] I did a huge copy operation from an external NTFS drive. [15:30] And at some points it was lagging the whole system. === Guest14545 is now known as exogen === exogen is now known as Guest26720 === wizonesolutions is now known as lefnire === lefnire is now known as wizonesolutions === cerebrati is now known as cerebrate [19:30] hi === guest904 is now known as trewe [22:11] hi, what's the name of the tool that when you move a window up it maximizes or when you move to the sides it takes the half of the screen and fit