[02:01] <Rtfsc8> Hi~ Anyone build openjdk7 with ubuntu 18.04 success?
[06:32] <pmjdebruijn> Rtfsc8: I doubt many would attempt such a thing...
[06:32] <pmjdebruijn> any particular reason you need java7?
[06:33] <pmjdebruijn> btw, the repos for 18.04 have both 10 and 8
[06:33] <pmjdebruijn> IIRC
[06:38] <Babloyi> yup
[07:02] <Rtfsc8> pmjdebruijn: I was learn oracle jdk7 by compile the source code.
[07:02] <pmjdebruijn> Rtfsc8: I don't follow
[07:02] <pmjdebruijn> compiling jdk source isn't something you ever have to do in regular java use, even as a java programmer
[07:02] <pmjdebruijn> unless you want to work on Java itself
[07:03] <pmjdebruijn> in which case, you should probably focus in Java 10 I guess
[07:03] <Rtfsc8> pmjdebruijn: The code build success but can't run java command
[07:03] <pmjdebruijn> Rtfsc8: that would like you didn't "install" it
[07:03] <pmjdebruijn> but doing manually compile installations may mess up your system
[07:03] <pmjdebruijn> as it's not managed by dpkg
[07:03] <pmjdebruijn> so revoming anything might be difficult
[07:03] <pmjdebruijn> removing*
[07:04] <pmjdebruijn> for real world Java usage and programming, using the official packages from Ubuntu is HIGHLY recommended
[07:04] <pmjdebruijn> Rtfsc8: also, unless you have some really special reason for Java7, it shouldn't be used anymore at all
[07:04] <Rtfsc8> you are right, i just want to learn some part of jvm something else.
[07:05] <Rtfsc8> pmjdebruijn: thks
[07:05] <pmjdebruijn> if you have specific question regarded that, I suggest asking on a Java specific channel
[07:06] <Rtfsc8> pmjdebruijn: Yes, i have
[08:45] <st-gourichon-fid> Hello. I sometime have an annyoing session problem on Xubuntu 18.04 .
[08:46] <st-gourichon-fid> Session would hang, and if I kill all my processes, I cannot open another session for that specific user. Other users unnafected.
[08:46] <st-gourichon-fid> Programs complain dbus not launched.
[08:46] <st-gourichon-fid> debug cannot run, complains "no socket received"
[08:46] <st-gourichon-fid> I see "systemd --user" not launched, if I launch it manually it complains about cgroups.
[08:47] <st-gourichon-fid> Failed to create /user.slice/user-1000.slice/session-c36.scope/init.scope control group: Permission denied
[08:47] <st-gourichon-fid> Googling that shows that a number of people have experienced this, yet I could not find any answer.
[08:53] <st-gourichon-fid> Xubuntu 18.04 AMD64, XFCE session. The repro scenario is : session works, then suspend (or just lock perhaps), resume, type password to unlock, sometimes screen then gets black, to see what happens, do Ctrl-Alt-F1 then login on plain VT, see processes still there, dm-tool-switch-to-user works for other users, this user always gets black screen, kill -9 -1 as affected user to "cleanup" the mess, try to login again, desktop opens with
[08:53] <st-gourichon-fid> desktop bakground but no panel, dialogs complain about dbus. There cannot start dbus or systemd --user.
[08:53] <st-gourichon-fid> Perhaps some group resource not cleaned when doing kill -9 -1 ?
[08:55] <st-gourichon-fid> Some elements of XFCE session successfully started, still, like the items one can customize in "session and startup".
[08:55] <st-gourichon-fid> But no panel, nm_applet etc.
[14:53] <unknown_> hello
[14:54] <unknown_> is there anyone here
[20:45] <ChunkzZ> I need some serious help! I thought I broke my Xubuntu 18 system, because every folder on my hdd (not the ssd where xubuntu is installed) has a lock on it, can't delete and edit stuff. what could've gone wrong? it's a fresh install...
[20:49] <ChunkzZ> it's saying it's a read-only file system?
[20:52] <ChunkzZ> I can't chmod 0777 -R it either, it says it's changing the read-only file system but the folder lock icons stay there. wtf?
[20:53] <diogenes_> ChunkzZ, run: lsblk | nc termbin.com 9999
[20:53] <diogenes_> share the link
[20:53] <ChunkzZ> http://termbin.com/uu6h
[20:54] <ChunkzZ> sdb and sda2 are the problem(s)
[20:54] <diogenes_> are you on a live session?
[20:54] <ChunkzZ> nope, install xubuntu 18 from the minimal iso
[20:54] <diogenes_> sda2 is a windows partition
[20:55] <diogenes_> you can try to boot into windows and reboot from windows
[20:55] <ChunkzZ> yeah, I can't edit stuff on sdb and sda2
[20:55] <knome> ntfs?
[20:56] <ChunkzZ> knome, yes
[20:57] <knome> https://askubuntu.com/questions/70281/why-does-my-ntfs-partition-mount-as-read-only
[21:01] <ChunkzZ> ugh, no luck.
[21:01] <knome> with what part?
[21:05] <ChunkzZ> thanks so much knome! I held the shift key in Windows and rebooted after it shutdown and it's back to normal!! :)
[21:06] <ChunkzZ> can edit/delete again
[21:06] <knome> keep in mind you'll have to do this every time to be able to write..
[21:06] <ChunkzZ> I never had a problem before :/
[21:07] <knome> i don't use windows so me neither...