CarlenWhite | Getting some kernel panics related to memory. Hoping my memory isn't giving up the ghost. | 00:44 |
---|---|---|
CarlenWhite | Or best case something has a nasty bug. | 00:44 |
CarlenWhite | https://termbin.com/qf06 | 00:48 |
CarlenWhite | journalctl -b -1 output, trimmed. | 00:49 |
CarlenWhite | Oh, it's amdgpu | 00:49 |
CarlenWhite | Well, now I know who to heckle. | 00:50 |
sparr | 19.10 changes sudo to not preserve $HOME? | 01:19 |
sparr | I can't find this mentioned anywhere, but am noticing the behavior change | 01:19 |
donofrio | anyone know of a "ports" version of 19.04 for ppc? | 02:25 |
donofrio | 20.04 I mean | 02:25 |
lotuspsychje | 20.04 isnt out yet | 02:28 |
OerHeks | 16.04.6 was the latest version that supports ppc | 02:46 |
guiverc | donofrio, 20.04 = 2020.April which is still a long time away; ppc64el 19.04 can be obtained via http://ports.ubuntu.com/ubuntu-ports/dists/disco/main/installer-ppc64el/current/images/netboot/ | 04:21 |
nt0 | re: "unstable and will probably break your computer [...]": is 19.10 in good enough shape at this point (two days from release, iirc) that i can expect to plink around on it in a VM without much trouble? i tried a 19.10 daily very early on and it was borked. | 19:49 |
tomreyn | "plink around on it" as in use ssh? | 19:51 |
Faux | nt0: I'm surprised it was broken even at the start, but yeah, it's fine. | 19:52 |
nt0 | tomreyn: well i suppose i might, but what i meant was to use it for general computing without anything important going on. i'm planning to set up a haskell dev vm on my laptop and would like to use ubuntu 19.10. | 19:53 |
Faux | "plink around" means "mess around", not "run plink". | 19:53 |
nt0 | Faux: great, downloading now. | 19:53 |
tomreyn | thanks Faux | 19:53 |
tomreyn | nt0: i guess you should use the daily iso, not the beta, in case you're undecided there | 19:56 |
dax | i.e. http://cdimage.ubuntu.com/daily-live/current/ | 19:57 |
nt0 | tomreyn: aye. that's what i chose. i assume that it's "rolling" in the sense that it'll be sync'ed up with whatever ships on the 17th. | 19:57 |
tomreyn | you can install updates and thus land on the same state as the release installer would put you, yes | 19:58 |
tomreyn | not rolling as in a rolling linux distro, but i'm sure you're aware of this. | 19:58 |
dax | !final | 19:59 |
ubottu | If you install a development version of Ubuntu Eoan and keep up with package updates, then you will be upgraded to the official release of 19.10 when it comes out. To make sure, type « sudo apt update && sudo apt full-upgrade » in a terminal. | 19:59 |
dax | (full-upgrade being notable because it usually isn't needed once Ubuntu's released, but occasionally is during development, even this late in the game) | 20:00 |
nt0 | tomreyn: of course. hence quotes and why i asked :D. dax: i habitually do full-upgrade every few logins, so it sounds like i'm covered. what would i use instead? dist-upgrade? | 20:06 |
dax | lots of people just do upgrade instead of full-upgrade | 20:06 |
dax | assuming you're checking the package list and making sure it's doing something sane, full-upgrade is fine | 20:07 |
nt0 | ah, just read up on it. sounds like the major (only?) difference between upgrade and full-upgrade is that full will remove packages if the maintainers have done so whereas upgrade will not | 20:08 |
bittin_ | https://www.jupiterbroadcasting.com/1030/jblive/ Review of Ubuntu 19.10 tonight | 20:53 |
bittin_ | burning the iso with fixed sudo now :) | 21:21 |
bittin_ | Now there is 19.10 time in this weeks LUP | 21:44 |
Generated by irclog2html.py 2.7 by Marius Gedminas - find it at mg.pov.lt!