/srv/irclogs.ubuntu.com/2020/11/04/#ubuntu.txt

spelterwhoa. well, it seems the ssd is busted, dmesg heckling out constant ata errors and it won't reboot after initial install. weird how I got everything up and running yesterday, then the lvm-apt package by accident, then the whole thing went to hell :D00:16
sarnold:(00:16
speltersarnold: it was a cheapo WD Blue 250GB ssd, around 50 EUR or so00:17
sarnoldstill :)00:18
speltereither my mobo's dying from that workstation or the lvm yesterday put a proper zap into it00:18
spelterthat other guy who was here earlier on was agreeing with my notion that LVM can be lethal for SSD's since it has so many different ways it can "overwrite" it; i.e. go past its boundaries and whatnot00:19
spelterand I said about this earlier but, nonetheless, a short recap; after that lvm apt package froze up the entire machine (I googled that one up too, seems like a common problem), no matter how I tried to reformat the ssd, it still kept on bouncing me into grub rescue00:20
spelter... which means that it probably overwrote some stuff into places it shouldn't have00:21
spelter,..aand that was probably a bit too much for the ssd to handle :ʒ00:22
spelterit's a bit of a bummer in a sense that I got everything working pitch-perfect within a couple of hours00:23
sarnolddid you do the encryptedinstall? iirc that does a write to the whole drive; it might have found it didn't have enough rewrite blocks00:24
speltersarnold: nope, did not do that.00:28
speltersarnold: it was working very nicely before that lvm package came by and then everything went to hell, I mean I was able to reboot time after time with absolutely no problems00:29
speltersarnold: at least the zfs gives me a nicer version of grub when it fails to boot :--)00:30
sarnoldspelter: hah :) I'm glad you can see an upside, hehe00:31
speltersarnold: the weird thing is that even when it fails to reboot, when I disconnect the drie and open it up on another linux machine, all the system files etc are there00:31
sarnoldspelter: o_O very strange00:32
speltersarnold: I mean that motherboard isn't exactly new, and by that I mean it's clocking at around 11 years, built to last, top of the line i7 core with a few components changed over the years00:32
speltersarnold: I'm going to sacrifice another ssd to the great lord moloc---I mean ubuntu00:33
spelterI have a leftover Kingston 128GB SSD that should also be in pristine shape00:33
sarnoldbut capacitors are gonna capacitate00:33
sarnoldI wonder if doing an entire hour's computing was too much for it?00:34
speltersarnold: ran thru the dmesg messages and it did give out a bunch of ata errors but i'm not quite sure if they're the ssd or the mobo, yet. I mean the whole thing runs beautifully from a usb stick00:35
spelterthe livecd (or in this case, livestick) runs perfectly fine, and fast00:35
sarnoldalright... maybe the sata controller?00:35
speltersarnold: well the thing is that I had a fried SSD on that workstation around halloween (who needs horrors when you've got real stuff to work on, right?)00:36
spelterthat was a Windows drive and I've been now scrambling to get the data rescued, which I miraculously have done, by the power of R-Studio00:37
spelter(available for linux also)00:37
sarnoldspelter: i think i fear for the safety of your kingston 12800:37
speltersarnold: well the harsh fact is that the lm1 apt package screwed up the entire thing ,and there's been many forum posts cursing LVM to hell when it comes to using it with SSD's00:38
speltersince it literally can overwrite blocks that it is not supposed to etc00:38
speltersarnold: I wouldn't fear too much for the safety, I mean the WD blue still comes up pitch-perfect on this linux endpoint00:39
spelterI do run the whole shabang in BIOS mode for legacy support00:39
spelterbut yep, seriously put , the lvm1 package started to install via apt and then the whole OS froze up00:40
spelterhad to really piledrive it down, I think I didn't use a hard boot tho, just a sudo shutdown00:40
spelterand even that was like a reaaaaaally long process, and after that, the ssd was kinda like, as it is now, "working but not-working"00:41
speltera.k.a. I can fill it up with zeros with dd on another endpoint and run the live install .iso that's been stuck on a stick, it will install just fine ... up until the first reboot00:42
spelterbefore that whole lvm1 ordeal, i was able to just reboot at will with absolutely no problems at all00:42
spelterand yeah, to clarify: when that lvm1 package started to install, and the machine froze up, it didn't boot except into the grub/grub rescue mode after that00:43
spelterI've been googling up that thing and it seems to be a common thing00:43
spelteryou know, SSD's are a thing in of themselves and add to that all the quirks that each manufacturer has in their models00:44
sarnoldspelter: hmmm, I wonder, zeros compress pretty well.. maybe try badblocks with -w or similar to try to poke it in the eye differently..00:46
speltersarnold: I'm just about ready dumping the crap off the kingston00:47
spelterit's a smaller ssd tho, only 128GB00:48
sarnoldiirc I've got two 128s in my big server in the basement; it's plenty for root, homedirs, etc00:49
spelterI wonder what would be the safest bet in order to have it "future-proofed" so that if that thing works out, I can use it as a basis to hop on to a larger one00:50
speltersarnold: hehe, I prefer to run every time-critical thing off of ssd's00:50
spelter250gb is plenty for a bunch of devkits and all that jazz00:51
spelteralthough my ssd system drives on windoze side tend to be 2tb and 4tb ssd's :--D00:52
spelterhey, you could spend 1k eur/usd into worse things00:52
spelterThat's a lot but then again both the devkits and software side altogether is so bloated that "IT'S NOT MY PROBLEM! Every night at 8PM" :D00:53
sarnoldoh believe me .. thatsystem in the basemtn was *not* cheap00:54
speltersarnold: computin' ain't cheap yo00:54
speltersarnold: if you can afford a truck you can afford a --- linux box00:54
spelter:D00:54
spelteralso I gotta admit that SSD's ain't what they're used to be; I mean I've heard so many horror stories recently of people's brand new SSD's just taking that one final dump after mere days of use00:56
spelterthat's also my rationale for going for the 128GB kingston; at least then -- something something, insert rationale here :D00:57
spelterno but that's an older drive that apart from it being in the shelves for a year or two, hasn't been used very much00:57
spelterthe quality has been dwindling, same goes for previously good sd-card and usb stick brands00:59
sarnoldah see I never trusted the sd cards and usb sticks00:59
sarnoldbut ssds, those should be okay00:59
sarnoldI don't know if modern qlc ssds are okay or not01:00
speltersarnold: in my case I don't always have a choice, it's a camera thing01:00
sarnoldyeah01:00
spelterbut yep, even sandisk extrems can go *poof* just like that. it sucks. especially when you're really paying to get something decent.01:01
speltersarnold: oh trust me, I've been riding on the SSD insanity for almost a decade now and I've had such revelations with the quality and the way different manufacturers cut corners etc01:02
spelterand I mean; drives that were over 500 EUR at the time and "whoops, we didn't see that one coming in our memory cell architecture"01:03
spelter:D01:03
krytarikSorry to interject a little here, but is this really still related to Ubuntu for the last few pages of scrollback?01:04
spelterseriously, it was like that. intel used to keep up a pretty solid track record until they noticed that they can't compete on the consumer markets because they didn't want to tarnish their brand, and hence they switched to enterprise-intended ssd manufacturing only , could've stopped that one too, haven't checked up on them in a while.01:05
spelterkrytarik: oh damn, I thought I was on the open discussion channel, not at the helpdesk. my bad01:06
spelterkrytarik: sorry about that.01:06
krytarikHeh, no worries.01:06
signofzetathat's okay, spelter. i've done the same thing.  #ubuntu-offtopic is more your jam.01:06
signofzetathat aside, i have a question.  whenever I open the official Discord app (a snap, if that matters), I'm immediately logged out.  what would cause that?01:07
spelterkrytarik: it was related to my woes with my recent attempt to install ubuntu 20.04.1LTS on an almost-pristine SSD, which worked for a while and then it went to hell, and now I've been scratching my head over it01:07
speltersignofzeta: what ubuntu version?01:08
speltersignofzeta: also, snaps are a hit-or-miss kinda thing imho. "oh snap!" *rimshot*01:08
signofzetaspelter: 20.04.1 LTS, fully updated, kernel 5.4.0-5201:08
spelterI mean I've literally given up on most snaps and just compile with my own scripts from the latest git source or so if I need to01:09
signofzetayeah, I know snaps can snap at you, but this is new.  just started today.  may or may not be related to me installing amdgpu drivers from AMD, not sure.  i can't read the debugging output because i'm logged off.01:09
speltersignofzeta: yeah you should defo see what it's doing by running it from cli01:09
signofzetatried it, spelter. it logged me out so fast i couldn't read the output.01:10
spelterwait what01:11
signofzetaI type "discord" in a terminal (or click the icon), then i'm immediately back at the logon screen.01:11
spelterlogged you out? out of your xwindow session?01:12
spelterwow.01:12
sarnoldoh wow01:12
signofzetayeah, just like that.  let me check journalctl for anything interesting. i haven't had time to troubleshoot yet.01:12
sarnoldis there anything in journalctl / dmesg / audit logs?01:12
speltertell ya what, as soon as I get that kingston ssd tried (OR fried) out, I'll try me some bad mojo-dickord myself01:12
spelterdiscord , sorry01:12
signofzetajournalctl has nothing for discord. some AppArmor stuff about the Ubuntu Store, but nothing damning.01:13
speltersignofzeta: you could try starting a script (With i.e. 'script whatsgoingonwithmydiscord.txt') in your terminal before you go-go01:14
speltersignofzeta: discord is the kinda software that I really don't, for some reason, trust that much01:14
spelterI mean there's been some datasec news about the owner selling some private data or some stuff like that01:15
signofzetayeah, but my friends are on there.  i use it carefully.  but I also use Linux.01:15
speltersignofzeta: :D maybe better to firejail the entire thing and see what it does then01:16
spelterand do the script thing before you run it so at least you can then get a whiff is it says something inside term01:16
spelters/is/if01:16
=== johuck5 is now known as johuck
signofzetaThe only thing I see in dmesg about Discord is an AppArmor warning:  audit: type=1326 audit(1604451649.764:15197): auid=1000 uid=1000 gid=1000 ses=3 pid=26580 comm="Discord" exe="/snap/discord/115/usr/share/discord/Discord" sig01:17
speltersignofzeta: "my friends are there" reminded me of that Mark Twain quote: "Go to heaven for climate, hell for the company."01:17
signofzetaI wish I could get my friends to use PGP, but that's a whole different channel. :-)01:18
speltersignofzeta: and if you start a script before you run it...? anything?01:18
sarnoldsignofzeta: it looks like it was truncated at 'sig'01:18
signofzetaIs it?  That was the whole line.01:18
signofzetasarnold: that was the whole line, unless it wrapped mid-screen01:19
spelterDiscord does some odd stuff on Windows side too, I've been probing it every now and then01:19
speltersignofzeta: oh btw you can use discord with just about all the features via www.discordapp.com/login01:19
signofzetayeah, I'm no stranger to Discord oddness. I run it on my macOS laptop and i can watch the battery drain.01:19
spelterI think that was the url01:19
sarnoldsignofzeta: how'd you see it? journalctl does some stupid line truncating thing, I wonder if that's what you hit01:20
spelterI mean if you have an up-to-date web browser, even screen sharing, webcam, stuff like that works01:20
spelterand hence you don't need to install any of their wonky cr*p on your PC01:20
signofzetasarnold: maybe. I did it in a terminal window. i've used Linux for 15 years, but i'm back to Ubuntu and trying to get the hang of systemd.01:20
signofzetasarnold: and no, that pasted line came out of dmesg | less01:21
sarnoldsignofzeta: weird. I've never seen an audit message not stick to the key=value pattern01:22
signofzetasarnold: maybe it was truncated before reaching dmesg, i'm not sure.01:23
sarnoldpossible, I've been logging mine to /var/log/audit/audit.log for so long I haven't got a clue what happens when they are sent to dmesg01:23
sarnoldbut the apparmor tooling can scrape messages from that, so they shouldn't be truncated there, I don't think01:23
signofzetasarnold: nope, i'm an idiot, hold on01:23
speltersarnold:  https://discord.com/login <= and if it tries to redirect you to the discord app, there should be a selection "open in browser instead"01:24
signofzetayeah, I saw the Discord browser login. I'll use that, but I'd like to the fix the app eventually.01:24
speltersarnold: voice chat, video chat/screen share etc works01:24
spelterstraight outta browser01:24
speltersignofzeta: yes, I understand that woe01:24
signofzetaHere's the full line:  udit: type=1326 audit(1604451812.515:22787): auid=1000 uid=1000 gid=1000 ses=3 pid=34999 comm="Discord" exe="/snap/discord/115/usr/share/discord/Discord" sig=0 arch=c000003e syscall=203 compat=0 ip=0x7f262b995b9f code=0x5000001:25
signofzetaI'm distracted by some political theater tonight, my bad.01:25
spelterpolitical theater? not on my watch!01:25
signofzetai'll try logging Discord output to a file soon, I'm chatting in another channel right now01:27
sarnold$ ausyscall 20301:27
sarnoldsched_setaffinity01:27
GumaAnyone know how to enable Mobile Networking from command line? I see two options Enable Networking and Enable Mobile Networking. I want to do this from command line. For Enable Networking I can do "nmcli networking off or on"01:28
signofzetai installed the closed-source AMD GPU drivers a few days ago, because I needed OpenCL support.  i assume it's related.01:28
GumaHow do you toggle Mobile on off01:28
spelterGuma: there's this thing called google and a thing called Ubuntu's Official Documentation, you might've heard of them ; there's the instructions at least for older versions ; https://help.ubuntu.com/community/NetworkManager#Using_NetworkManager_on_the_command_line01:31
spelterI'm installing the 20.04.1LTS desktop now on that beforementioned Kingston 128GB SSD to see how that works out01:34
spelterI wonder if I should use ZFS or not, hmm01:35
spelterZFS it is! Sun Microsystems! Zardoz!01:35
spelterI mean, sorry.01:35
signofzetaspelter: I do. Works great so far.  it's not a boot volume, though.01:35
spelterno errors yet01:36
speltersignofzeta: I had the SSD issue just before this one, hmm, thjis also seems to be a way lot faster than the WD Blue 250GB cheapo one, although this is like, years old and so01:37
spelterbut hasn't been used much, all the memory cells should be in pretty good shape as for r/w wear01:37
signofzetai just had a PCIe M.2 SSD report that it was starting to fail.  poor old thing.  i guess its last owner abused it.  though my motherboard's M.2 slot is immediately under the GPU slot, so it gets hot.01:43
speltersignofzeta: that's the thing with solid state drives01:43
spelterit's wild e. coyote stuff, works like a rocket engine, until you hit a wall01:44
speltersignofzeta: at least you got a forewarning01:44
signofzetaHard drives would slow down and maybe make noise back in the day, before SMART kicked off.  SSD's are more reliable, but tend to die quietly.01:45
spelterI mean, usually, when SSD's or other solid state media goes, it just goes01:45
speltersignofzeta: quietly AND suddenly at times01:45
spelterbtw is there any benefits for a PC desktop user from trying out ubuntu 20.10? I saw some initial reviews that weren't very enthusiastic about 20.1001:47
signofzetadoes 20.10 use the 5.5 kernel? my computer has an AMD fTPM.01:47
spelterI did a pervert thing here on this Raspberry Pi4B endpoint and tried out 20.10 and then reverted back to 20.04.1LTS but got to keep the 5.8 kernel01:47
spelter:D01:47
spelterKernel: 5.8.0-1002-raspi aarch64 bits: 64 Desktop: Xfce 4.14.2 Distro: Ubuntu 20.04.1 LTS (Focal Fossa)01:48
spelterMachine:   Type: ARM Device System: Raspberry Pi 4 Model B Rev 1.1 Kernel: 5.8.0-1002-raspi aarch64 bits: 64 Desktop: Xfce 4.14.2 Distro: Ubuntu 20.04.1 LTS (Focal Fossa)01:48
spelter;)01:48
signofzetawell, if you have an AMD or Intel fTPM, 20.10 will let your apps use it -- if it has Linux 5.5, that is.  i forget.01:49
speltersignofzeta: my mobo is old a.f. but I do have an i7 core with plenty of ram onboard etcetera, and a good gpu01:49
spelterbut I doubt it supports any of the new motherboard gimmicks01:50
spelternvidia quadro drivers seem to be up to date01:50
signofzetaIt's short for Firmware TPM.  it's a TPM emulated in the CPU microcode.  might just be an AMD Ryzen thing, who knows?01:50
spelteraaand after everything was installed, I'm now waiting in front of a black screen for something to happen01:54
spelterjust like what happened with the other SSD01:54
speltererror: compression algorithm inherit not supported01:54
Sven_vBIs there an easy way (in focal) to find all process IDs of all processes that are running as user "_apt" and whose executable's path starts with "/usr/lib/apt/methods/"?01:54
speltererror: you need to load the kernel first01:54
Sven_vB(??? or should I pipe ps to sed)01:54
reset`hi again01:55
reset`managed to upgrade it01:55
spelteryep doesn't work from the other ssd either :|01:55
speltererror: attempt to rea or write outside of disk 'hd0'.01:55
sarnoldSven_vB: that's probably a one-liner if you install https://github.com/osquery/osquery .. but ps to sed isn't a bad start01:55
spelter(Read)01:55
reset`card reader still not working01:56
sarnoldspelter: sweet! can you file a bug report on that while yo've got it running? :)01:56
reset`and now (gnome-disks:12708): GNOME-Disks-ERROR **: 01:52:59.913: Error getting udisks client: Timeout was reached01:56
reset`disks dont work after upgrade to 2001:56
speltersarnold: While I got it running? :D you mean the GNU GRUB screen that is now once again staring me in the face01:56
speltersarnold: I'm typing this from another endpoint01:57
spelterfunny thing is that also, GNU GRUB doesn't let me scroll up or down with arrow keys01:57
spelteronly lets me press enter01:57
Sven_vBsarnold, sounds like ps|sed is the easiest way with standard equipment then. thanks!01:57
spelterI seriously wonder what the hell was going on, I got everything to work perfectly yesterday, and then boom01:58
spelteror was = is01:58
spelteryeah so anyway it's kinda hard to file in a bug report on that one as it is, I guess I could see if I can shut that down and dump the logs to you02:01
spelterthe install in of itself went without errors tho, I've had errors in that process too during my re-install attempts02:01
spelteractually I think I had some errors during the very first install attempt but i just did sudo apt updates and upgrades and a couple of reboots later it was all good02:02
=== zbenjamin is now known as Guest70393
=== zbenjamin_ is now known as zbenjamin
spelterI'm re-running the install from the boot installer, again everything's working just fine for now. I'll try with the default filesystem selection this time.02:04
spelterI chose "erase disk and install ubuntu" and no advanced/extra options this time...02:05
spelterI do have some extra USB sticks, wonder should I try to just go for the 20.10 and see what happens02:07
spelterit might be that the i7 core generation I have is too old or something for Ubuntu to handle it tho, wonder also if I should set stuff up in BIOS somehow differently. but well, at least now I know it wasn't (just) the WD Blue SSD02:08
sarnoldafaik all the i7s should work fine02:09
spelterbtw my wd blue ssd that is now out of that pc opens up just fine here on this ubuntu 20.04.1lts (running on aarch64)02:09
spelterI mean I can get the entire filestructure opened up02:10
spelterno wait, I can't :D02:10
spelterthere's a 537 MB volume, then "bpool" and "rpool"02:10
sarnold/dev/nvme0n1p2    2048    1050623    1048576   512M EFI System02:11
sarnoldthat's my guess for your 537 MB volume02:11
speltersarnold: if you don't mind 6 rows of text ....02:11
spelterDevice     Boot   Start       End   Sectors   Size Id Type02:11
spelter/dev/sda1  *       2048   1050623   1048576   512M  b W95 FAT3202:11
spelter/dev/sda2       1052670 488396799 487344130 232.4G  5 Extended02:11
spelter/dev/sda5       1054720   5249023   4194304     2G 82 Linux swap / Solaris02:11
spelter/dev/sda6       5251072   9445375   4194304     2G a5 FreeBSD02:11
spelter/dev/sda7       9447424 488396799 478949376 228.4G a5 FreeBSD02:11
spelterapparently, it's all there, grub just goes haywire and dumps me into the rescue prompt02:12
spelterand I've tried different fs options from the setup choices on the 20.04.1LTS02:13
sarnoldI wonder if the zfs install option expects uefi rather than legacy02:13
spelterit all worked out just fine, well, apart from few glitches that I did send a bugreport out of02:14
=== EuphOria is now known as AbandonHope
spelterokay so now I got an "Installer crashed" errormsg02:14
spelterstill managed to get to the desktop, should've sent an error report, or at least it said it would02:15
spelterrunning apt update / upgrade, any good tips what I should do before I attempt to reboot?02:16
spelter^ on02:16
spelterjust my take on things but perhaps the installer altogether should have a logging+crash log send functionality straight from the get-go02:18
spelterespecially when it's such a rickety roller coaster ride to install02:19
Sven_vBspelter, shameless plug: when you have doubts about rebooting, it's always a good idea to have a SuperGrub Disk at hand. #sgrub02:19
spelterSven_vB: thanks02:19
spelterI dunno if it's a licensing thing or what but the whole troubleshooting as for the boot failures and such could be made a way lot easier02:20
spelterand coherent at least02:20
Sven_vByeah there's a ton of stuff that could still be way easier in Ubuntu. at least, over the years it has made lots of progress already.02:21
spelterSven_vB: and don't get me wrong, I do realize the fact that I get what I pay for -- which is nothing :D02:22
spelterno, but all joking aside, it has a huge potential02:22
Sven_vBoh btw with spare USB thumb drives, did you mean to try different live ISOs? because the SuperGrub Disk can boot them from HDD or SSD, and the latter usually is a lot quicker to boot.02:23
spelterlinux altogether and so forth, it just seems so scattered, add to that the fact that indeed packet managers can go wild and whatnot02:23
spelterSven_vB: oh, ok, thanks for the tip...02:24
spelternow I've ran apt updates and upgrades02:24
spelterany last words before I reboot and face the grub?02:24
spelter:D02:24
Sven_vBif you install Ubuntu a lot, it might be worth considering options for automatic install02:25
spelterSven_vB: yep I've done that a multiple ties02:25
Sven_vBwhat do you use then?02:27
kvndyHow do I re-mount an external LUKS-encrypted drive that accidentally became disconnected?02:29
sarnoldspelter: fwiw we get a *lot* of automated bug reports during install https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/ubiquity/+bugs?orderby=-id&start=002:29
speltersarnold: where should I send the entire dmesg dump02:32
spelteri'm a bit worried about thoes ata errors tho02:33
Sven_vBkvndy, afair you have to dismount its logical volumes, deavtivate them, close the LUKS, ensure its mappers are released for real, then open the LUKS as usual, activate the logical volumes, then mount their file systems.02:34
Sven_vBkvndy, ideally you have a helper script for that ;)02:34
Sven_vBwith mappers I meant dm devices that show up in /dev/mapper.02:35
Sven_vBspelter, some ATA errors can be normal part of drive type detection. if they occurr while the disk has been properly detected already, check the cables. if you have doubts about disk health, smartmontools can help.02:36
kvndySven_v8 So... restart the computer every time then?02:37
spelterSven_vB: https://pastebin.com/LWBGdEWD stuff like that ... just posting a part of the dmesg there but02:38
spelterthen again it makes absolutely no sense at all that I'm able to install the entire thing on to an ssd and play around with it until I hit a brick wall02:39
spelterI mean it runs right now as I type this, but I'm pretty sure if I reboot it now,  it'll be toast02:39
spelterif there's a dev around who wants to take a peek at the entire dmesg dump from the boot, I'll be glad to send it over02:40
spelterEmask 0x52 (ATA bus error) seems to be prevalent02:41
sarnold[  117.081313] sd 0:0:0:0: [sda] tag#8 Add. Sense: Unaligned write command02:41
sarnoldI wonder ... I used to hear reports that some install software would misalign the starting sector, causing all writes on the drives to be insanely painful02:42
spelterhttps://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=174335 <= "Problem solved. The solution was to switch which SATA ports my drives were connected to. Thanks for the help! I also updated the title to better describe the actual problem.02:42
sarnoldI thought that hadn't been an issue in half-dozen years or something, but maybe you've got a fun way to trip it?02:42
spelterIn case anyone else has this problem, I'm using an ASRock Z87 Extreme4 motherboard, and the solution was to move my SATA cables from the SATA3_A0_A1 ports to the SATA3_0_1 ports."02:42
spelterthat's from archlinux but02:42
speltersarnold: well like I said, I'm running an old-gen i7 core02:42
spelterand by old, I mean they stopped manufacturing this intel motherboard in 200902:43
sarnoldwow I think this guy's errors are much scarier, he's got *all* the errors, heh02:43
=== PowerTower_121 is now known as PowerTower_120
Sven_vBkvndy, if reboot is a cheap option and it's easier than re-mounting, that's a valid approach of course.02:44
speltersarnold: well, I didn't post all the dmesg errors in that one02:44
spelterI got a bunch of that same-kind-ish ata error  and so forth02:44
Sven_vBkvndy, in case it is the disk where your lvm program resides, it's usually also the only option.02:45
kvndySven_v8 annoying but eventually I want to figure it out. It's going to take some research02:45
spelter"Disabling lock debugging due to kernel taint" :D02:45
spelter"Module license 'MIT' taints kernel"02:46
spelter:D02:46
Sven_vBok "I/O error, dev sda, sector 234441248" is one of those ATA errors that I expect to not see.02:46
kvndySven_v8 Ubuntu is installed on my internal SSD, but storage on an external LUKS-encrypted drive with a flaky connection02:46
Sven_vBlet's hope it's just your cables having problems02:46
Sven_vBkvndy, I see. then a script for cleaning up the debris seems to be a good idea.02:47
spelterand thus I reboot aaand.02:48
spelterback to grub. "error: attempt to read or write outside of disk 'hd0'. Entering rescue mode..."02:48
spelterI still don't get it how did it work without any issues initially, I rebooted it like ten times02:49
Sven_vBwhen have you last run the long S.M.A.R.T. test?02:50
spelterand I mean, by all logic, the entire OS is already installed on the ssd02:50
spelterthese are both near-mint ssd's, the other's a bit older02:50
spelterbut hasn't been used much at all, same thing goes for the 250GB WD Blue02:51
Sven_vBdid you verify their capacity with F3? maybe they have a surprise for you.02:51
speltermy point here is that I'm now trying this same thing out on another SSD and I've got two that have simply just went zonk02:51
spelteras in? that they're fake?02:52
Sven_vBmaybe. or just broken.02:52
spelteroh c'mon02:52
speltertwo in a row and the other one, the 128gb ssd that  I just tried out just now, I emptied it from around 110GB of files02:53
kvndySven_v8 I'll have to wait until the next accident before I'm motivated to figure it out02:53
Sven_vBI always test my new SSDs and thumb drives. bugs can be very hard to find if the lowest basics are at fault.02:53
spelterso, I mean ... and these are both from official retailers that don't sell copies so ...02:53
spelterthese are not new ones02:53
spelterbeen trying to explain that02:53
spelterI mean I can rip out a brand new, still sealed and whatnot ssd and put that in if that satisfies the doubt02:54
Sven_vBwell, afair F3 was invented because a well-known retailer had a bad batch.02:54
spelterand well, both of these hard drives have been used as material transfer mediums between endpoints with very little overall use, SMART health excellent and so forth, and been filled up to capacity , so02:55
spelterhow many ssd's do you want me to pull out and stick in there before you would conclude that it's not the drives02:55
Sven_vBif you want to believe, I accept that. I just wanted to inform that you can know instead of believing. :)02:55
speltertwo different drives from two different manufacturers from two different years02:56
spelterso if I stick 10 brand new different SSD*s in there, you still think that the statistical odds without checking are on the side of the SSD's and not because there's something going haywire in i.e. the code or elsewhere02:57
speltermakes perfect sense, except that it doesn't02:57
spelterwhat I still don't get is how it could work yesterday and be screwed up like that today02:58
spelterI did check the "install updates while installing" and "allow turdparty proprietary drivers" etc yadayada02:59
Sven_vBmaybe let's get back to that error message. so you assume you have an Ubuntu on that SSD, but the GRUB looks like it's broken? then it would be interesting to see what a known-good GRUB (e.g. SuperGrub Disk) sees.02:59
signofzetayeah, it might not be the SSD's.  i bought big hard drives ages ago, so I use those for my storage.  this one SSD i found acts as a totally-unnecessary L2ARC.03:00
spelterthose two ... were ... perfectly working ... literally almost good-as-new ... ssd's.03:01
spelterand I can still open up the contents of both on this other endpoint03:01
spelterfrom some of the error messages I got the impression that it might be a problem related to the order of the sata ports03:02
spelterand I MEan for christ sakes, I can run the entire OS just fine after installing it but with the first reboot it does that now03:02
Sven_vBhow would that affect GRUB? do you have them in a hardware RAID?03:02
spelterit's gotta be some update that has been introduced to ubuntu within the past 24hs03:02
spelterthat's my take on it03:03
speltersince I haven't changed the cabling, it goes straigh into that one docking slot, and since it WORKS03:03
spelterkinda03:03
spelterexcept for the boot-up ending up in grub's rescue mode03:04
signofzetamaybe. can you pop these into a (ugh) Windows system and set up a Storage Space or something, just as a test?  skip this if your data is already on these.03:05
Reset`hi again03:05
speltera Storage Space? as in, clone the entire drive as an image for people to probe?03:06
Sven_vBspelter, perfect use case for SGD03:06
Reset`im trying to get access to my sd card to put some things on it and i cant format it, it keeps giving me this message03:06
spelterrather not d o that03:06
Reset`error creating file system command-line mkexfatfs-n exited ith non-zero exit status 103:06
Reset`flushing stderr error fsynk failed imput/output error udisks error qark 003:07
Reset`nothing on google03:07
Sven_vBspelter, actually, if a broken GRUB is your only obstacle atm, I'd just install Ubuntu without a GRUB, and install GRUB later from the inside.03:08
spelterSven_vB: and how do you suppose I do that with the desktop installer? there's no option for that? or did you suggest that I'd just grab Ubuntu Server and install the desktop separately?03:10
Sven_vBspelter, I had just assumed that the desktop installer has that option. if it doesn't??? it won't make much of a difference. you'd backup your good grub, let the desktop installer destroy it, boot from SGD, restore the good grub. :(03:11
spelterI'm still contemplating on trying out 20.10 because I have this stupid wish that perhaps it's a kernel level bug that has been fixed in the 5.8.x kernel tree that 20.10 uses03:11
Sven_vBshould have been :)03:11
spelterbut then again, mo' updates, mo' problemz03:11
signofzetaforget the Windows Storage Space if your disks are in use.  it's the closest thing Windows has to ZFS.  it might have been a good control group for a test.03:11
Sven_vBspelter, now I'm confused. what's the current problem? wasn't it GRUB reading outside the disk?03:12
speltersignofzeta: how about the fact that I can fill up these SSD's to their final memory cell without an issue?03:12
signofzetaspelter: sorry, I haven't been paying close attention. never mind then.03:12
spelterSven_vB: I install via the official .iso installer, everything works ... until I reboot and end up in grub's rescue mode.03:12
spelterif choose zfs as the filesystem in install options, I end up in a little bit fancier looking grub (btw the arrow keys don't work in the GNU Grub)03:13
spelter:D03:13
Sven_vBspelter, ok. so it seems to be a GRUB problem, no kernel involved at that stage. SGD is made exactly for that situation. why not try it?03:14
Reset`go fsck -f dev/sda and it ill repair the booting part03:14
spelterSven_vB: I might as well do that by now, it seems just so ironic (or MORONIC, for that matter) that you get distros "broken out of the box" like that, exactly what i.e. Luke Smith, if you know the Unaboomer, has been ranting about in his youtube vids03:15
speltermore on the archlinux side tho03:15
speltera house is only as solid as its foundation03:15
spelterthere should be a proper recovery mode implemented straight on to the desktop version imho, everything is streamlined to look so good and then it hits a brick wall.03:16
spelter*just a kind side note greeting to the devs ;) I hope wimpy's not watching this! * :D03:16
Sven_vBspelter, considering the complexity of modern computing, it's a marvel that the installer works a lot of the times. a certain rate of failure is to be expected.03:17
Sven_vBalso of course I'd like to keep a market for commercial installers. ;)03:18
spelterSven_vB: I mean since you've obviously done such a good job in doing all that stuff, it makes me wonder why can't your code be implemented as a safety measure into existing distros03:24
spelterSven_vB: should I try out Rescatux or what ?03:25
Sven_vBspelter, I'm not sure I understand the question. I'm not a Ubuntu dev, and my patches for the official installer have been ignored so far.03:25
spelterSven_vB: that figures :D03:25
Sven_vBspelter, nope, I'd try the SuperGrub Disk. it's on the same website though.03:25
Sven_vBfor my commercial projects I usually use installers based on multistrap nowadays. once you learn the depths of the install process in detail, it loses its magic. :)03:28
random1Hey im having issues finding where my games are being saved at on wine. I went to /home/.wine/drive_c/program files(x86)/03:35
random1dont see it unfortunately. But when im installing the game again it shows its right there. Completely confused. Using ubuntu20.0403:35
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Jordan_Urandom1: "du ~/.wine/drive_c/ | sort -n -r | head -n 20" will give you an idea of where the larger files are, which will probably tell you were your games' data gets stored.03:41
random1appreciate it jordan_u03:42
random1still dont see it.03:44
random1It did the install o.O.03:44
random1Going to try installing it again i guess o.O03:45
signofzetamacOS has a way to type accented characters by hitting Option/Alt + a key, then the letter.  Is there anything like that in Ubuntu?03:46
sarnoldsignofzeta: there's several, I think; 'deadkeys', 'compose key', 'altgr', hopefully these help you find something nice03:47
signofzetathanks, sarnold. I'll check them out.  macOS made it easy, and iOS made it dead simple.  sure beats going Alt+numbers on Windows, that's for sure.  it's not often i need to type them, but it's annoying when I can't.03:50
random1Hey can anyone tell me how to search for a specific file in my hard drive?04:08
random1Textures0.bsa04:08
leftyfbrandom1: https://www.howtoforge.com/tutorial/linux-search-files-from-the-terminal/04:09
sarnoldrandom1: if it's been there a while, 'locate Textures0.bsa'; if it's new, sudo find / -name Textures0.bsa04:09
leftyfbsarnold: you can update the locate db04:10
sarnoldleftyfb: yeah but that's a pain :)04:10
leftyfbsarnold: nah, I run it all the time04:10
leftyfbsudo updateb ; locate <file>04:10
sarnoldleftyfb: is it still a cron job or is it a systemd time now?04:10
sarnoldahhhh, so you don't care about the prunepaths etc that the configuration uses04:11
leftyfbsarnold: looks like it's also in cron04:11
leftyfbsarnold: nope, half the things I search for using locate I want searching everywhere :)04:12
sarnoldleftyfb: have you seen this yet? https://blog.sesse.net/blog/tech/2020-10-12-20-27_plocate_1_0_0_released.html04:12
sarnoldleftyfb: it's several hundred times faster than 'locate' on my system with a lot of files04:12
sarnoldleftyfb: time for me to bail, have fun with it :)04:13
sarnoldwin 16404:13
leftyfbsarnold: it's not available in ubuntu yet :P04:13
sarnoldyeah :(04:13
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Tas-sosHello! o/06:27
Tas-sosI have the known probem/bug with copy-paste (clipboard), in Ubuntu 20.04 LTS06:27
Tas-soswhat can i do to fix it?06:27
lotuspsychjewelcome Tas-sos06:27
Tas-sosHello lotuspsychje :-)06:27
Tas-sosI read somewhere about an alternative package that install (but now I can not find it now)..06:28
tomreyn"known probem/bug with copy-paste (clipboard)"? whom is this known to? is it known to the bug tracker?06:34
tomreynTas-sos: ^06:35
Tas-sosI mention it as known, because I believe that I am not alone... it is a known problem06:44
Tas-soshttps://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/virt-manager/+bug/187252706:44
ubottuLaunchpad bug 1872527 in spice-vdagent (Ubuntu Focal) "Clipboard doesn't work 100% of the time in Ubuntu 20.04 (in KVM guests)" [Undecided,Incomplete]06:45
Tas-soshttps://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/mutter/+bug/185218306:45
ubottuLaunchpad bug 1852183 in mutter (Ubuntu Groovy) "[X11] copy/paste (clipboard) with LibreOffice is broken in Ubuntu 19.10 & 20.04 (see comment 93 and 176)" [High,Fix released]06:45
Tas-soshttps://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/mutter/+bug/187996806:45
ubottuLaunchpad bug 1879968 in mutter (Ubuntu Focal) "Copy/paste still sometimes fails in LibreOffice and Wine apps" [Medium,Fix released]06:45
Tas-sosAnyway, my problem is that sometimes (not always) I can not copy-paste from one application to another.06:49
Tas-sosFor example, from gedit to Firefox/Brave/Chromium06:50
Tas-sosfrom a browser to LibreOffice etc..06:50
tomreynTas-sos: hmm, the first bug report is said to be limited to running in a KVM VM (is this what you do?), the other two are solved (is your system fully up to date?). thanks for looking those up, though.06:50
Tas-sosthis problem is really very annoying when it happens because you can not work06:51
tomreyni can imagine that's annoying06:51
cheaterhi. in dpkg-query, what's the difference between Status-Status and Status-Want? my guess is that "Status-Status: installed" means that the package is installed right now, while "Status-Want: installed" means it's either installed now or will be installed after some sort of job runs, but I don't really know how that works exactly.06:52
tomreynTas-sos: please see the questions in parentheses above06:52
tomreyn!uptodate | Tas-sos06:52
ubottuTas-sos: To ensure you have all the latest known patches and security updates for your ubuntu installation, please update with the following command: `sudo apt update && sudo apt upgrade`. See also !upgrades and !security; you may also need to run `apt full-upgrade`.06:52
Tas-sosyes of course you are right. I saw that the first one I sent referred to KVM which is not really in my case06:55
Tas-sosI just have a HP laptop with Ubuntu 20.04 LTS06:56
tomreynTas-sos: is it fully updated and rebooted afterwards?06:56
Tas-sosyes i updated my entire system yesterday.. with : apt update and apt dist-upgrade06:56
tomreynokay, great. this is standard ubuntu with gnome-shell, not another flavor?06:57
Tas-sosI also need to run "apt full-upgrade" ?06:57
tomreyndist-upgrade and full-upgrade do the same thing06:58
tomreynso, default gnome-shell / mutter?06:58
tomreynAnd are you using Xorg, or XWayland?06:59
Tas-sosNo no another flavor, I have ubuntu! Nothing else06:59
Tas-soshm... about default gnome-shell...06:59
Tas-sosWhat you mean mutter ?06:59
tomreynyou already answered this question basically07:00
Tas-sosyes, most likely the problem will not exist again07:00
tomreyngnome-shell and mutter are what forms the default gnome-based desktop on ubuntu 20.04 LTS07:00
Tas-sostomreyn: A! Ok! Thanks!07:00
tomreynby default, 20.04 uses the XOrg X server, but you can also switch to XWayland. Did you switch to XWayland?07:01
tomreynnc termbin.com 9999 < <(lsb_release -ds;cat /proc/{version,cmdline};echo "Session: $XDG_CURRENT_DESKTOP ($XDG_SESSION_TYPE)";echo Shell: $SHELL)07:01
tomreynyou can run this and get all those infos in a row.07:01
tomreyncheater: with dpkg under-the-hood questions, you may be better served on #debian here or on oftc, or rather on the ubuntu or debian mailing lists07:07
cheaterthanks07:07
cheateri asked in #debian but it's idle07:07
cheateri'll keep waiting thanks07:07
tomreyni assume you read the man page and it didn't really help?07:08
tomreyncheater: ^ those very short explanations there refer to the dpkg version which introduced these states, so you could refer to the changelog, which might have more info.07:09
tomreyni mean the debian changelog07:10
cheaterhmm good idea but that might be a little too deep for me07:10
tomreynhttps://launchpad.net/debian/+source/dpkg/1.17.1107:11
tomreyn"  * Add new dpkg-query virtual fields db:Status-Want, db:Status-Status and db:Status-Eflag to allow fine-grained access to the Status values."07:12
tomreynnot super helpful either. i guess it says "inspect my source code".07:12
Tas-sostomreyn: Thanks for your time! I hope and believe that I will not face the same problem again!07:24
Tas-sosThanks! :-)07:24
john_rambo Only Youtube is slow. The Youtube homepage wont even load. All other websites are loading fine. Is there a way to troubleshoot this ?07:30
tomreynjohn_rambo: disable browser extensions / plugins, try again07:31
john_rambotomreyn, I just loaded FF with all addons disabled & Youtube loaded just fine. How to find out which addon is responsible ?07:32
tomreynjohn_rambo: if "FF" is an abbreviation for "Firefox" which saved you 5 characters, but made it less obvious, then you can try re-emnabling extensions one by one and identify the one causing it this way.07:34
tomreynalternatively, there's about:performance07:35
john_rambotomreyn, Okay/Thanks07:35
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ychaouchehello #ubuntu. Does this channel also covers ubuntu server ?08:39
ychaouchebasically I want to know how to show the motd again when I'm already logged in. Is there a command for this ?08:39
lotuspsychjeychaouche: it does, but you might usually have more luck in #ubuntu-server where the experts gather08:40
ychaouchethanks lotuspsychje, /topic should be updated08:40
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RevertToCamelotDoes anyone know how to combine multiple .vmdk files on Ubuntu?09:51
RevertToCamelotI've found a lot of reference to the vmware tool but I can't find anything about it on vmwares site09:52
ThinkT510RevertToCamelot: what do you mean combine? each of them would be a separate VM09:52
RevertToCamelotThey download as fragmented files within the zip sometimes when you need to download an entire vm09:53
RevertToCameloti've done it before, just never on linux09:53
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BluesKajHi all11:58
speltnerHello! Still working on the grub issue that I talked about yesterday over here12:56
speltnerI noticed that a lot of people have had the same problem since at least 18.04 days. After installation, the whole thing just boots into grub rescue12:57
speltnerI mean plenty of material on that online, so it's definitely not a new problem12:57
lotuspsychjespeltner: if you are looking for continued support, please ask your question again into the channel with all details so volunteers can pickup where you left13:09
Sven_vBhi everyone. :-) welcome back, speltner. what operating systems was the SuperGrub Disk able to detect?13:09
NotumHey all. I’m trying to add a CA cert to my Ubuntu 18.04 machine, as i understand all i need to to is put my .crt under /usr/share/ca-certificates and then run sudo update-ca-certificates ? However my cert doesn’t get picked up and added. Any ideas why?13:10
NotumIf i run sudo dpkg-reconfigure ca-certificates my cert i listed and i can manually add it, however i don't want to do it interactivly13:11
Sven_vBNotum, as for the non-interactive part, config automation tools like ansible could help.13:12
NotumSven_vB Ansible is actually what i'm trying to use, this "add and import cert" thing is part of a larger playbook13:13
Sven_vBNotum, I'm sure someone else had the problem before and has written an ansible module for it. :)13:14
Sven_vBspeltner, if you prefer to not try SGD, you could also boot into the live session and install GRUB manually.13:15
NotumSven_vB Probably, but my problem isn't really related to Ansible. I just don't get why my cert isn't picked up with update-ca-certificates :/13:16
Notumhttps://askubuntu.com/questions/645818/how-to-install-certificates-for-command-line I'm doing exactly as explained here13:16
Sven_vBhow do you test whether it is picked up?13:17
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ograNotum, custom certs should go to /etc/ca-certificates/update.d/ ... (and then update-ca-certificates needs to be run)13:19
NotumSven_vB When running sudo sudo update-ca-certificates i get '0 added, 0 removed'13:20
Notumogra I dont think so? the ca-cert config utility (sudo dpkg-reconfigure ca-certificates) even says  "This package installs common CA (Certificate Authority) certificates in /usr/share/ca-certificates."13:23
NotumWhich is exactly where my cert is placed.. :/13:24
Sven_vBNotum, I think ogra's idea is worth a try. if that doesn't work, verify whether manually adding the cert works, to ensure it's not a problem with the test setup.13:25
ograah, no, i'm wrong updates.d is for hooks to run along with custom certs, sorry13:26
ograbut the update-ca-certificates manpage states:13:26
ogra       Furthermore all certificates with a .crt extension found below /usr/local/share/ca-certificates  are13:26
ogra       also included as implicitly trusted.13:26
ogratry that dir13:26
NotumSven_vB Manually adding the cert with dpkg-reconfigure ca-certificates works fine13:26
ograat the bottom it also says:13:26
ogra       /usr/local/share/ca-certificates13:26
ogra              Directory of local CA certificates (with .crt extension).13:26
Notumogra Ok, will give it a try :)13:27
Sven_vBNotum, in that case you could dump the debconf database before and after, compare, and manually apply the change with debconf13:27
Sven_vBor have a look at the source of update-ca-certs, maybe it turns out to be a very simple script and you see the trick part within minutes.13:29
NotumAdding the cert to /usr/local/share/ca-certificates works a liiitle better. I get 1 added and 1 removed so it seems to add and then remove it again...13:34
nualaSo... regarding encryption with dual boot: https://askubuntu.com/a/442820/64513  Makes sense I can't encrypt full disk. In a nutshell I want ubuntu install to be 'well' protected while not caring bout windows/keeping win working (or the respective equivalent to that). Given I'd have a root, swap and home partition alongside n windows partitions. At the very minimum I want (and likely can) encrypt home13:42
nualapartition. Can I also encrypt root/system partition and swap (should I/ 'need' I to protect swap as well?)13:42
Sven_vBnuala, I happen to have installed Ubuntu focal into an encrypted LUKS side-by-side a Windows yesterday. it works. :)13:47
Sven_vBnuala, if you really need a swap at all, I think you should encrypt it. would be bad if your secrets would leak from that.13:48
Sven_vBnuala, and yes you can have all the linux partitions on the LUKS, you just need to either adapt your GRUB config in arcane ways (may require using an old LUKS) or have the kernel and initrd unencrypted, but the latter could be on a different physical medium, maybe a USB thumb drive.13:49
Sven_vBbasically you have to ensure there's some way for the boot process to load the decryption program from some unencrypted memory.13:50
nualaOh that's nice to hear! :D Hm. I dont think an unencrypted boot process would be an issue (I hope ><) like, threat level is generally low.13:57
Sven_vBit should be safe against theft at least. just don't use a potentially-modified boot chain after someone had an opportunity to modify it.13:58
nualaLike if configuring GRUB would become too much of a hassle. I might also just overlooked the 'encrypt disk' part during installation.13:59
mgedminSven_vB: did you have to do manual partitioning to get a LUKS side by side with Windows?13:59
Sven_vBmgedmin, no, I used a proprietary commercial installer that did it for me.14:00
nuala(just to clearify my thoughts and for later research: LURKS would be (part of)  the 'default' encryption protocol? [never heard of it before]: AKA that's something i could expect to find on the general install image or do i need extra tools for it? ^^;14:04
nuala*LUKS :seenoevil:14:04
mgedminat one point I had to manually install a couple of packages so I could mount a LUKS volume from nautilus14:04
mgedminlibblockdev-crypto2, to be specific14:05
mgedminah, but https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/udisks2/+bug/1757321 is fixed so that should be always installed now (if you have udisks)14:05
ubottuLaunchpad bug 1757321 in udisks2 (Ubuntu) "udisks2 must depend on libblockdev-crypto2 and libblockdev-mdraid2 instead of suggests [Can't mount encrypted USB drive after upgrade to bionic]" [High,Fix released]14:05
mgedminand I think always mounting LUKS volumes from /etc/fstab doesn't require this package anyway14:06
mgedmintl;dr: LUKS should work out of the box using the general image14:06
nualamgedmin: i see, sweet! i might give it a shot later this week then!14:06
heeentrying to uninstall linux-image-5.8.0-25-generic it insists on installing linux-image-unsigned-5.8.0-25-generic, but I already have linux-image-5.8.0-26-generic and linux-image-5.8.0-26-lowlatency14:07
heeenwouldn't either of the latter fulfill any dependencies for linux-image or whatever depends on the kernel package?14:08
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Sven_vBheeen, you could mark both the normal and unsigned for uninstall, then apt should either do it or tell you why not.14:18
flaburganhello everybody! I wanted to know if Thunderbird is going to be upgraded in Ubuntu 20.04? It is using the ESR version which is pretty obsolete14:20
lotuspsychjeflaburgan: you can try the thunderbird snap if you like14:21
flaburganhm I was wrong, there isn't any ESR version of thunderbird, the previous was 68 and the current is 78. So 20.10 has 78 but 20.04 is at 68.14:21
mgedminUbuntu doesn't upgrade software in old releases as a rule; browsers are an exception14:22
mgedminfor Thunderbird to be upgraded it would have to be very broken, or have a security bug that's very hard to backport14:22
emilsphiya, under what circumstances would 20.04 systems have an /etc/resolv.conf that's symlinked to /var/run/NetworkManager/resolve.conf yet have NM manage DNS via systemd-resolved anyway?14:31
mgedminperhaps somebody manually created that symlink?14:33
emilspCould it be there becuse an user upgraded from an earlier verison that was NM-only or something like that?14:34
emilspThere's a bug with NM and DNS wit WireGuard that I'm looking to work around, and I want to know if this is a widespread config or not14:36
emilspoh, if I remove /etc/resolv.conf and reboot, NM will create a file that's not a symlink in /etc/resolv.conf14:40
mgedminhm14:41
mgedminI can't say I remember when /etc/resolv.conf was ever a symlink to /var/run/NetworkManager/*14:42
emilspmaybe it wasn't, but my gripe is that by default it's a symlink to /var/run/systemd/resolved/resolve.conf or such, but if a user removes it, it gets replaced with a file that's managed by NetworkManager.14:43
mgedmininteresting14:45
speltnerah, crap. I tried yet another re-install of 20.04.1LTS amd64, this time in UEFI and now, after installation is complete, it only boots to a still-non blinking _ <-cursor on the top left side of the screen15:04
speltneroh now it's starting to somewhere, it was just VERY stuck15:05
speltnertook like 5 minutes on this i7 core, AH15:05
speltnerYES!15:05
speltnerthat was the key, to switch from BIOS to UEFI mode15:06
speltner(and to reinstall)15:06
speltnernow it's booting into zfs ssd15:06
speltnerafter running the initial install package and rebooting, I get the same stuck-on-the-top-left-underscore (_)-non-blinking15:15
speltnerI'll wait it out like I did the last time, but that is very weird. when I first got that working within Legacy BIOS mode (before ??? happened and it didn't reboot except to grub/grub rescue anymore), it booted way faster15:16
speltnerI wonder if that is normal that it gets stuck in that stage for 1-2 minutes or is that just because there was around 150megs of important updates like ubuntu base, linux-firmware, etc, etc.15:17
speltnernow it's booting but yep, that took a couple of minutes of terror15:17
mgedminno, getting stuck for a couple of minutes during boot is not normal15:19
mgedmincan you switch consoles during that time?  or press esc to see boot messages?15:20
speltnermgedmin: nope, just did another run of apt update + upgrades just to be on the safe side.15:20
speltnermgedmin: rebooted, and now again I've got the _ on top left screen, probably will take that 2mins to dissolve15:21
ice9I'm connected to openvpn server but there is no internet nor I can ping the server's IP, I already allowed ip forwarding and added the iptables rule: -t nat -A POSTROUTING -s 10.2.0.0/24 -o eth0 -j MASQUERADE ; any idea?15:21
speltnermgedmin: i did choose to install the system as zfs, i wonder if that was a bit too experimental of a choice :P15:21
speltneryep it's defo stuck again the same way as previously. this is a fresh install, so should I try to install the whole thing with the default selection? or is it likely that it's related to something else?15:23
mgedminhow about figuring out what's happening instead?15:23
mgedminis this blinking cursor thing happening after grub?15:24
speltneryep, booting up, now it's kinda sluggish on the rotating ubuntu circle15:24
speltnerthis didn't happen previously15:24
mgedminI think there's usually some extra logs on tty12 if you can switch there?15:24
mgedmin/usr/share/doc/systemd/README.Debian.gz describes ways to debug startup/shutdown problems with systemd15:25
speltnerwon't take keyboard input atm15:25
mgedminno keyboard input is bad :/15:25
speltneryup can't switch tty15:25
speltnerit did run from that drive like, just now, just fine :D then on the first boot, stuck cursor for a couple of mins in top left, then this15:26
speltnerit's still in the low-res, single screen boot mode too.15:26
speltnerthe circle is still rotating and all that, but it is sloo-oooooooooo-ooow15:27
speltnerWD Blue 250GB SSD15:27
speltner(and this is an i7 core, albeit older gen., with 16GB RAM...)15:27
speltnerexception Emask 0x0 SAct failed command: WRITE DMA EXT15:28
speltnerof ata1.0015:28
mgedminuhhh dying SSD?15:29
speltneryep it seems to be stuck,, 345 secs in and it gets stuck with exception Emask 0x0 SAct 0x0 SErr 0x0 action 0x6 frozen15:29
speltnerINFO: task zpool:333 blocked for more than 241 seconds.15:29
mgedminif it boots, check the disk's self-assesment with smartmontools15:29
speltnerTainted: P                O   5.4.0-52-generic #57 Ubuntu15:29
speltner437 seconds in15:30
speltner.........15:30
speltnerit seems to be going from one address to another very slowly as in there's the next spot, frozen, and the next one frozen15:31
speltner"echo 0> /proc/sys/kernel/hung_task_timeout_secs" disables this message.15:31
mgedminyeah, and then you have a frozen server with no indication of why it's frozen15:32
speltnerI/O error with the dev sda again15:32
speltnerI/O errors ... 560 secs in. Still booting.15:32
speltnershould I try enabling Intel's VT ? I've disabled it for security, how about execute disable bit ?15:36
speltnerthat one's enabled15:36
mgedminfirst of all figure out if your SSD is really dying15:37
speltneryep that would be the ,.. thing to do15:38
speltnermgedmin: but I've tried with two ssd's now15:38
mgedmin(also, which Intel VT?  if you plan to use virtual machines, you want it enabled)15:38
speltnerand at least in bios mode the end result was the same with the both of them15:38
mgedmininstall smartmontools and run smartctl -a /dev/sda to see the drive's self-assesment15:38
speltnerI mean they booted to grub15:38
ioriaspeltner,   i'd try to replace  the cable15:39
mgedminthere's a GUI version of that in gnome-disks in case this is a desktop15:39
mgedminSMART is handled by the disk firmware itself, if it says everything's fine, then maybe check cables15:40
speltnerioria: you think it might be something as ridiculous? I tried googling up some of the I/O error messages and actually found out that a lot of people have had similar booting problems if the boot drive hasn't been in a certain sata port of the motherboard15:40
speltneryeah I took it out of the computer and checking it now here on another endpoint15:40
ioriaspeltner,   if you have a spare one, it's easy to check and rule it out15:41
speltnermgedmin: ok so this is interesting, sudo fdisk -l seems to point to multiple problems in the drive, but that they can be fixed with write?15:51
speltnerah , I don't have a screen here , brb15:51
mgedminthe only way fdisk could cause disk read errors is if you have a partition table pointing to areas outside the size of the disk15:52
joesgaragehi is this channel for lite as well?16:16
endersendingIm wondering if someon could help me. I am trying to install ubuntu 20 LTS as a guest on Qemu, but on boot it cant find the LVM disks properly16:17
lotuspsychjejoesgarage: lite?16:17
joesgaragelotuspsychje, linux lite16:17
endersendingIs it possible to install ubuntu server without LVM?16:17
joesgarageuses ubuntu 2016:17
lotuspsychjejoesgarage: no, we can only support ubuntu and its official !flavours16:18
joesgaragelotuspsychje, thanks16:18
lotuspsychjeendersending: you might want to try #ubuntu-server16:19
endersendingthanks16:19
luna_https://www.brighttalk.com/webcast/6793/44857816:54
lotuspsychjein #ubuntu-discuss please luna16:55
hylianlotuspsychje: is #ubuntu-discuss like #ubuntu-offtopic?16:56
lotuspsychjehylian: yes, but more ubuntu discussion minded16:57
hylianlotuspsychje: cool, thanks.16:57
speltnerhello17:56
speltnerso; I went to get a brand new SSD17:56
speltnerany ideas on what's more preffered on Ubuntu 20.04.1LTS installation, for stability, compatibility, etc.... to use BIOS or UEFI mode?17:56
speltnerif I remember correctly, UEFI made it a little bit easier for linux to see what's wrong if something goes haywire, or when17:57
speltnersome years ago, the recommendation was that you should only use UEFI mode if you're double-booting?17:59
mgedminUEFI is the modern option17:59
speltnermgedmin: yeap but then again I read from just a few years ago that BIOS would be less likely to cause problems, and that UEFI would be like , for dual boot purposes. And that Intel mobo is around 10 years old already so ...18:01
speltnermegoix: I have a nagging feeling that UEFI + a mobo that old = uh oh18:01
speltner(sorry , mgedmin  )18:02
speltnerI also did get a new SATA cable18:02
speltneralthough, well ...18:02
speltnerha, while I was away at the shops, the PC had booted into login screen :D18:05
speltnerlol18:05
=== denningsrogue3 is now known as denningsrogue
speltnerI still contend that I found the right answer the other day when I noticed that the grub-crash right after first reboot has been a problem across distros18:06
speltnerfor years18:06
speltnerand the fault line in that one is if in some mobos, you've stuck the /dev/sda1 (or: the primary boot device) into a sata port that is not port#118:07
speltnerit was something as trivial as that18:07
lotuspsychjespeltner: please dont use this channel for every step you are doing18:07
speltnerlotuspsychje: I'm describing the problem here18:07
speltnerlotuspsychje: I thought this was the help channel?18:07
speltnerlotuspsychje: or was there a separate channel for help requests?18:08
lotuspsychjespeltner: try asking 1 question all in one line, then wait until volunteers pickup on your issue instead of monologues with the enter button18:09
speltnerlotuspsychje: alright, I get it, sorry about that. I'm just a bit perplexed over the entire ordeal atm and really don't know wheere to start tackling the issue from. OH, btw, is there any possibility that Linux itself might do physical damage to SSD's i.e. by overwriting them (i.e. into the designated buffer cell areas) or so? That might be one culprit here. I read something about LVM that it might do18:10
speltnersuch a thing18:11
lotuspsychjespeltner: try aproaching your issue systematicly, one step at time, where you are stuck now, and ask your question till someone can sort you out18:11
YWH_1I have to install about twenty packages from the commandline in Ubuntu 20.10. What is the best way to do this?18:31
leftyfbYWH_1: sudo apt install <package1> <package2> <package3> ....18:32
YWH_1They are all in the same directory18:32
YWH_1OK18:33
leftyfbYWH_1: sudo dpkg -I *.deb18:33
leftyfbsorry, -i, not -I18:33
leftyfbYWH_1: why do you have local packages to install?18:33
YWH_1Because the program in the Ubuntu repository is defective.18:34
leftyfbYWH_1: oh? Which program?18:34
YWH_1Libreoffice 7.02 I need to install 7.03 to fix the bugs18:35
mgedminyou can sudo apt install ./*.deb these days (and it's better than dpkg -i because it still checks dependencies)18:39
mgedminit is important to use ./*.deb rather than just *.deb, otherwise apt will think you're passing package names rather than file names18:40
YWH_1Thanks18:41
rayyyyhow to setup tor network so all my request goes via it?18:42
WandererSometimes I will launch an app from the terminal, and it will pop up behind the terminal and notification will announce that the app is ready. Is there some way to make this not happen? I am running Ubuntu 20.0418:48
WandererPlease18:49
jadaxhi, I want to install Ubuntu on Intel Compute Stick m3, what's the leanest and lightest flavor/configuration out there?19:03
jadaxI need graphical environment and Firefox, that's all19:03
Maikjadax: i don't have experience with such sticks but Lubuntu seems to be the most lightweight flavor19:19
tomreynjadax: there's #lubuntu for your lubuntu questions. #xubuntu would be another option. but you'll be very short of resources either way - don't expect to be able to run multi-tabbed browsers.19:23
jadaxtomreyn I just need Firefox, 1 tab , youtube19:25
jadaxthat's the CPU I've got, https://ark.intel.com/content/www/us/en/ark/products/88198/intel-core-m3-6y30-processor-4m-cache-up-to-2-20-ghz.html19:25
jadaxas well as 4GB RAM and eMMC as storage19:25
tomreynoh it's got 4 GB, that's better than i assumed19:26
jadaxyeah, it's one of the more capable sticks19:26
rfmit looks more capable than my old acer netbook which runs xubuntu/chrome ok (need to be patient during boot)19:27
tomreyna share of the 4 GB will go to the GPU, though19:27
tomreynanyways, should be ok, you could possibly even run the default desktop environment on it.19:28
jadaxso would you recommend lubuntu or xubuntu at this point?19:28
tomreynwhichever you prefer19:29
jadaxok ok19:30
Maiklubuntu, xubuntu has become a bit heavier since the switch to GTK3 afaik19:31
=== disillusion is now known as Nov1-Vaccine
Maikjadax: you could try them both and then make up your mind19:32
jadaxand just to confirm, lubuntu fully supports webbrowser (e.g. firefox) and should be capable of youtube playback?19:33
=== Nov1-Vaccine is now known as disillusion
speltnerokay, the installer just crashed again with the brand new SSD and a SATA cable but this time I got a confirmation that it's a part of a critical bug in glibc19:35
=== disillusion is now known as RussianInterfere
Maikjadax: i don't see why not19:35
tomreynjadax: yes and yes, it'S the same foundation as ubuntu, just the DE differs19:36
=== RussianInterfere is now known as disillusion
speltnerMaik: I respectfully disagree strongly about lubuntu being the most "light-weight", imho it's among the most bloated ones19:36
speltnerMaik: for lower-end computers I'd definitely recommend Xubuntu / Xfce19:36
speltner(goes for SBC/SoC computers as well)19:37
jadaxoh, understand now! thanks, will try lubuntu then19:37
Maikjadax: lubuntu is ubuntu with the LXQt desktop19:38
speltnerMaik: but what you're saying about Lubuntu being light-weight is simply not correct imho19:38
speltnerMaik: ubuntu MATE / xubuntu are the most light-weighted ones out there19:38
speltnerthat's not an opinion, it's a fact19:39
Maikno need to rub it in dude19:39
Maiki asumed it was one of the most lightweight ones, if not, then not19:39
speltnerMaik: I'm just saying. Been running XUbuntu-variants all the way from 18.04 LTS on a Raspberry Pi4B for what, almost 1,5yrs now19:40
Maiki never tried it myself to be honest, let me have a look at a live session19:40
speltnerMaik: the heaviest ones are kubuntu and lubuntu, by far19:40
Maiklol19:40
Maikever seen Gnome?19:41
speltneragain, the only "subjective" part in that one is how well they are optimized for one's corresponding setup19:41
speltnerMaik: yes19:41
speltnerMaik: into the same category it goes19:41
Maikkubuntu uses up to 580MB idle, Gnome is around 890MB to 1.1GB19:41
speltnerbut obviously all of this depends on your hardware specs and what do you want to accomplish19:41
Maikof course19:42
speltnerMaik: well, Ubuntu MATE and XUbuntu are a fraction of that. Right now I've got a bunch of Firefox tabs open as well as multiple other programs on a 4GB RPi4B. Yes, I am typing this from a RPi4B running Xubuntu. Feel free to ctcp version me19:43
speltner:D19:43
Maiki run main Ubuntu 20.04 on a Pi4 4GB19:43
Maikbut we're chatting offtopic here imho19:44
speltnerMaik: yep, same here19:44
jadaxspeltner I tried ubuntu mate on r pi 4b, I wasn't happy with youtube playback19:44
jadaxpretty choppy, even scrolling up & down was laggy,, not smooth19:44
Maikit improved jadax19:44
jadaxthat's why I got compute stick with Intel m3 CPU19:44
speltnerspeltner: well yes and no, because when it comes to low-end performance, xubuntu and ubuntu mate are far lighter than any other distros, ubuntu Mate especially being perhaps the lightest version of them all19:45
Maikbut let's take it to -discuss. This channel is for support with Ubuntu in the first place19:45
speltnerjadax: did you try it out with wimpy's desktopify? it should give a bit of a boost. also, RPi4B's essentially don't do anything well if you don't overclock them a bit, and that's just my personal opinion ;)19:46
speltnerspeltner: "desktopify" from github19:46
speltnerwhoops, jadax ^19:46
speltnerjadax: I'd be interested to know what was your distro solution?19:47
jadaxspeltner  I used this, https://www.tomshardware.com/how-to/play-netflix-raspberry-pi19:48
speltnerOkay, I got a way faster boot result now with the new SSD+SATA cable. At least it didn't get stuck on that "_" underscore-cursor. booted up in around 10sec19:48
speltnerI wonder if it really could've been the SATA cable tho, seems a bit crazy but then again I noticed that, since they're around 6-8 years old, the plastic in them felt kinda brittle19:49
speltnerthat workstation haven't been meddled around with too much tho so ... but weird. I'll keep you posted if the problem persists19:50
g3poandlslis there any way to troubleshoot why `pam-auth-update --remove sss` actually adds the SSS module to PAM configs instead of removing it?19:51
speltnerNow there's btw this 142,5 MB updated software package again, I believe that was the nail in the coffin the last time ...19:52
speltnerI'll try it out nonetheless, I've got error reporting enabled and so forth. o719:53
sarnoldg3poandlsl: try adding --force and see if thta changes anything? perhaps it thinks you've made local changes that ask for sssd to be configured on19:54
g3poandlslsarnold, same results with --force.  It's weird because I can disable SSS via the TUI, but if I run the non-interactive command after that, it gets re-enabled19:56
sarnoldg3poandlsl: it's probably worth a bug report, anyway19:56
g3poandlslsarnold, thanks19:56
speltner(update on my ssd/install woes; regarding 20.04.1LTS -- after the latest big update package it WORKS[for nnow, bought a brand new ssd+sata cable today]) ! perhaps something was fixed as well since now when the install process crashed, the bug it crashed into was marked critical and it might've been patched during the course of today20:02
gordonjcpspeltner: a SATA drive is the best 60 quid you'll ever spend on computer bits20:03
speltnergordonjcp: well that is not my main workstation and I just spent 600-something euros on a 4TB Samsung Pro SSD, so ... :D20:03
speltner(I'm running this one on a brand new cheapo WD Blue, tho)20:04
gordonjcpspeltner: :-20:05
gordonjcpspeltner: :-)20:05
FabgieseI have a problem, someone can help me?20:07
tomreynFabgiese: not at this point. you'll need to discuss the problem first of all. ;)20:09
tomreynFabgiese: in other words: you're generally welcome to just come here and immediately start describing the problem you're facing and are looking for assistence with.20:10
=== KindTwo is now known as KindOne
=== JanC_ is now known as JanC
blackbird_0Hi, I got this error when trying to upgragde from 18.04 LTS to 20.04 LTS: https://paste.ubuntu.com/p/63m6c7RMMq/20:38
blackbird_0I can't delete all ppa packages20:39
leftyfbblackbird_0: why can't you delete all the ppa packages?20:40
blackbird_0leftyfb: Because I need them (there is a lot)20:41
leftyfbblackbird_0: you need to remove the packages and the PPA entries. After you finish the upgrade you reinstall them20:42
leftyfbblackbird_0: upgrading your release is not supported when PPA's are enabled and packages installed from said PPA's20:43
leftyfbblackbird_0: use "ppa-purge" to make the process easier20:44
blackbird_0leftyfb: Is there a way to do that in one command line?20:44
leftyfbblackbird_0: no. Use ppa-purge on each of the PPA's individually20:45
blackbird_0That way I'll stay all night20:47
leftyfbblackbird_0: if you have that many PPA's, it's a perfect time to re-evaluate the usefulness of them. I have 9 PPA's myself. It doesn't take that long to handle them.20:48
blackbird_0Is there a way to list all PPAs?20:49
leftyfbblackbird_0: apt policy20:50
leftyfbthat shows all enabled repositories including PPA's20:50
blackbird_0leftyfb: Sorry, I meant all installed PPAs?20:51
leftyfbblackbird_0: look in your sources lists20:51
leftyfbblackbird_0: /etc/apt/sources.list and /etc/apt/sources.list.d/*20:52
sarnoldblackbird_0: awk '$1 ~/deb/ && $2 ~/ppa/ {print $2;}' /etc/apt/sources.list /etc/apt/sources.list.d/*.list | sort -u20:52
leftyfbblackbird_0: sarnold: the line sarnold just posted will only show you PPA's. Not all 3rd party repos you might have added20:53
sarnoldah good point20:53
sarnoldcan purge-ppa cope with non-ppas? I can't recall20:53
leftyfbdon't think so20:53
leftyfbnot sure though, never tried20:53
blackbird_0I was wrong, there is not a lot :)20:53
speltnerpseudo-urgent question (since I can't see my display :D), is there a method to make the WinKey+arrow combo skip over displays in a multi-display setup?21:05
speltner(on Ubuntu 20.04.1LTS). Thanks21:06
speltner(^ I mean one window hopped into a monitor that I'm physically unable to see ...)21:06
blackbird_0leftleg, sarnold: thanks a lot guys, I will remove the listed PPAs, and tru again21:09
speltnerokay, a temporary solution for the winkeys+arrows not skipping from one display to another was to just disable the screens that I can't see, a few important windows hopped into there and that was the workaround for it :)21:09
sarnoldblackbird_0: cool :)21:10
speltnergeez, I'd hope there was a way to hop from display to another using winkeys and arrows; sigh21:11
rootsandcultureShift+WinKey+Letf or Right Arrow21:14
rootsandculture@speltner21:16
speltnerrootsandculture: I think I tried that but it didn't work. But thanks a lot, I will try it out; it's always an exciting moment when I reboot the system and see whether or not the whole thing collapses on itself :D so far so good! at least 5 reboots done!21:30
speltnerrootsandculture: yep it works! thanks for the tip! ^__^ (p.s. just learning to use the new bells'n'whistles of 20.04.1 here so I'm sorry in advance)21:32
pavlosFabgiese: can you describe the problem?21:38
Fabgieseyes, sorry, my son needed help, he is one year old21:45
FabgieseMy problem is, my son accidently shutdown my computer21:45
Fabgiesewhen it restart, I needed to use fsck manually21:45
FabgieseAnd it don't solved the problem21:46
Fabgiesewhen it restart again21:46
FabgieseEnter in emergency mode21:46
FabgieseAnd my ubuntu don't start again21:46
Fabgieseand I use sudo grub-install /dev/sda after21:47
Fabgiesebut it don't solved the problem as well.21:48
Fabgiesesorry for my english, it's quite bad.21:49
=== nshireTimeout is now known as nshire
Fabgieseplatvoeten21:51
sarnoldrunning grub-install by hand may break things, if you didn't give the correct parameters for your configuration21:51
FabgieseI'm a new user in linux and Ubuntu is my first SO21:51
Fabgiesesarnold What I should to do?21:53
FabgieseWhat should I do?*21:54
sarnoldFabgiese: I don't know; what error do you get when you try to boot your computer?21:56
Fabgiesesarnold Failed to start File System Check on /dev/disk/by-uuid/2f90...22:01
sarnoldFabgiese: is there anything more specific about why it couldn't start the check?22:04
FabgieseIn journalctl -xb don't have any red trouble22:04
FabgieseI don't know, my computer stop running when my son tap shutdown button, and fsck don't running more.22:05
FabgieseWhere should I see the problems?22:05
Fabgiesejournalctl -xd?22:06
sarnoldmaybe; or it might be printed to the console22:06
Fabgiesehere22:08
FabgieseHave the same problem22:09
Fabgiesefsck failed with exit status 422:09
sarnold              4      Filesystem errors left uncorrected22:09
sarnoldthat's not a good sign22:09
sarnoldmaybe it just means you need to run fsck by hand and force it to try to correct errors?22:10
Fabgieseyes22:10
FabgieseIt's my first action, I use fsck sda322:10
FabgieseI don't know if it is right.22:11
kenwoodfoxI have no idea what happened but my brother is using popos and i know this is ubuntu but im hoping somebody knows how to fix this22:11
kenwoodfoxhe inverted right and left click22:11
kenwoodfoxand the home button dosent work22:11
kenwoodfoxand i have no idea how to fix that ive never seen anything like that before22:11
FabgieseI don't know if it is right.22:11
FabgieseHow I run fsck by hand and force it?22:12
sarnoldkenwoodfox: check xmodmap -pp output22:12
kenwoodfoxsarnold: sure thing22:13
kenwoodfoxugh everything keeps slipping into like22:13
kenwoodfoxidk what its called, the windows want to tile22:13
kenwoodfoxbut a reboot seems to have fixed the inverted mouse22:14
kenwoodfoxxmodmap 1 error encountered, aborting22:14
kenwoodfoxunable to open file output for reading22:14
sarnoldFabgiese: maybe try fsck -y /dev/sda4 --- this is a dangerous operation, it'll try to repair what it can, and in doing so, it might make things worse22:15
BilgeIf two apt sources provide the same version of the same software, how do I tweak which one takes priority?22:15
sarnoldkenwoodfox: I wonder if your brother also decided to remap other keys to do window manager operations? heh22:15
sarnoldBilge: iirc repository pinning can do that22:16
Bilge`apt-cache policy` shows one has priority 100 and the other 500, but I want to switch them somehow22:16
kenwoodfoxsarnold: I have no clue, i disabled tile windows, aparently that was turned on, Super / launches and switches applications22:16
kenwoodfoxi thnk thats supposed to be the home key?22:16
Fabgiesesarnold my system is in sda3, and when I tried this operation is aborted because sda3 is mounted22:17
kenwoodfoxi reset them to default but the home button still does nothing22:17
sarnoldFabgiese: oh, that makes sense. sigh. do you have a usb installer handy?22:17
Fabgieseyes, I have22:18
sarnoldFabgiese: I suggest booting into that, and then use fsck from that installer image to try to repair the filesystem22:19
FabgieseI need umount sda3?22:19
sarnoldFabgiese: yeah; that can be difficult to do if you don't have another root filesystem already mounted that you can pivot_root into -- it's much easier to reboot into another filesystem like a USB installer22:21
FabgieseI open the usb installer, but what's the root password? It's not the same.22:25
BilgeHow do I pin this (default) package: 100 /var/lib/dpkg/status?22:26
FabgieseI never use usb installer for it22:26
BilgeI don't know how to address it in the pin file line22:26
imharvol`DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive; DEBIAN_PRIORITY=critical; sudo apt-get install ubuntu-mate-desktop -y` even though I'm specifying noninteractive why am still being asked for input?22:28
Fabgiesewhen I try the console inform that I don't have permisson22:31
sarnoldFabgiese: hmm, that's a surprise; I didn't think we had passwords on the installers.. the whole point is to use the thing to install an OS :)22:37
sarnoldFabgiese: try adding init=/bin/bash to the kernel command line22:37
gordonjcpFabgiese: Ubuntu doesn't have a root password22:38
gordonjcpFabgiese: from the USB live image, you ought to be able to sudo without a password22:38
Fabgiesesarnold I got it22:52
Fabgiesethx for you help22:53
sarnoldFabgiese: were you able to repair your filesystem?22:53
FabgieseI fsck in kive installer22:53
Fabgiesebut I need log root with sudo su22:53
FabgieseIn second fixed it.22:54
sarnoldsweet22:54
FabgieseIt can't use fsck in main system, you need log other system for it, and I use live cd confirm your orientation.22:55
FabgieseNeed umount main system22:55
=== cassandra is now known as cass
coreyhuinkerupgraded to 20.10. on xorg server works normally until the display sleeps, when it restores, windows have a series of short horizontal lines around areas of movement/scrolling.  when windows are closed, a wide "static" pattern flashes on the screen, always in a shape that resembles a wide but short rectangle immediately above a right triangle where two points are on the right side. i tried to capture this in simplerecorder, but the art23:46
coreyhuinkeracts do NOT show up on the capture23:46
coreyhuinkerswitching to wayland seems to bypass the issue23:46

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