[00:00] HELLO ASSHOLES === MadBus is now known as vwbusguy [00:03] Is there anyway I might be able to get the ubuntu-2404-noble-arm64-v20240830 daily am64 cloud image .img? Looks like it has aged off the main ubuntu daily site. I see there's an image on GCE but I need the image file itself. [00:05] what site are you looking at? [00:05] pragmaticenigma, https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/locator/ [00:07] !coco | salamalekum [00:07] pragmaticenigma, Have a kubevirt where someone use a download link on daily on 9/3/2024 and the backing image got corrupt by the new url, so I'm trying to find the original when they created it and the 20240821 and 20240911 didn't work [00:07] !coc | salamalekum [00:07] salamalekum: The Ubuntu Code of Conduct is the document that spells out etiquette in the Ubuntu community | http://www.ubuntu.com/project/about-ubuntu/conduct | For information on how to electronically sign the CoC, see https://help.ubuntu.com/community/SigningCodeofConduct | Watch http://static.screencasts.ubuntu.com/videos/2010/12/22/004-SigningCoC.ogv [00:07] another non registered troll [00:07] oerheks: why do you engage... let the mods take care of it. the more attention you put there, the more problems it creates [00:07] The 0831 daily seems like the closest to the date the backingimage was created [00:08] vwbusguy: I'm not 100% certain, but I would think that an image would be removed if it's no longer a recommended option for any number of reasons. Specifically if that release had vulnerabilities in it [00:08] https://cloud-images.ubuntu.com/noble/current/ [00:09] oerheks, Yeah, that doesn't go back far enough [00:09] vwbusguy, why the 9/3/2024 one? [00:09] oerheks, that's exactly the URL they used [00:10] oerheks, need the image on the day that they used the URL you just pointed me to ;-) [00:10] vwbusguy: you might want to try the ubuntu channel dedicated to the cloud images... [00:11] vwbusguy: #ubuntu-cloud might be a better option [00:11] all i find is 0423 http://cloud-images-archive.ubuntu.com/releases/noble/release-20240423/ [00:12] thanks, pragmaticenigma === esv_ is now known as esv [00:44] pragmaticenigma, Good news - found the image. Thanks for looking with me regardless. === timj1 is now known as timj [00:45] have fun! === antonispgs3 is now known as antonispgs === pusher is now known as keypusher [01:49] Hey folks, got a udev/modprobe question. I have a USB-C docking station with an AX88179 ethernet controller. The controller needs to be reset several times a day because it gets stuck in a power-saving mode and won't come back. I noticed that Ubuntu is selecting the generic cdc_ncm driver, even though the kernel has a driver specifically for this controller (ax88179_178a). I've been trying everything I can [01:49] think of to get this driver to bind to the controller, but the cdc_ncm driver always jumps in and takes over.[5~ [01:49] Any ideas? [01:52] blacklist ncm === Game114542279 is now known as Game11454227 === JanC is now known as Guest8195 [02:37] Tried that. [02:39] Blacklisting a module doesn't actually prevent it from being loaded, unfortunately. [02:43] cdc_ncm is autoloaded by the kernel, so the blacklist is bypassed [02:44] In any event, I don't want to break the generic driver, I just want to use the driver that is actually for my hardware [02:45] thats the point of blacklist... [02:48] how do you get 'your' driver? [02:49] It's in Linux mainline. I can just modprobe it, and the module loads. It just doesn't bind the controller, because cdc_ncm binds it. [02:50] Unbinding it then leaves the controller in an unuseable state [02:51] So, then I reset, and cdc_ncm binds.. and you see the problem. [02:52] I added a udev rule : ACTION=="add", SUBSYSTEM=="usb", ATTR{idVendor}=="0b95", ATTR{idProduct}=="1790", RUN+="/sbin/modprobe -r cdc_ncm; /sbin/modprobe ax88179_178a" [02:52] but... still cdc_ncm still binds the controller, and then goes to sleep and dies. [02:53] did you reboot after that? [02:54] Yep [02:56] I've done this before with misbehaving USB devices, and a custom udev rule always did the trick. In this case, it seems like something is bypassing udev, which is new to me. [02:58] I *think* it has to do with module autoloading, but I haven't had to mess with that before. [03:00] The suggested solutions are kind of extreme, like removing the generic ethernet drivers from initramfs. That seems... bad? [05:07] Sorry to do something so lame after over a decade on here but... is anyone seeing me on here? [05:07] I'm really not sure [05:08] we see you Guest5149 [05:10] I can see Guest5149 [05:10] ty ty [05:10] now I know they see me in the other channel too [05:11] I have what would amount to a very simple problem re-setting up my domain on cloundflare after something broke it and I want to pay someone to flat out supply the answer - just plain instruct step by step until the problem is resolved. If anyone is interested to look at what the problem is I pasted it (its about one full screen / page and includes what I thought were all the relevant details. Lemme know.. [05:11] https://pastebin.com/vefjUrzm [05:11] You can pm me if I can find it === ancientz3 is now known as ancientz [05:57] i have removed radeon + google repository for apt, but `apt update` still tries to update them? there is no mention in /etc/apt/sources.list nor sources.list.d/ how can i remove them? [06:07] strange now it works [06:20] thanks oerheks, will be sure to try that! [06:26] Does DEBCONF_FRONTEND=noninteractive work for ubuntu? [06:26] Installing tzdata still shows the selection window on Ubuntu noble [06:26] at least from my side :/ === mrpond3 is now known as mrpond [07:28] billchenchina1: I think it's named DEBIAN_FRONTEND=noninteractive, and it should work in Ubuntu === mrpond3 is now known as mrpond [07:46] mgedmin: Good catch! Thank you! === mrpond5 is now known as mrpond === mrpond8 is now known as mrpond [10:11] I installed ubuntu last night and I am seeing that apt is taking a very long time. for example apt-get update && apt-get upgrade took 2 hours and I just tried installing chromium with apt-get install chromium-browser and it´s been hanging on ¨installing the chromium snap" for 10 minutes or so [10:12] is there something I can try checking to see what is making it take so long? `top` doesn´t seem to show it taking up a lot of resources or anything [10:25] https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=219220 [10:25] -ubottu:#ubuntu- bugzilla.kernel.org bug 219220 in IO/Storage "nvme nvme0: I/O timeout, completion polled" [High, New] [10:25] I saw a bunch of nvme i/o warnings in dmesg. After disabling VMD it seems everything is moving along much faster === test230118 is now known as test230117 === tryfan529 is now known as tryfan52 === Guest4489 is now known as raj === raj is now known as Guest9336 === Guest9336 is now known as cypha === sevy_ is now known as sevy [15:45] hello [15:45] new to irc [15:45] :-) [15:45] welcome to ubuntu support [15:45] you have ubuntu support on irc? [15:45] we do [15:46] thats cool [15:46] see topic? [15:46] no [15:46] where [15:47] the title just after you joined [15:47] oh yes [15:47] or type: /topic [15:47] okay [15:47] sorry for annoying [15:47] goodbye [15:48] :-) [15:48] you'Re not, you're just new. [15:48] see you === neocharles is now known as Guest3192 === rfm_ is now known as rfm [18:49] is there somewhere I can see all of the default hotkeys? I pressed Super+. and it looks like it's some kind of interesting input but idk what it's doing [18:58] settings > keyboard > keyboard shortcuts === rvalue- is now known as rvalue === donofrio2 is now known as donofrio === rajm-and is now known as rajm === kemosabe is now known as NorrinRadd === HeartyWombat2 is now known as HeartyWombat === Catty is now known as kitties [23:10] test gaey [23:10] gaes [23:11] Does uname -a show the kernal your currently booted to or just the kernal that's installed [23:11] hooyyy [23:14] anyone can see this? [23:14] Yes [23:14] I can see it [23:15] bray90820: the kernel you are booted to [23:17] so easy to find that answer .. [23:18] sarnold: Thanks