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PBCrunch posted:I installed 16.04 beta 2 on my Chromebook the other day. Since 16.04 is final release now, do I need to do anything beyond the normal apt-get update/upgrade/dist-upgrade to make sure my computer is up to date?
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 22:22 |
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Upgrading Ubuntu is such a loving shitshow every time. Update aborted because /boot was not ridiculously large, nuked some old images, and it went through. Only like 30 minutes of apt fuckery required. Backed up all my poo poo, but no need, everything came back perfectly on reboot. Yay! Except now my screen flashes off a few times an hour, and *all* audio on the system is pitched down and slowed down. ![]() I'm going to go back to NixOS or FreeBSD, this is some hot garbage. edit: of course it's a pulseaudio, thanks lennart Mao Zedong Thot fucked around with this message at 05:22 on Apr 22, 2016 |
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so loving future posted:Upgrading Ubuntu is such a loving shitshow every time. Update aborted because /boot was not ridiculously large, nuked some old images, and it went through. Only like 30 minutes of apt fuckery required. Backed up all my poo poo, but no need, everything came back perfectly on reboot. Yay! Isn't audio on Linux historically a fuckup?
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so loving future posted:Upgrading Ubuntu is such a loving shitshow every time. Update aborted because /boot was not ridiculously large, nuked some old images, and it went through. Only like 30 minutes of apt fuckery required. Backed up all my poo poo, but no need, everything came back perfectly on reboot. Yay! I upgraded from 15.10 and now (non-guest?) sessions don't have the Unity launcher nor top bar ![]() Also, Yakety Yak
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My two computers upgraded from 15.10 without troubles. ![]()
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cheese-cube posted:Isn't audio on Linux historically a fuckup? Works fine for me. I started using Linux in 2011 and I've never had a gently caress up that wasn't caused by myself.
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The Merkinman posted:16.04LTS Came out today. So I just switched from Arch to Ubuntu to try out Unity for a bit. How is this done? When I move windows from the left to right monitor they keep getting caught on the edge and try maximizing. I'd prefer the dock on the bottom/top.
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YouTuber posted:So I just switched from Arch to Ubuntu to try out Unity for a bit. How is this done? When I move windows from the left to right monitor they keep getting caught on the edge and try maximizing. I'd prefer the dock on the bottom/top. There's the sticky windows options under System Settings > Display that should disable the maximizing behavior. For changing the dock, the command code:
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pyonium posted:For changing the dock, the command ![]()
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I'm loving 16.04 (and previously 15.10) with Cinnamon on my MacBook Pro from work. Cinnamon is the only DE I've found that sanely handles the resolution. It's pretty nice, really.
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G-Prime posted:I'm loving 16.04 (and previously 15.10) with Cinnamon on my MacBook Pro from work. Cinnamon is the only DE I've found that sanely handles the resolution. It's pretty nice, really. I'm surprised, honestly, considering Cinnamon uses X11, which wasn't really meant for HiDPI. How do common applications like for example LibreOffice or firefox fare? I don't really have a high res display to test it out.
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Firefox has a flag for it that was added a while back, though I think it's been changed in recent versions to examine the DPI settings for X. Not positive, because I use Chrome. Which is working great. Libreoffice I haven't had a reason to use yet, but according to their docs, they've had support since somewhere in the 4 series. Not all of the programs on my machine work perfectly, but it's a significant majority that do. Pretty much anything GTK 3 is good to go. Modern KDE apps seemed to work fine as well. Admittedly, I had to do some tuning. Straight out of the box, X didn't detect my DPI correctly, so I had to adjust that by hand. That said, it wasn't a huge deal. A little bit of math and a single config file. GNOME 3 and KDE 5 both do a pretty decent job with HiDPI as well, but I ran into snags with them. Don't recall what, honestly, because I went through rapid fire iterations trying to find something that did what I wanted. MATE was just flat out broken. The theme engine they use fails completely for some reason when you try to use HiDPI, or it did for me at least. Unity appears to handle it, but I just plain don't like Unity's design from a usability standpoint.
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Yo, if you've been having display blanking issues since upgrading to 16.04, check it: https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/linux/+bug/1554613 Installing the mainline 4.6.0-994 kernel fixed my DP display blanking randomly all the time.
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So I'm at my wits end troubleshooting a strange issue on an Ubuntu 14.04.3 VM running on VMware. The VM itself is fairly massive (46 vCPUs/128GB RAM) and is used as a database server in production. Our DBA is just now making use of it to transfer (via rsync job) a large amount of data from an old DB to this new one. At some point, about 2-3 hours, after starting the rsync job, the VM just hangs. CPU usage (from the ESX host level) goes crazy, and up to that point the memory usage on the host has been pegged at 98% or so. After we reboot the hung VM (it's not a kernel panic, so no kernel dump/core dump), we look in the syslog and see almost nothing recorded from the hang, just business as usual syslog stuff. Any hints on what (if any) options I can enable to get some more verbose logging on the VM?
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Wicaeed posted:So I'm at my wits end troubleshooting a strange issue on an Ubuntu 14.04.3 VM running on VMware. Get a vmcore. Manually trigger it with sysrq or use whatever vmware provides to get a memory dump from the vm. Surely your company has a support contact with the vm OS vendor for things just like this?
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Now that zfsutils-linux is rolled into Ubuntu, I'm wondering what the state of zfs-auto-snapshot is. We're not supposed to use the zfsonlinux PPA anymore, right? Do we just install that script manually by itself? Or is there another name for it now?
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Wicaeed posted:So I'm at my wits end troubleshooting a strange issue on an Ubuntu 14.04.3 VM running on VMware. Rsync builds a memory table of the file system details to do it's syncing with. If you've got like a million little files, it'll crush your server as it builds that table up and then goes to the remote location and does it again to compare against. The answer is to reduce the scope that rsync runs with.
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I recall rsync 3 actually did something to stop that problem happening, it also went GPL 3 which is why OS X is on version 2.quote:The 3.0.0 version number is such a large bump up from 2.6.9 due to the addition of an incremental recursion scan (which helps a lot with large transfers) and the official arrival of several other new features, including ACL support, extended attribute support, filename character-set conversion, etc. MrMoo fucked around with this message at 00:08 on Jun 9, 2016 |
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Is there any drawback from running the low latency kernel as the usual? I occasionally screw around with JACK but mostly not. I'd prefer not to reboot and choose all the time.
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TMI on the BMI posted:Is there any drawback from running the low latency kernel as the usual? I occasionally screw around with JACK but mostly not. I'd prefer not to reboot and choose all the time. And just now I realise probably there is a new thread
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# ? Jun 10, 2024 22:22 |
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Just installed 16.04 but this is a general question - where are the scaling settings other than the one under Display? I was hoping to scale Libreoffice down a little (as well as Google Chrome's UI) because I'm stuck with 1366x768 on a laptop.
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