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So after messing around with it at work, I just installed Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my old netbook, mainly so I can mess around with it for fun. Unfortunately this netbook is slow as dogshit, does anyone know of any neat things can I do with it to optimize performance and make it a little more useable?
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# ? Sep 1, 2012 01:43 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:49 |
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ManSedan posted:So after messing around with it at work, I just installed Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my old netbook, mainly so I can mess around with it for fun. Unfortunately this netbook is slow as dogshit, does anyone know of any neat things can I do with it to optimize performance and make it a little more useable? Switch from Unity to XFCE, LXDE or something similar.
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# ? Sep 1, 2012 01:54 |
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ManSedan posted:So after messing around with it at work, I just installed Ubuntu 12.04 LTS on my old netbook, mainly so I can mess around with it for fun. Unfortunately this netbook is slow as dogshit, does anyone know of any neat things can I do with it to optimize performance and make it a little more useable?
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# ? Sep 3, 2012 10:22 |
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Heads up, "Ubuntu GNOME Remix" has hit alpha. Download here. Also good job Canonical for having a cert that requires an explicit exception! VVV Yeah listen to this dude VVV angrytech fucked around with this message at 16:47 on Sep 3, 2012 |
# ? Sep 3, 2012 16:20 |
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That alpha is reaaaaaaly an alpha. Unless you want to fix bugs and contribute, I wouldn't suggest playing with it. Glad to see they're getting there, though.
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# ? Sep 3, 2012 16:26 |
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It's hard not to troll on this but how is Ubuntu Gnome not going to be just Ubuntu with even worse default applications? You would think everything would integrate really easy and hardly anything needs to be done as Ubuntu already works (tm). How does Ubuntu Gnome team manage relations with Gnome though? One item on the known issues list is amazing: quote:GNOME Shell is only at 3.5.4 because newer versions require GDM to be running. Most Ubuntu users currently running GNOME Shell use LightDM instead and it's not really feasible to make installing gnome-shell switch the default display manager. So is this implying Ubuntu Gnome isn't fully Gnome stalwart? It is interesting wording: saying Gnome shell requires Gdm instead of some new API for whatever integration requirements have been determined. One would hope LightDM could be modified appropriately to work in place of Gdm.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 00:00 |
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The GNOME spin already includes GDM and uses it, but to maintain continuity with mainline Ubuntu and not require forked binaries it also needs to be compatible with LightDM. You can get the latest stuff from a GNOME PPA, but the GNOME stuff in the Canonical repositories will remain compatible with mainline. Or, from the horse's mouth: quote:The Ubuntu GNOME remix will be using Nautilus 3.4 since that's what will be in the Ubuntu archives. For those that want the 3.6 stuff that doesn't make it into 12.10, there's always the GNOME3 PPA. Since our goal is to be an official recognized flavor, we can't use PPAs. When you realize how many benefits come with being a sponsored derivative, it's worth it for a few of the default components to be less than fresh than for the install to include the appropriate PPA automatically. Not every spin needs to be the be-all install for everyone. This is a pretty good concept for people who would like to run off to Fedora or Debian or somesuch but find themselves drawn to Ubuntu for it's widespread desktop support. Those other two aren't quite as enjoyable on the bleeding edge. Craptacular! fucked around with this message at 00:47 on Sep 4, 2012 |
# ? Sep 4, 2012 00:45 |
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My only computer now is a netbook(asus 1000he). When I originally got it I split it with a preview version of Win7 and linux. I've since replaced Win7 with XP when it timed out. Now that its my only computer I'd like to give it a bit more room on the XP side. I was thinking I could just delete the Ubuntu partition, stretch the drive under computer management and reinstall on a smaller partition but my boot loader seems to be a little funny after the installs of windows. Grub shows Windows 7 but in Windows if I run EasyBCD it just says 'earlier version of Windows'. No CD drive so I can't just stick a win cd in and fix it. Any other solutions I can try at this point? E: Basically I'm afraid if I just delete the Ubuntu partition I wont be able to boot at all. OgNar fucked around with this message at 16:57 on Sep 4, 2012 |
# ? Sep 4, 2012 16:53 |
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OgNar posted:E: Basically I'm afraid if I just delete the Ubuntu partition I wont be able to boot at all. You're right; this is what will happen. Can you run fixmbr and/or fixboot from your XP install? If you're able to replace GRUB with XP's bootloader using those utilities, then it should be safe to delete the Ubuntu partition.
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# ? Sep 4, 2012 17:41 |
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How do I make windows not "stick" to the edge of the screen so much? "Displays -> Sticky Edges" has nothing to do with it (that is something multi-monitor thing). "Compiz -> Window Management -> Snapping Windows" has nothing to do with it (that makes the window snap to the edge, not stick to it). If I am dragging windows around, they will "stick" to the edge of the screen, so when I try to drag them away, I have to move my mouse almost half a screen away before the edge will "lets go" of the window.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 22:19 |
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"Snapping Windows" has some "edge resistance" settings. Those are for how hard it resists being pulled off. Edit: At least, I think.
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# ? Sep 6, 2012 22:51 |
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fourwood posted:"Snapping Windows" has some "edge resistance" settings. Those are for how hard it resists being pulled off. Edit: At least, I think. I disabled Snapping Windows and Sticky Edges. Things still "stick". Edit: It's not doing it on a system that boots straight to Ubuntu, so I'm guessing it may be an issue with VMware Fusion. Xenomorph fucked around with this message at 10:08 on Sep 7, 2012 |
# ? Sep 7, 2012 01:34 |
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Has any one managed to install 12.10 with disk encryption? When I tick the disk encryption box in the installer, I can't get past the next screen titled "Choose a security key". There are no dialog boxes to enter a key, and the Next button is not accessible. edit: I had to manually delete the existing LUKS partitions on the disk before the installer worked. other people fucked around with this message at 14:46 on Sep 7, 2012 |
# ? Sep 7, 2012 14:33 |
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Ahhh. I have tried to install both 12.04 and 12.10 and they fail during the install with "grub-efi package failed to install into /target/" or something like that during the last leg of the installation. I have tried letting the installer use the entire disk and partition it as it likes and partitioning it myself. It is a laptop, single 16gb sata ssd, using a usb stick as the install media.
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# ? Sep 7, 2012 18:23 |
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I'm having a hard time installing Lubuntu 12.04 at all. So far on two different sets of very different hardware, the installer from the live CD installer eventually just hangs. The cursor is the little circle with ants running around in it, I can still click on stuff and move around the GUI normally, but the OS isn't actually installed. My idea now is to try installing 11.10 and updates from there. Do I need to bother with all the available updates to get it up to 'current' before I upgrade to 12.04.1 or will it matter if I upgrade straight from the live CD install and then apply all the updates on 12.04?
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# ? Sep 8, 2012 19:19 |
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I just made the jump from 10.04 to 12.04, and I'm liking it so far, but there's one issue I'm running into. About 1 time in 4, when I close my laptop lid to put it to sleep, it won't wake up properly. I'll get a black screen, and maybe a flash of the background for a second, with a mouse cursor on it. It seems like I can possibly sign in and interact with whatever's going on in the background, since the cursor will change and the hard drive light will flicker depending on what I do. I've tried pulling up the terminal blind and doing "sudo shutdown -r now", but it doesn't seem to work and I have to power it off by holding the power button to restart it. My computer is a Thinkpad T61, nothing fancy, Intel graphics card. I'm not really sure where to start tracking this down. Any ideas?
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# ? Sep 9, 2012 03:21 |
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That happens to me on my Dell laptop. I can use ctrl+alt+f1 to switch to a prompt and reboot from there. This only seemed to start with 12.04... The last, like, 3-4 releases slept just fine.
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# ? Sep 9, 2012 15:42 |
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fourwood posted:That happens to me on my Dell laptop. I can use ctrl+alt+f1 to switch to a prompt and reboot from there. This only seemed to start with 12.04... The last, like, 3-4 releases slept just fine. Somehow I completely forgot about being able to switch to a terminal, and that does work fine. While doing some looking on an unrelated issue, I ran into a bug report for this same issue. It looks like it's related to Intel drivers. https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/xserver-xorg-video-intel/+bug/966744 Also looks like restarting lightdm will put you back to a usable desktop, and is at least faster than restarting the whole machine.
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# ? Sep 9, 2012 18:39 |
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My parents have a weird graphics glitch after I upgraded their PC to 12.04. All of the text gets garbled, on the unity menus, in firefox, the terminal, everywhere yet graphics are fine. They say it happens after they switch users. Logging out and logging back in fixes the issue. Try as hard as I might (switching users dozens of times) I can't reproduce the bug. Since I can't reproduce it, does this mean I probably shouldn't bother reporting it even though I have screenshots?
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# ? Sep 10, 2012 04:01 |
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keyvin posted:My parents have a weird graphics glitch after I upgraded their PC to 12.04. All of the text gets garbled, on the unity menus, in firefox, the terminal, everywhere yet graphics are fine. They say it happens after they switch users. Logging out and logging back in fixes the issue. Try as hard as I might (switching users dozens of times) I can't reproduce the bug. Since I can't reproduce it, does this mean I probably shouldn't bother reporting it even though I have screenshots? Is your hardware the same as theirs? Specifically the graphics card and drivers?
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# ? Sep 10, 2012 04:53 |
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you ate my cat posted:Somehow I completely forgot about being able to switch to a terminal, and that does work fine. While doing some looking on an unrelated issue, I ran into a bug report for this same issue. It looks like it's related to Intel drivers. This is exactly what I've been doing on my x61. - Boot into failsafe terminal - sudo /etc/init.d/lightdm restart Login and all works fine. It's a bummer though when Chrome won't recover any open tabs.
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# ? Sep 10, 2012 15:46 |
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Longinus00 posted:Is your hardware the same as theirs? Specifically the graphics card and drivers? No, my hardware isn't the same. It's a 7 year old p4 box so it has some kind of intel gma I'd wager. Its a shame I've recycled all of my old AGP video cards, because now I don't have any way to trouble shoot. Its really not a big deal since it takes all of four seconds to fix, and it happens maybe once or twice a week. Believe it or not this is the first bug I've encountered with ubuntu that wasn't the result of my installing software without using apt.
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# ? Sep 10, 2012 16:15 |
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Lysidas posted:You're right; this is what will happen. I know this was a few weeks ago , but to follow up. I finally just realized that I can just reinstall Ubuntu from a thumb drive and reformat the Ubuntu partition I had into two and use the last part to reinstall. I'm reformatting the first part of the of partition now as a 2nd Xp partition.
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# ? Sep 18, 2012 18:49 |
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I installed Ubuntu through wubi.exe and really wanted the 64-bit version but I didn't see the option and I'm pretty sure I'm stuck with the 32-bit install. It's not a major deal, as its running fine and its just my work computer, but I'd feel better having the 64-bit version. Is there a way that I can choose?
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# ? Sep 21, 2012 16:11 |
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Apok posted:I installed Ubuntu through wubi.exe and really wanted the 64-bit version but I didn't see the option and I'm pretty sure I'm stuck with the 32-bit install. It's not a major deal, as its running fine and its just my work computer, but I'd feel better having the 64-bit version. Is the OS on your work computer 64-bit? I thought by default wubi pulled down the 64-bit version of Ubuntu but you could use the 32-bit version if you manually downloaded it and told it to install that.
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# ? Sep 21, 2012 16:14 |
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I have some sound issues, again. I'm running the newest Mythbuntu, which is based on 12.04. My tv broke and is currently being serviced. For a laugh, I decided to try using my old 17-inch monitor as a stand-in for a while, just in case I want to watch the news or something. The problem is: I get no sound at all. The computer is connected via HDMI to a home theather receiver, which is then connected via HDMI->DVI adapter to my monitor. It's the same setup as with my tv, except with the tv, it's HDMI all the way. I always used the receiver as my sound output, the tv was muted. What I imagine is happening is that the sound driver notices that the monitor has no sound output and disables the audio output. Is there a way to force audio output over HDMI even if the monitor is incabable of outputting it?
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# ? Sep 30, 2012 12:02 |
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I'm already looking forward to 13.04. I'm using Quantal on all of my machines and have been since the Nvidia closed-source driver was usable. Now that 12.10 is converging toward a stable release, there aren't any crazy "replace every package and break the system" updates anymore, and it just doesn't feel right. I also can't wait until the system installation of Python is the newly-released 3.3, which I'm guessing was released too late to make it into Quantal as the default Python 3 version. Side note: I think it's really neat that the plan for 12.10 is to only install Python 3 by default, but the daily CD images still have 2.7 in addition to 3.2. I wonder whether it'll actually happen.
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# ? Oct 1, 2012 17:32 |
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Lysidas posted:I'm already looking forward to 13.04. I'm using Quantal on all of my machines and have been since the Nvidia closed-source driver was usable. Now that 12.10 is converging toward a stable release, there aren't any crazy "replace every package and break the system" updates anymore, and it just doesn't feel right. Last I checked there weren't very many programs left to be ported over to 3.x. I assume that the number has declined since then. As for 13.04, I want to see Wayland in action so badly that it's not even funny.
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# ? Oct 1, 2012 18:13 |
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I've got a question. I'm SSHing into a linux box (running 12.04) using KiTTY (a PuTTY fork). I use tmux, and I can't for the life of me get ls to output colors (either in or out of tmux). I'm using the Solarized Dark color scheme. My .bash_profile contains the following: code:
code:
Does anyone have any idea why I wouldn't be seeing the different colors when I ls? I was hoping it was a color issue (before explicitly setting TERM, tput colors was 8). vim properly shows colors, but I don't know why ls won't. Fangs404 fucked around with this message at 21:40 on Oct 8, 2012 |
# ? Oct 8, 2012 21:33 |
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you ate my cat posted:I just made the jump from 10.04 to 12.04, and I'm liking it so far, but there's one issue I'm running into. About 1 time in 4, when I close my laptop lid to put it to sleep, it won't wake up properly. I'll get a black screen, and maybe a flash of the background for a second, with a mouse cursor on it. It seems like I can possibly sign in and interact with whatever's going on in the background, since the cursor will change and the hard drive light will flicker depending on what I do. I've tried pulling up the terminal blind and doing "sudo shutdown -r now", but it doesn't seem to work and I have to power it off by holding the power button to restart it. I can reproduce that symptom by turning the backlight off with the keyboard then cycling sleep mode. I must authenticate using the dark LCD before I can raise the backlight level with the keyboard. Keyboard shortcuts, such as the backlight, do not work at either the lock or login screens for me. Maybe these two issues are related?
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# ? Oct 9, 2012 07:05 |
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Fangs404 posted:I've got a question. I'm SSHing into a linux box (running 12.04) using KiTTY (a PuTTY fork). I use tmux, and I can't for the life of me get ls to output colors (either in or out of tmux). I'm using the Solarized Dark color scheme. 'ls --color' is normally aliased to 'ls' but if you've been mucking around in your bash.profile, maybe you accidentally took it out?
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# ? Oct 9, 2012 08:52 |
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you ate my cat posted:I just made the jump from 10.04 to 12.04, and I'm liking it so far, but there's one issue I'm running into. About 1 time in 4, when I close my laptop lid to put it to sleep, it won't wake up properly. I'll get a black screen, and maybe a flash of the background for a second, with a mouse cursor on it. It seems like I can possibly sign in and interact with whatever's going on in the background, since the cursor will change and the hard drive light will flicker depending on what I do. I've tried pulling up the terminal blind and doing "sudo shutdown -r now", but it doesn't seem to work and I have to power it off by holding the power button to restart it. You'd probably be better off filing a bug, since the bug report will submit your hardware details. It will probably be marked as a duplicate of another bug -- which is fine, at least you'll know what the bug is and can be notified of an imminent fix. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/ReportingBugs
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# ? Oct 9, 2012 09:02 |
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Wheany posted:I have some sound issues, again. I'm running the newest Mythbuntu, which is based on 12.04. My tv broke and is currently being serviced. For a laugh, I decided to try using my old 17-inch monitor as a stand-in for a while, just in case I want to watch the news or something. Your problem lies elsewhere. The reason is that the receiver is first in accepting the HDMI signal, so any handshaking reports the capabilities of the receiver, not the destination display.
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# ? Oct 9, 2012 09:45 |
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Fangs404 posted:I've got a question. I'm SSHing into a linux box (running 12.04) using KiTTY (a PuTTY fork). I use tmux, and I can't for the life of me get ls to output colors (either in or out of tmux). I'm using the Solarized Dark color scheme.
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# ? Oct 9, 2012 13:24 |
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I've been running Ubuntu and then XFCE on my work/school laptop for about 3 years and now the media PC needs a system upgrade. I tried Ubuntu 12.04 but I don't like the look, now I've got Mint on it and it's OK but it's not quite right. I can't really put my finger on what it is. I'd like it to be simple, stable and easy to navigate. Is there somewhere that has a look & feel comparison of distros? The sites I've found say "If you're new to linux, you want this; if you're a hacker, you want this..." The last survey I took recommended OpenSUSE and Fedora. The machine is a Dell Optiplex GX620: P4 3.2 Ghz, 1GB RAM. I've got all of my music and videos on it so I want to play that and also browse the internet and stream video. Anyone have a favourite distro they recommend?
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# ? Oct 9, 2012 20:19 |
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greazeball posted:The machine is a Dell Optiplex GX620: P4 3.2 Ghz, 1GB RAM. I've got all of my music and videos on it so I want to play that and also browse the internet and stream video. Anyone have a favourite distro they recommend? Try an LXDE distro? I use Lubuntu on a laptop with worse specs and it works fine. Look & feel wise it's set up like the standard windows desktop style from 95-2k, but prettier.
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# ? Oct 9, 2012 20:32 |
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greazeball posted:I've been running Ubuntu and then XFCE on my work/school laptop for about 3 years and now the media PC needs a system upgrade. I tried Ubuntu 12.04 but I don't like the look, now I've got Mint on it and it's OK but it's not quite right. I can't really put my finger on what it is. I would recommend grabbing the Ubuntu Minimal CD and then installing only the packages you want. https://help.ubuntu.com/community/Installation/MinimalCD Or if you like XFCE maybe just get Xubuntu.
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# ? Oct 9, 2012 20:34 |
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oval office AND PASTE posted:'ls --color' is normally aliased to 'ls' but if you've been mucking around in your bash.profile, maybe you accidentally took it out? hifi posted:I don't know what $CLICOLOR is, but check what $LS_COLORS is. In my shell config I check for $TMUX and then set the terminal to screen-256color and then also eval dircolors -b. Also it looks like setting default-terminal will only affect new windows, so that might be an incorrect way of setting $TERM. Thanks guys. I restored the default .bashrc, and I also had to go under Connection -> Data in the KiTTY/PuTTY options and change "terminal-type string" from xterm to xterm-256color. Now I'm at least getting the correct terminals. Also, it seems like tmux doesn't automatically read .tmux.conf. I had to do tmux source-file ~/.tmux.conf for tmux to read the conf file. However, I'm still not seeing colors. $LS_COLORS is correctly set, and dircolors -b correctly returns the colors it's set at. I was correctly seeing colors at my work computer, so I'm thinking it's gotta be a KiTTY configuration issue.
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# ? Oct 10, 2012 01:14 |
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Fangs404 posted:Thanks guys. I restored the default .bashrc, and I also had to go under Connection -> Data in the KiTTY/PuTTY options and change "terminal-type string" from xterm to xterm-256color. Now I'm at least getting the correct terminals. Also, it seems like tmux doesn't automatically read .tmux.conf. I had to do tmux source-file ~/.tmux.conf for tmux to read the conf file. try 'which ls' and make sure that reports "ls --color=auto". As for the terminal emulator I don't use kitty but there are color options in putty under Window > Color, and make sure the "allow terminal to use ..." options are bolded.
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# ? Oct 10, 2012 01:51 |
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# ? Jun 8, 2024 08:49 |
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hifi posted:try 'which ls' and make sure that reports "ls --color=auto". Did you try this? which does not process aliases in this way. code:
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# ? Oct 10, 2012 02:01 |