neeHello all.
I believe I have decided to go with a Debian as my choice to begin learning again. But everything I have read all talks about xp, 7, vista and the likes. I have seen mention of 8 and 8.1 a couple times. But the info was very vague. So I am questioning myself in my decision based solely on the fact that I really do not want to or have to need to build my distro from the get go. I am completely dumbfounded as to making something work that normally wouldn't. I know I can get through the ISO process to run a live disc. If it is unlikely that Debian will run on my amd64 from a live, then I need to read more I suppose. I figure a good foundation of install without too many "make it work" scenarios would be a good start? Or am I just being paranoid and ignorant?
OK, so I am taking Cyber security classes at my college, and I am getting myself into pen testing and stuff of that sort (but still completely a newbie). I am deciding between what OS I want for my laptop < Debian or Kali >. I know Kali is used mostly for security field type work, but I would also like to be able to practice on my Developing skills to. would kali os be a good choice for me or would debian be a better choice for security/development? I have met a few security professionals who keep telling me that real professionals use whatever os they want and just build their own tools?
Hello,
I am looking for a live linux distro that is able to recognize more hardware by "default" without installation. For example, when I borrow a laptop/netbook, I want to be able to boot the live linux distro and be able to have wireless access to internet (at least most of the time).
I know how to get the wireless working if I have internet access to begin with, but sometimes I do not have a wired connection or am not allowed to install stuff.
I would like to try many live distros on different laptops, but it would be hard to convince other people to give me their laptops to do that; so I would really appreciate your help.
Thanks
I would like to use a hibernate function on my Debian 7.7 OS.
There is a debian tutorial about this - but I'm not an experienced system administrator so it's a bit difficult to understand.https://wiki.debian.org/Hibernation/...Swap_Partition
I have finally decided to create a swap file rather than a swap partition for the sake of simplicity.
I have 2gb RAM and am a normal user - so I think I can set the 'swappiness' to low so that the swap file is used mainly for hibernation.
Can anyone please point me to somewhere where I can install the hibernate function onto a debian/ubuntu distro?
Also, I would've thought that a dpkg could have been written which simplifies this process with the use of a GUI.
In fact, additional functions such as screensaver and wallpaper changer would make the dpkg very useful.
However, any help on creating hibernation on my OS would be really great.
Thank you.
Hello all.
I have been helped with a link to dl the debian live. However, I go to burn them and Power2go tells me the disc doesn't have the space. I am using Memorex 700mb 40x CD-R. Is there a smaller version of the live or will I have to do a hard install? I have found a netinst if that is the case. Please forgive my ignorance.
I just read that in 2013 nasa stopped using windows and moved to linux quoting the need for a more stable ssystem with better security. They also said that they were using debian.
http://www.extremetech.com/extreme/1...ed-reliability
They also use lenova thinkpads for the same reasons.
My question is, what is the functionality difference with debian? Is it more stable than other distributions? If ubuntu is Debian based, what is the difference?
I'm currently using ubuntu studio Distro and very happy with it but I'm very interested in the reasons why nasa use Debian.
Hello all,
I am new to linux but not new to PC's.
I am self taught in everything i know so far.
I have an issue i am looking for some guidance on, i have burned an ISO copy of AVLinux & booted from the Live DVD.
chose to install on partition & created all the necessary file systems etc with GParted then proceeded with the install.
Completed install but when i try to boot no joy.
I have EasyBCD installed on Vista to manage to boot processes.
I am able to get to Grub4dos window & grub> prompt.
I have tried many commands of which i have identifeid the partition is there as correct filesystem, when running the /vmlin....TAB command it locates the name of the linux distro, if i set the drive partition to makeactive it boots up saying no operating system them have to change it back to Vista.
I have two pics that show the grub configuration reading from the live DVD, the install appears to have some missing or not right as opposed to the DVD, can anyone assisst how i can fix this issue?
Do i have to copy each file over manually from the Live DVD's folders?
Cant attach images here so here is the differeneces,
these are the listing on the Grub configuartion being read using the Live DVD,
1. /etc/grub.d
2. /boot/grub/device.map
3. grub-install
4. grub-mkconfig
5. grub-mkdevicemap--device
6. grub-mkfont
7. /boot/grub
8. /boot/grub/grub.cfg
9. /etc/default/grub
Here is what way they are on Live DVD,
1. Present
2. Present
3. Present
4. Present
5. Present
6. Present
7. Present
8. Yellow information bubble
9. Present
My install on partition,
1. Present
2. Yellow information bubble
3. Red X bubble
4. Red X bubble
5. Yellow information bubble
6. Present
7. Yellow information bubble
8. Yellow information bubble
9. Present
what do i need to do to remedy this?
i have attempted the install on couple of different drives, no success.
Sorry, but I just have a terrible time getting started in Linux. What I want for the moment (having set up a partition on WinXP and ran a distro before) is a live MINT USB distro on a 64GB stick plugged into a Win7 machine. Since stick is 64GB, I am dealing with exfat. Found Gparted and seems to be okay, but gives an ominous warning about launching the win 32 formatter off of the stick drive and NOT windows (C:\). That part is understood. However I see the prompt "hit any key to format L" and when I look up at the colored title bar of the window, I read cmd: C:\ etc. that makes me wonder am in C: or L: (the USB drive letter). The Gparted iso in resident in L: but the drive needs C: for computing power etc. I know, I'm such a newbie it must be painful for many to read. I just don't want to screw up the MBR of C: In short. Unetbootin, MINT 17 and Gparted are all on L: and unzipped on a exfat USB thumbdrive. I want to fix the exfat to be readable by Unetbootin so I can make a live USB. I might be doing it correctly, but the top bar of the widow reading cmd: c:\etc etc scares me.
I tried to install Debian 8 and 7 but I get error message at partitioning stage:
"Failed to create a file system
The ext4 file system creation in partition #1 of SCSI1 (0,0,0) (sda) failed."
After that I couldn't advance further.
I booted from a live Debian and the HardDisk actually shows there with some older files on it.
I tried to install even Windows but from the start it shows the computer doesn't have a Hard Disk Drive so the installation stops right at the start.
Any ideas what is wrong and is there any fix?
Hello,
I am trying to upgrade CPAN and getting the following errors.
Please suggest how to proceed.
" CPAN.pm: Going to build A/AN/ANDK/CPAN-1.9800.tar.gz
Importing PAUSE public key into your GnuPG keychain... done!
(You may wish to trust it locally with 'gpg --lsign-key 450F89EC')
Checking if your kit is complete...
Looks good
Writing Makefile for CPAN
Could not read '/root/.cpan/build/CPAN-1.9800-qmv5vY/META.yml'. Falling back to other methods to determine prerequisites
Can't exec "make": No such file or directory at /usr/share/perl/5.10/CPAN/Distribution.pm line 2003.
ANDK/CPAN-1.9800.tar.gz
make -- NOT OK
Warning (usually harmless): 'YAML' not installed, will not store persistent state
Running make test
Can't test without successful make
Running make install
Make had returned bad status, install seems impossible
Failed during this command:
ANDK/CPAN-1.9800.tar.gz : make NO "
fyi, I am using Debian Squeeze.
Thanks in advance,
---
Anji
I previously installed kdenlive in previous Debian versions with the suggested command:
apt-get install kdenlive frei0r-plugins dvgrab recordmydesktop dvdauthor genisoimage
but it gives error messages in debian 8 saying packages not available
maybe my sources.list is wrong?
# deb cdrom:[Debian GNU/Linux 8.0.0 _Jessie_ - Official amd64 DVD Binary-1 20150425-12:54]/ jessie contrib main
deb http://security.debian.org/ jessie/updates main contrib
deb-src http://security.debian.org/ jessie/updates main contrib
deb-src http://ftp.fr.debian.org/debian/ jessie-updates main contrib non-free
deb http://ftp.fr.debian.org/debian/ jessie-updates main contrib non-free
deb http://www.debian-multimedia.org jessie main
# jessie-updates, previously known as 'volatile'
# A network mirror was not selected during install. The following entries
# are provided as examples, but you should amend them as appropriate
# for your mirror of choice.
#
# deb http://ftp.debian.org/debian/ jessie-updates main contrib
# deb-src http://ftp.debian.org/debian/ jessie-updates main contrib
What should I do?