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1. Linux
Hi All,
My chrome browser was working correctly on my Debian Lenny 5 PC..Today i downloaded the version from google and tried to install the deb from command line as follows:
dpkg -i <latest-chrome-package>
The installation failed but now my existing old chrome browser is not starting.
... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: coolatt
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2. Red Hat
Hello Team,
What's the procedure to downgrade the kernel . If we modify the grub.conf manually and rebooting to the old version what will be affect ?? Will it work perfect ?
Regards,
Gowtham.G (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gowthamakanthan
1 Replies
3. Debian
I have been running Debian Lenny on this current PC for about a year. Since installation, I have had no major issues. Last night, I lazily tapped out:
$ sudo aptitude update
$ sudo aptitude upgrade
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Discussion started by: Elric of Grans
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4. Red Hat
HI,
is there any way to downgrade my redhat el-5.3 to el-5.2?
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5. Debian
Hi all
im trying to install Java in Debian lenny with apt-get install but can find the packages...anyone can help me on this one?
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6. Debian
Hi,
I don't think this is a new problem, but I can't find a solution anywhere, and it's quite annoying:
In the office, I have a workstation running Debian Lenny with Gnome, and I've copied my ssh key to some other machines for secure and easy login without havin' to remember all the passwords.... (8 Replies)
Discussion started by: harald
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7. Debian
Hi everybody!
I have a very big problem, I can not make any updates on my debian lenny.
I get everytime this errors with apt-get update:
Err http://security.debian.org lenny/updates Release.gpg
Connection failed
Err http://www.backports.org lenny-backports Release.gpg
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Discussion started by: magge
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8. Debian
I recently upgraded from Etch to Lenny. There were a few hiccoughs, but I was able to sort most of these out myself. There is just one little niggle left that I have no idea how to go about fixing. My CD-ROM now ejects on boot, and will not stay closed. When I boot the system, I notice that... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: Elric of Grans
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9. AIX
Hi all,
This is my first post on this forum :)
I have a very small AIX admin experience and for my first week in this new company, i got to downgrade a P5 server from AIX 6.1 to 5.3... so I have a few questions because I never did an install of AIX before nor a downgrade..
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APTITUDE-RUN-ST(1) Command-line reference APTITUDE-RUN-ST(1)
NAME
aptitude-run-state-bundle - unpack an aptitude state bundle and invoke aptitude on it
SYNOPSIS
aptitude-run-state-bundle [<options>...] <input-file> [<program> [<arguments>...]]
DESCRIPTION
aptitude-run-state-bundle unpacks the given aptitude state bundle created by aptitude-create-state-bundle(1) to a temporary directory,
invokes <program> on it with the supplied <arguments>, and removes the temporary directory afterwards. If <program> is not supplied, it
defaults to aptitude(8).
OPTIONS
The following options may occur on the command-line before the input file. Options following the input file are presumed to be arguments to
aptitude.
--append-args
Place the options that give the location of the state bundle at the end of the command line when invoking <program>, rather than at the
beginning (the default is to place options at the beginning).
--help
Display a brief usage summary.
--prepend-args
Place the options that give the location of the state bundle at the beginning of the command line when invoking <program>, overriding
any previous --append-args (the default is to place options at the beginning).
--no-clean
Do not remove the unpacked state directory after running aptitude. You might want to use this if, for instance, you are debugging a
problem that appears when aptitude's state file is modified. When aptitude finishes running, the name of the state directory will be
printed so that you can access it in the future.
This option is enabled automatically by --statedir.
--really-clean
Delete the state directory after running aptitude, even if --no-clean or --statedir was supplied.
--statedir
Instead of treating the input file as a state bundle, treat it as an unpacked state bundle. For instance, you can use this to access
the state directory that was created by a prior run with --no-clean.
--unpack
Unpack the input file to a temporary directory, but don't actually run aptitude.
SEE ALSO
aptitude-create-state-bundle(1), aptitude(8), apt(8)
AUTHOR
Daniel Burrows <dburrows@debian.org>
Author.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2007 Daniel Burrows.
This manual page is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published
by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
This manual page is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation,
Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
aptitude-run-state-bundle 0.6. 08/08/2011 APTITUDE-RUN-ST(1)