Sysop: | Amessyroom |
---|---|
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Messages: | 76,417 |
On 14/12/2024 23:44, gene heskett wrote:I purged it, then forcibly removed the log files and directory. The lag
What is suricata, first I've heard of it
I was expecting that you would walk through every item reported by
"dpkg -V" and "systemctl --failed". For the former, you have enough
data locally to get more info
dpkg -S /etc/suricata/suricata.yaml
and "apt show" with the reported package name. Either you clicked at aI am totally alone, have been for about 5 years now. IOW, if it got done
wrong item or somebody manages your computer.
Depending on the degree of your paranoia, I would either just purge
suricata or to dig into apt and dpkg logs to figure out when it was
installed and what actions were performed around that time.
Audit other lines as well: were modifications intentional? If it is
not a conffile then move changes to /etc and restore original version.
.
On 15/12/2024 03:24, gene heskett wrote:
On 12/14/24 12:31, Thomas Schmitt wrote:
Gene Heskett wrote:
Our std night shift procedure was to pump the big tank down to
under 2 or 3
psi, which put the bottles up around 7400 to 7800 psi at midnight. The >>>> morning shift at 8AM had 5200 psi to play with till the truck got
there.
Around a 2500 diff. Where did the rest of it go?
The pressure of a given amount of gas in a given volume is proportional
to its absolute temperature. Pressure reduction from 7400 to 5200 would
correspond to a temperature reduction from e.g. 427 Kelvin (309 F, more
than boiling hot but not glowing) to 300 Kelvin (80 F, luke warm).
The next step would be calculation of ideal gas temperature in a
vessel after filling it from atmospheric pressure to 7500 psi (rather
high value) neglecting heat dissipation through the vessel walls.
(Side not: compressor thrust may be hot as well) +100 K difference
does not look like an overestimate from my point of view.
I've BTDT, have you?
Heating during filling was mentioned previous time as well and sounds reasonable.
.
On 12/10/24 18:07, Greg Wooledge wrote:
On Tue, Dec 10, 2024 at 18:01:24 -0800, David Christensen wrote:
If official Debian packages cause your system to crash, then your
Debian
installation is broken.
Or the hardware is broken. Running a specfic program may exercise the
broken hardware in a way that causes it to fail, while other programs
do not.
If the OP runs Debian OOTB, okay. But, Gene does anything but that.
David
.
I use CrashPlan to back up to the cloud. Saved my ass more than once.
On 12/10/24 23:06, David Christensen wrote:
On 12/10/24 18:07, Greg Wooledge wrote:if debian kept the popular aps up to date, I'd use them. T-bird is an example. With suricata gone its still going out to lala - land while
On Tue, Dec 10, 2024 at 18:01:24 -0800, David Christensen wrote:
If official Debian packages cause your system to crash, then your
Debian
installation is broken.
Or the hardware is broken. Running a specfic program may exercise the
broken hardware in a way that causes it to fail, while other programs
do not.
If the OP runs Debian OOTB, okay. But, Gene does anything but that.
fetching new mail. The beta is in .xz format, unpacked into it own / home/gene/thunderbird directory is running fine. The only real problem
is its creating and using a whole new mail directory, and none my
sorting filters yet exist. With suracata gone, it says it connected to imap.server at my isp, collecting 599 msgs to catch up, but goes out to
lunch for an hour using 100% of a core, the gui is dead, mouse clicks anyplace are ignored, killall kills it instantly. Just did a full-
upgrade, 7 security pkgs, now its fetching the same 577 headers & htop
thinks its running ok. But it got to the last header count, went to
100.5% of a core, no response to a mouse click any place. This is your t-bird doing that, beta is working fine, you are reading it.
Merry Christmas all.