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    Xecure

      – It appears to me that maintaining backlight level is not working for me automatically. Even after installation of the patch. Not that important though. I just press Fn + Home and comes back to level.

      It seems live-USB is a bit more complicated than I can manage.
      On installed, when exiting the system, the last step runit does is stop any configured K (stop) scripts in /etc/runit-core/, but on live USB this happens AFTER all persistence changes have been saved, so this new change doesn’t save at all (on live USB with persistence).
      I tried activating savestate, but this only seems to work (not tested) on non-persistent antiX-live.
      My guess is that there is a script that runs at some point in time after pressing Shutdown/reboot that saves the brightness value before giving the option to save persistence changes, and that only works with sysvinit scripts. Or maybe savestate is not working on runit version at all (I need to test this).
      For now, nothing I can do until I learn more.

      Question about general service management in runit environment: Is there a service management tool that would allow to manage services?

      This is experimental, and isn’t a package yet, but if you install dialogbox from the repos and run this script from terminal (with sudo), you can manage runit services in a graphical interface.
      Try to enable ufw and bluetooth Startup option and see if this fixes the issues you are experiencing on your system.

      – When from slimski login screen (Default theme, not the theme that comes as default, at least) selecting sessiontype not one of those included with antiX (DWM in this case) is working but the well known screen appears that wm is not one of approved

      I think the most left option is used to disable it for the future. I will have a look.

      -It just came to me that the “Update menu” entry does not work on my system – because it needs root privileges

      I will see if I can send a merge request adding gksudo to the update menu command.

      -Is it possible to solve the bug- when you download anything in firefox and click the file from firefox’s downloads list- the “search file” window pops up, instead of opening the associated program…

      Same method, changing the default file manager from preferred applications. For some reason, desktop-defaults-follow-fm.desktop is not a valid option for mime-update.
      The problem resides in $HOME/.local/share/applications/mimeinfo.cache, line inode/directory
      inode/directory=zzzfm-find.desktop;zzzfm-folder-handler.desktop;zzzfm.desktop;
      I think if rox-filer.desktop and desktop-defaults-follow-fm.desktop had this option inside:
      MimeType=inode/directory;
      and run
      sudo update-desktop-database
      it should work for firefox (at least rox-filer).
      If you move desktop-defaults-follow-fm.desktop outside of the /usr/share/applications/antiX/ folder, it should also pick up by mimeinfo and work properly.
      I will edit the zzzfm package to remove the MimeType option for zzzfm-find, so that at least it doesn’t bring up the same problem.

      antiX Live system enthusiast.
      General Live Boot Parameters for antiX.

      Member
      olsztyn

        I am trying to build a different version of runit with this command included (but it isn’t working right now). For now, stop the ufw service with
        sudo sv stop ufw
        sudo touch /etc/sv/ufw/down

        Thanks Xecure for interim solutions. Just to update on testing:
        – CUPS resolution worked perfectly. CUPS service started and works going forward.
        – UFW still does not start automatically upon reboot. I did install your two patches (ufw and backlight). However, as before, it can be started via sudo ufw enable each time after reboot.
        – Bluetooth shows powered on in CMST, however service continues to be down:
        sudo sv status bluetooth comes back with:
        down: bluetooth: 664s
        – It appears to me that maintaining backlight level is not working for me automatically. Even after installation of the patch. Not that important though. I just press Fn + Home and comes back to level.
        – When from slimski login screen (Default theme, not the theme that comes as default, at least) selecting sessiontype not one of those included with antiX (DWM in this case) is working but the well known screen appears that wm is not one of approved, allowing to Cancel, select one of approved, etc., like in 19.4, however the ‘Disable’ button is missing. Therefore disabling this screen popping up is not possible and and needs to be cancelled every time. Not a big issue, just an annoyance…

        Thanks and Regards…

        • This reply was modified 1 year, 8 months ago by olsztyn.

        Live antiX Boot Options (Previously posted by Xecure):
        https://antixlinuxfan.miraheze.org/wiki/Table_of_antiX_Boot_Parameters

        Member
        Xecure

          – UFW actually starts successfully on ‘sudo ufw enable’ or from Control Center -> Firewall but does not restarts automatically upon reboot.

          Sorry. This was a bug in the ufw service. The “pause” command isn’t included in the current version of runit (I copied part of the sv script from void linux).
          I am trying to build a different version of runit with this command included (but it isn’t working right now). For now, stop the ufw service with

          sudo sv stop ufw
          sudo touch /etc/sv/ufw/down

          – Bluetooth – I am unable to start Bluez service and not sure what I am missing. On 19.4 on the same machine no problem.

          First, enable bluetooth from cmst interface (connman disables bluetooth, the same as it did with wifi on previous versions)
          cmst -d
          and switch bluetooth to ON.
          Then, check that the runit service is working
          sudo sv status bluetooth
          Its state should be “run”.
          Then you can connect to any bluetooth device with blueman. You can launch the applet with
          blueman-applet &

          – CUPS service fails to start on me.

          Works for me on my system. Check the service status
          sudo sv status cups
          If it is not up, then we can explore if there is something stopping it from starting (a down file) or if it is even enabled.

          Are your tests from Live USB or from installed? If from live-USB, maybe one of the disable=[] parameters is set, which has some of the services also disabled (you need to tell us for us to test properly).

          antiX Live system enthusiast.
          General Live Boot Parameters for antiX.

          Member
          olsztyn

            Based on my limited playing with this B2 runit version I have good feelings about runit init architecture, although it will take me some time to understand better.
            The only material issues I have failed to resolve yet perhaps have to do with starting services:
            – UFW actually starts successfully on ‘sudo ufw enable’ or from Control Center -> Firewall but does not restarts automatically upon reboot.
            – Bluetooth – I am unable to start Bluez service and not sure what I am missing. On 19.4 on the same machine no problem.
            – CUPS service fails to start on me. Not sure what makes it fail. Again, on 19.4 works fine. Perhaps it must be started a different way, not from Control Center Printers?

            Other than that seems fine so far…

            Live antiX Boot Options (Previously posted by Xecure):
            https://antixlinuxfan.miraheze.org/wiki/Table_of_antiX_Boot_Parameters

            #65537
            Member
            olsztyn

              Question:
              Just minor wrinkles I cannot seem to overcome:
              – Starting ufw via command line ‘sudo ufw enable’ and via Control Panel Network’> Firewall/start works for the session but does not survive reboot, although sudo ufw enable comes back as expected that it is started and added to startup list.
              Is there a new way to make uwf automatically started on boot, just as in antiX 19?

              – It appears to me Bluetooth Bluez service seems resisting my attempts to start. Still playing with this challenge. Question: Do I still need to install Pulseaudio in order for bluetooth to work with audio, even if I manage to start Bluez service? I think Blueman needs to pass audio via Pulseaudio and not Alsa, the way it is in antiX 19, at least…

              Update:
              Actually runsv service ‘bluetooth’ appears to be running. However I realize that memory footprint of that process is 0 per Htop…
              Thanks for any hints…

              • This reply was modified 1 year, 8 months ago by olsztyn.
              • This reply was modified 1 year, 8 months ago by olsztyn.
              • This reply was modified 1 year, 8 months ago by olsztyn.

              Live antiX Boot Options (Previously posted by Xecure):
              https://antixlinuxfan.miraheze.org/wiki/Table_of_antiX_Boot_Parameters

              Member
              Xecure

                I’d like some feedback from users who have tried printing, scanning, bluetooth devices, exfat partitioned usb devices, phone connections, tethering etc.

                I installed 21runitb2 on Real hardware.
                Printing (over network): works out of the box (cups service running).
                Scanning (over network): works out of the box (saned service running).
                Bluetooth test 0 – Detection of Android 10 phone: works (bluetooth service and blueman-applet working).
                Bluetooth test 1 – Transfer file from computer to android phone: works (bluetooth service and blueman-applet working).
                Bluetooth test 2 – Transfer file from android phone to computer: works (bluetooth service and blueman-applet working).
                USB phone connection and file transfer: works (I need to use “Android Device USB connect” program to mount the folder).
                USB android phone tethering: works (as soon as I enabled it on the phone). Connection is stable. (tested only with connman and it works automatically).

                All this without playing with the services.

                I don’t know how to measure boot time.
                I don’t really pay too much attention to RAM use, and only enable or disable services when needed, but most are always running.

                -On zzz-icewm- the “root file manager” toolbar icon lunched “rox” not “zzzfm in root mode”

                I think it is better to remove this entry, so users don’t make mistakes. If they need root access, launch rox (root) from menus or launch zzzfm root window from zzzfm window menus.

                -in zzzmf disable showing hidden files/folders by default (it may be confusing for some users)

                On zzzfm hidden files, I will change the desktop-defaults-zzzfm-antix configuration to hide hidden files.

                antiX Live system enthusiast.
                General Live Boot Parameters for antiX.

                #65383
                Member
                olsztyn

                  I was looking at the blues-alsa, but it looks like it would be a tricky install.

                  Pulse audio is not memory friendly, if I recall.

                  I hate all these wires…

                  I would not be even able to be wired to my TV box… I do need bluetooth…
                  For Bluetooth support in antiX I ended up installing Pulseaudio. Takes some toll on memory but seems to be adopted by almost every distro. No better alternative in sight, as much as I am memory footprint quite sensitive.
                  If I understood from a recent note from Xecure, anticapitalista could be coming up with Bluetooth solution for Bullseye, though…

                  Live antiX Boot Options (Previously posted by Xecure):
                  https://antixlinuxfan.miraheze.org/wiki/Table_of_antiX_Boot_Parameters

                  Forum Admin
                  anticapitalista

                    Thanks for the feedback so far.

                    I’d like some feedback from users who have tried printing, scanning, bluetooth devices, exfat partitioned usb devices, phone connections, tethering etc.
                    Also, some comments on stability, speed, RAM usage would be useful.
                    Doesn’t matter if it is running live or installed.
                    Thanks

                    Philosophers have interpreted the world in many ways; the point is to change it.

                    antiX with runit - leaner and meaner.

                    #65327
                    Member
                    Xecure

                      You need to install pulseaudio + bluetooth module or build bluez-alsa from source if you want it to work with alsa.

                      See this thread: https://www.antixforum.com/forums/topic/i-cant-get-any-bluetooth-device-to-pair-with-my-pc/

                      antiX Live system enthusiast.
                      General Live Boot Parameters for antiX.

                      Moderator
                      BobC

                        I would like to be able to listen to podcasts without bothering others in the room, and be able to record audio with a good microphone for screencasts, all without having to deal will tangled messes of wires to the audio jack on my laptops.

                        Are there any good options?

                        I bought a Bluetooth Plantronics Voyager 104, and it works well with bluetooth for my phone, and connects to my work laptop (Win/10). It paired with my antiX Linux laptop, but I didn’t find a way to get audio to play to it. I haven’t tried any recording, but assume that won’t work until audio out is working.

                        Does anyone have anything working of know how to make this work?

                        #64982
                        Member
                        Xecure

                          My experience is that on some my machines Connman does not seem to firmly maintain stability of connection and rather too often loses communication with dbus.

                          I think you are confusing connman (the connection manager, cannot work without dbus), with the cmst GUI, which communicates with connman through dbus (and is messed up sometimes). Simply kill the cmst process and restart it again.
                          I like how anticapitalista has set up antiX21, where cmst doesn’t start except if there is no network connection. This way it doesn’t reside in RAM doing nothing and you only launch it when needed (when closed, it stops the process).
                          cmst -d

                          I was using Network Manager rather than Connman

                          That worked well on antiX 19.X, but it seems Debian removed the service init script for Network Manager at some point (it isn’t present in bullseye), so you will need to copy it from antiX-19 if you want to still use it on sysvinit. I created this service for runit just to see if it was possible to use it there, and I had no problem at all running it with this service.
                          I prefer connman, as I have spent more time learning and testing things with it (it is a very powerful connection manager (has less dependencies that network-manager and can run with less accompanying programs):

                          Another service I would think beneficial to would be Bluetooth

                          anticapitalista already has it working on runit, but I may touch it a bit just so it stops without errors when bluetooth packages are removed.

                          Is there a way to run without a dbus altogether?

                          Yes. I recently removed dbus on a testing system just to see if I can get slimski to work properly without it (anticapitalista asked if I could get it to work without dbus). When you remove dbus, many many things are uninstalled, as dbus seems to have become a standard in linux (more even than systemd). connman needs dbus, networkmanager needs dbus, complex DEs require dbus, etc.
                          Network without dbus is pure wpa_supplicant+ifup/ifdown, I think (ceni for example). Most daemons nowadays seem to need dbus, so it will not be easy at all.

                          You may want to check out iwd, as their aim is to simplify wireless connections in linux and replace wpa_supplicant (but it depends on dbus). This program would be the only one scanning and managing wireless connections, and other programs (connman/network-manager) would interface with it using dbus. I haven’t used it, so no idea hw well it works, but some people seem to be happy with it.

                          Anyway, back to the services for runit, I will be touching on anticapitalista’s working services (mainly to add the no-error stopping when not available), and maybe even be touching runit-antix package to edit some /etc/runit-core init script (like adding sudo there, as it isn’t a real service, and is just used to restart the sudo timer for all users after rebooting) and adding the brightness service to save brightness setting for next reboot (proposed a few replies above).

                          Apart from Login Managers, anything else that people use that isn’t already a service in antiX 21-b1 runit?

                          antiX Live system enthusiast.
                          General Live Boot Parameters for antiX.

                          #64954
                          Member
                          olsztyn

                            For runit fans, please respond to Xecure’s request.

                            Since this is a request to runit fans only I am not sure I qualify to respond, since I am not exactly a fan of either sysvinit or runit but I would prefer runit if it is implemented in a consistent, streamlined way. More I would like S6 but it is a moot point now…
                            So just my very limited two cents from end user perspective, mostly focused on network stability:

                            * connman and elogind, so that they check if dbus is already running before starting (and correctly stop if not installed).

                            My experience is that on some my machines Connman does not seem to firmly maintain stability of connection and rather too often loses communication with dbus. I have not found a way to revive Connman connection in such case short of rebooting. This might have to do with some WiFi cards only but nevertheless. Now, just to clarify, this my experience has nothing to do with recent Connman failures in result of changes.
                            I have read of critical assessments of Connman as not a streamlined implementation but rather being full of patches around various drivers as issues were discovered. I do not know if this might be causing the above instability of communication with dbus.
                            As Connman remains as default in antiX I would like to find out how to re-instate such network connection, when Connman loses communication with dbus to improve usability.

                            * network-manager, for those who don’t like connman or ceni

                            For Hannie Schaft I was using Network Manager rather than Connman. Grup Yorum seems made it more tricky to replace Connman but I have not spent much time to figure this out yet and Bullseye is around the corner.
                            So on this Xecure’s point I would welcome Network Manager as an official alternative to Connman. From my pre-‘Grup Yorum’ observation it seemed more mature, although sometimes slow to connect when new network card detected (such as running on different laptop).

                            Another service I would think beneficial to would be Bluetooth. It is currently available in antiX and just needs to be enabled and start Blueman. However it appears to be dependent on pulseaudio to work, which takes a toll on memory. I do not know if there is a solution though…

                            Just my two cents.
                            Thank you Xecure!

                            P.S.:
                            Is there a way to run without a dbus altogether? In MX forum late last year there was a discussion of memory footprint and anticapitalista was showing Htop print of antiX with extremely low memory footprint. One of participants noticed that in that setup there was no dbus running…
                            Just a digression…

                            • This reply was modified 1 year, 9 months ago by olsztyn.
                            • This reply was modified 1 year, 9 months ago by olsztyn.

                            Live antiX Boot Options (Previously posted by Xecure):
                            https://antixlinuxfan.miraheze.org/wiki/Table_of_antiX_Boot_Parameters

                            #64761
                            Member
                            olsztyn

                              @ Kjellinux:
                              First I want to say this is a very interesting project to make antiX run well on this hardware, which as I understand is Acer Aspire 3100 with 512M ram…
                              The lowest specs machine I was using antiX was Thinkpad T23, made around year 2000 by IBM, although with slightly more memory – 768M.
                              My machine was much inferior to yours, but performed relatively nicely with antiX.
                              Your machine has significant better specs:
                              – CPU is AMD Sempron 3200, which benchmarks PassMark = 245. Mine was Pentium M, benchmarked PasssMark 145. Yours is about 70% faster.
                              – Your memory is DDR2. Mine was PC133. Your memory is much faster than mine.
                              – Your USB ports are USB 2, while mine was USB 1.1. Huge difference. USB 1.1 was so slow it took forever. I actually booted from CD and passed booting to Frugal install on hard disk. I commonly use USB 2 for antiX Live and I see no problem booting and operating, although nowadays my typical machines are later models, the lowest spec is T60, 32 bit, which runs fine from USB 2 stick.

                              I am curious of your testing with such machine although I expect you should be successful with not much trouble.
                              If you decide to go for Live implementation, not actual installing antiX to hard disk then I would recommend the process Christophe outlined several threads back. If you have a hard disk and decide to use Frugal instance of antiX then it is a great solution and should be fast enough.
                              Better still, if you decide to use hard disk for Live installation vs. Frugal then Christophe outlined such process in a different thread recently, namely install Live instance of antiX directly on hard disk using Live-USB-Maker CLI version, to include hd as target. Installation is from terminal specifying parameter –force=usb.
                              If you are weighing whether to use antiX Full or antiX Base for such experiment I would suggest antiX Base, considering your limited memory.
                              My measurement of memory used after fresh boot with the same Boot parameter (disable=F) on the same machine:
                              Thinkpad X61:
                              – With antiX Full – about 227M
                              – With antiX Base after re-creating the same relevant composition of components as Full – 142M. By the same relevant I mean including Pulseaudio, Bluetooth, etc.

                              Thinkpad T410:
                              – With antiX Full – about 286M
                              – With antiX base built-up as above described – about 192M.

                              Of course ones you start we browsers, that memory use will shoot up…
                              Just my experience. You got lots of good advice from helpful forum members in preceding posts…

                              Live antiX Boot Options (Previously posted by Xecure):
                              https://antixlinuxfan.miraheze.org/wiki/Table_of_antiX_Boot_Parameters

                              #64522
                              Member
                              oops

                                There will be a connman update (buster only ie antiX-19 series) coming soon that basically reverts to using the ‘old’ way ie solution 1.
                                We’re testing before uploading to the repos to make sure that whatever fix a user may have applied (or not), this fix will not break anything.

                                Those using testing/sid repos should use fix 2 as this is the ‘new’ way and will be default connman on antiX-21.

                                Apologies for any inconvenience caused.

                                BTW – A heads up to you all, there will be security upgrades to our kernels available as soon as possible. (building them as I type).

                                Last time, almost same network issue with network-manager test repository (into sysVinit) for MX19 😉 … the network, is like the kernel, the keybord&mouse&LCD, the terminal and the web browser, very very important.

                                FI: I have some errors with the kernel 5.10.52-antix.1-amd64-smp into my PC (no problem for my eepc 32 bit 5.10.52-antix 32b pae )

                                
                                $ cat /proc/cmdline 
                                BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-5.10.52-antix.1-amd64-smp root=UUID= XXXXXXX
                                
                                dmesg
                                ...
                                [ 4841.160994] ------------[ cut here ]------------
                                [ 4841.161003] WARNING: CPU: 0 PID: 3391 at kernel/rcu/tree_plugin.h:297 rcu_note_context_switch+0x4b/0x520
                                [ 4841.161003] Modules linked in: bnep(E) bluetooth(E) ecdh_generic(E) ecc(E) rfkill(E) cpufreq_userspace(E) cpufreq_powersave(E) cpufreq_conservative(E) vboxnetadp(OE) vboxnetflt(OE) vboxdrv(OE) uinput(E) nfsd(E) auth_rpcgss(E) nfs_acl(E) nfs(E) lockd(E) grace(E) nfs_ssc(E) fscache(E) sunrpc(E) v4l2loopback(OE) videodev(E) mc(E) lp(E) intel_rapl_msr(E) snd_hda_codec_realtek(E) snd_hda_codec_hdmi(E) snd_hda_codec_generic(E) ledtrig_audio(E) snd_hda_intel(E) intel_rapl_common(E) snd_intel_dspcfg(E) snd_hda_codec(E) x86_pkg_temp_thermal(E) intel_powerclamp(E) snd_hda_core(E) snd_hwdep(E) coretemp(E) snd_pcm(E) snd_timer(E) kvm_intel(E) snd(E) kvm(E) soundcore(E) irqbypass(E) crct10dif_pclmul(E) crc32_pclmul(E) ghash_clmulni_intel(E) aesni_intel(E) ppdev(E) mei_wdt(E) mei_hdcp(E) crypto_simd(E) iTCO_wdt(E) intel_pmc_bxt(E) mei_me(E) iTCO_vendor_support(E) mei(E) cryptd(E) parport_pc(E) parport(E) intel_smartconnect(E) glue_helper(E) at24(E) evdev(E) regmap_i2c(E) tiny_power_button(E) vmd(E)
                                [ 4841.161042]  hid_generic(E) radeon(E) i2c_algo_bit(E) ttm(E) drm_kms_helper(E) syscopyarea(E) sysfillrect(E) sysimgblt(E) fb_sys_fops(E) cec(E) rc_core(E) i2c_i801(E) r8169(E) xhci_pci(E) i2c_smbus(E) crc32c_intel(E) lpc_ich(E) realtek(E) drm(E) xhci_pci_renesas(E) fan(E) thermal(E) wmi(E) video(E) button(E)
                                [ 4841.161065] CPU: 0 PID: 3391 Comm: alsa-sink-ALC88 Tainted: G           OE     5.10.52-antix.1-amd64-smp #1
                                [ 4841.161066] Hardware name: MSI MS-7808/B75MA-E33 (MS-7808), BIOS V1.7 09/30/2013
                                [ 4841.161068] RIP: 0010:rcu_note_context_switch+0x4b/0x520
                                [ 4841.161070] Code: 00 48 83 ec 10 65 48 03 1d fa 45 f1 7e 66 66 66 66 90 45 84 ed 75 15 65 48 8b 04 25 00 6d 01 00 8b 90 f0 02 00 00 85 d2 7e 02 <0f> 0b 65 48 8b 04 25 00 6d 01 00 8b 80 f0 02 00 00 85 c0 7e 0f 41
                                [ 4841.161071] RSP: 0000:ffffc9000158fc98 EFLAGS: 00010002
                                [ 4841.161073] RAX: ffff88810e628000 RBX: ffff888197c29880 RCX: ffffffff82607c78
                                [ 4841.161074] RDX: 0000000000000001 RSI: ffffffff81c1a561 RDI: 0000000000000000
                                [ 4841.161075] RBP: ffffc9000158fd28 R08: ffffffff82607c78 R09: 0000000000010a10
                                [ 4841.161075] R10: 0000000000000004 R11: 0000000000000001 R12: ffff88810e628000
                                [ 4841.161076] R13: 0000000000000000 R14: 00000000000000f0 R15: ffffc9000158fd98
                                [ 4841.161077] FS:  00007f58e1a25700(0000) GS:ffff888197c00000(0000) knlGS:0000000000000000
                                [ 4841.161078] CS:  0010 DS: 0000 ES: 0000 CR0: 0000000080050033
                                [ 4841.161079] CR2: 00007f58e73b39d0 CR3: 000000010d498005 CR4: 00000000000626f0
                                [ 4841.161080] Call Trace:
                                [ 4841.161086]  __schedule+0x78/0x660
                                [ 4841.161088]  schedule+0x51/0xc0
                                [ 4841.161091]  io_schedule+0x12/0x40
                                [ 4841.161093]  __lock_page_or_retry+0x1c9/0x4b0
                                [ 4841.161095]  ? __page_cache_alloc+0x80/0x80
                                [ 4841.161098]  do_swap_page+0x566/0x960
                                [ 4841.161099]  handle_mm_fault+0xd02/0x16f0
                                [ 4841.161102]  exc_page_fault+0x29c/0x530
                                [ 4841.161104]  ? asm_exc_page_fault+0x8/0x30
                                [ 4841.161105]  asm_exc_page_fault+0x1e/0x30
                                [ 4841.161107] RIP: 0033:0x7f58e73443a0
                                [ 4841.161109] Code: 68 34 01 00 00 e9 a0 ec ff ff ff 25 3a f6 06 00 68 35 01 00 00 e9 90 ec ff ff ff 25 32 f6 06 00 68 36 01 00 00 e9 80 ec ff ff <ff> 25 2a f6 06 00 68 37 01 00 00 e9 70 ec ff ff ff 25 22 f6 06 00
                                [ 4841.161110] RSP: 002b:00007f58e1a21ed8 EFLAGS: 00010246
                                [ 4841.161111] RAX: 0000000000000000 RBX: 000100000000fcee RCX: 0000000000000921
                                [ 4841.161112] RDX: 0000000000000921 RSI: 000100000000fcee RDI: 00007f58e73b75c0
                                [ 4841.161113] RBP: 00007f58d8060040 R08: 0000564599451698 R09: 0000000000000000
                                [ 4841.161113] R10: 0000000000000010 R11: 0000000000000043 R12: 0000000000000921
                                [ 4841.161114] R13: 00007f58e8062890 R14: 00007f58e1a22240 R15: 00007f58e1a22420
                                [ 4841.161116] ---[ end trace 23b1f2342c48ed11 ]---
                                • This reply was modified 1 year, 9 months ago by oops.
                                #64461
                                Forum Admin
                                rokytnji

                                  Was posting with my chromebook earlier. Here is the IBM Laptop.

                                  harry@biker:~
                                  $ sudo inxi -v8 -z
                                  [sudo] password for harry: 
                                  System:    Kernel: 4.9.193-antix.1-amd64-smp x86_64 bits: 64 compiler: gcc v: 8.3.0 
                                             parameters: BOOT_IMAGE=/boot/vmlinuz-4.9.193-antix.1-amd64-smp root=UUID=abdba333-2fb3-456f-842f-bd0539f4b1ca ro 
                                             quiet 
                                             Desktop: IceWM 2.6.0 dm: SLiM 1.3.6 Distro: antiX-19_x64-full Marielle Franco 16 October 2019 
                                             base: Debian GNU/Linux 10 (buster) 
                                  Machine:   Type: Laptop System: LENOVO product: 2347DS2 v: ThinkPad T430 serial: <filter> Chassis: type: 10 serial: <filter> 
                                             Mobo: LENOVO model: 2347DS2 serial: <filter> UEFI-[Legacy]: LENOVO v: G1ET41WW (1.16 ) date: 05/25/2012 
                                  Battery:   ID-1: BAT0 charge: 11.8 Wh (100.0%) condition: 11.8/56.2 Wh (20.9%) volts: 12.2 min: 10.8 model: SANYO 45N1001 
                                             type: Li-ion serial: <filter> status: Full 
                                  Memory:    RAM: total: 15.47 GiB used: 1.01 GiB (6.5%) 
                                             Array-1: capacity: 16 GiB slots: 2 EC: None max-module-size: 8 GiB note: est. 
                                             Device-1: ChannelA-DIMM0 size: 8 GiB speed: 1600 MT/s type: DDR3 detail: synchronous bus-width: 64 bits 
                                             total: 64 bits manufacturer: Crucial part-no: CT102464BF160B.C16 serial: <filter> 
                                             Device-2: ChannelB-DIMM0 size: 8 GiB speed: 1600 MT/s type: DDR3 detail: synchronous bus-width: 64 bits 
                                             total: 64 bits manufacturer: Crucial part-no: CT102464BF160B.C16 serial: <filter> 
                                  PCI Slots: Slot: 1 type: x1 PCI Express ExpressCard Slot status: Available length: Other 
                                             Slot: N/A type: Media Card Slot status: Available length: Other 
                                  CPU:       Info: Dual Core model: Intel Core i5-3320M socket: rPGA988B (U3E1) note: check bits: 64 type: MT MCP 
                                             arch: Ivy Bridge family: 6 model-id: 3A (58) stepping: 9 microcode: 21 cache: L1: 64 KiB L2: 3 MiB L3: 3 MiB 
                                             bogomips: 20752 
                                             Speed: 2192 MHz min/max: 1200/3300 MHz base/boost: 2600/2600 volts: 0.9 V ext-clock: 100 MHz Core speeds (MHz): 
                                             1: 1837 2: 1632 3: 1822 4: 2007 
                                             Flags: acpi aes aperfmperf apic arat arch_perfmon avx bts clflush cmov constant_tsc cx16 cx8 de ds_cpl dtes64 
                                             dtherm dts epb ept erms est f16c flexpriority flush_l1d fpu fsgsbase fxsr ht ibpb ibrs ida kaiser lahf_lm lm mca 
                                             mce md_clear mmx monitor msr mtrr nonstop_tsc nopl nx pae pat pbe pcid pclmulqdq pdcm pebs pge pln pni popcnt pse 
                                             pse36 pts rdrand rdtscp rep_good sep smep smx ss ssbd sse sse2 sse4_1 sse4_2 ssse3 stibp syscall tm tm2 tpr_shadow 
                                             tsc tsc_deadline_timer vme vmx vnmi vpid x2apic xsave xsaveopt xtopology xtpr 
                                             Vulnerabilities: Type: l1tf mitigation: PTE Inversion; VMX: conditional cache flushes, SMT vulnerable 
                                             Type: mds mitigation: Clear CPU buffers; SMT vulnerable 
                                             Type: meltdown mitigation: PTI 
                                             Type: spec_store_bypass mitigation: Speculative Store Bypass disabled via prctl and seccomp 
                                             Type: spectre_v1 mitigation: usercopy/swapgs barriers and __user pointer sanitization 
                                             Type: spectre_v2 mitigation: Full generic retpoline, IBPB: conditional, IBRS_FW, STIBP: conditional, RSB filling 
                                  Graphics:  Device-1: Intel 3rd Gen Core processor Graphics vendor: Lenovo driver: i915 v: kernel bus-ID: 00:02.0 
                                             chip-ID: 8086:0166 class-ID: 0300 
                                             Device-2: Acer type: USB driver: uvcvideo bus-ID: 1-1.6:3 chip-ID: 5986:02d5 class-ID: 0e02 
                                             Display: server: X.Org 1.20.4 driver: loaded: modesetting unloaded: fbdev,vesa display-ID: :0.0 screens: 1 
                                             Screen-1: 0 s-res: 1600x900 s-dpi: 96 s-size: 423x238mm (16.7x9.4") s-diag: 485mm (19.1") 
                                             Monitor-1: LVDS-1 res: 1600x900 hz: 60 dpi: 132 size: 309x174mm (12.2x6.9") diag: 355mm (14") 
                                             OpenGL: renderer: Mesa DRI Intel Ivybridge Mobile v: 4.2 Mesa 18.3.6 compat-v: 3.0 direct render: Yes 
                                  Audio:     Device-1: Intel 7 Series/C216 Family High Definition Audio vendor: Lenovo driver: snd_hda_intel v: kernel 
                                             bus-ID: 00:1b.0 chip-ID: 8086:1e20 class-ID: 0403 
                                             Sound Server-1: ALSA v: k4.9.193-antix.1-amd64-smp running: yes 
                                             Sound Server-2: PulseAudio v: 12.2 running: no 
                                  Network:   Device-1: Intel 82579LM Gigabit Network vendor: Lenovo driver: e1000e v: 3.2.6-k port: 5080 bus-ID: 00:19.0 
                                             chip-ID: 8086:1502 class-ID: 0200 
                                             IF: eth0 state: down mac: <filter> 
                                             Device-2: Intel Centrino Advanced-N 6205 [Taylor Peak] driver: iwlwifi v: kernel modules: wl port: efa0 
                                             bus-ID: 03:00.0 chip-ID: 8086:0085 class-ID: 0280 
                                             IF: wlan0 state: up mac: <filter> 
                                             IP v4: <filter> scope: global broadcast: <filter> 
                                             WAN IP: <filter> 
                                  Bluetooth: Message: No bluetooth data found. 
                                  Logical:   Message: No logical block device data found. 
                                  RAID:      Message: No RAID data found. 
                                  Drives:    Local Storage: total: 465.76 GiB used: 52.5 GiB (11.3%) 
                                             ID-1: /dev/sda maj-min: 8:0 vendor: Seagate model: ST500LT012-1DG142 family: Laptop HDD size: 465.76 GiB 
                                             block-size: physical: 4096 B logical: 512 B sata: 3.0 speed: 6.0 Gb/s type: HDD rpm: 5400 serial: <filter> 
                                             rev: YAM1 temp: 45 C scheme: MBR 
                                             SMART: yes state: enabled health: PASSED on: 41d 14h cycles: 266 Pre-Fail: attribute: Spin_Retry_Count value: 100 
                                             worst: 100 threshold: 97 
                                             Optical-1: /dev/sr0 vendor: Optiarc model: DVD RW AD-7740H rev: 1.S1 dev-links: cdrom,cdrw,dvd,dvdrw 
                                             Features: speed: 24 multisession: yes audio: yes dvd: yes rw: cd-r,cd-rw,dvd-r,dvd-ram state: running 
                                  Partition: ID-1: / raw-size: 19.53 GiB size: 19.1 GiB (97.79%) used: 5.33 GiB (27.9%) fs: ext4 block-size: 4096 B 
                                             dev: /dev/sda3 maj-min: 8:3 label: rootantiX19 uuid: abdba333-2fb3-456f-842f-bd0539f4b1ca 
                                             ID-2: /home raw-size: 441.41 GiB size: 433.48 GiB (98.20%) used: 47.17 GiB (10.9%) fs: ext4 block-size: 4096 B 
                                             dev: /dev/sda2 maj-min: 8:2 label: homeantiX uuid: d11c1f27-c656-4052-9d2d-d09aa9246d53 
                                  Swap:      Kernel: swappiness: 10 (default 60) cache-pressure: 50 (default 100) 
                                             ID-1: swap-1 type: partition size: 4.82 GiB used: 0 KiB (0.0%) priority: -1 dev: /dev/sda1 maj-min: 8:1 label: N/A 
                                             uuid: f18b2739-9fc4-43c1-a3a5-0728d7114e8d 
                                  Unmounted: Message: No unmounted partitions found. 
                                  USB:       Hub-1: 1-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 3 rev: 2.0 speed: 480 Mb/s chip-ID: 1d6b:0002 class-ID: 0900 
                                             Hub-2: 1-1:2 info: Intel Integrated Rate Matching Hub ports: 6 rev: 2.0 speed: 480 Mb/s chip-ID: 8087:0024 
                                             class-ID: 0900 
                                             Device-1: 1-1.6:3 info: Acer type: Video driver: uvcvideo interfaces: 2 rev: 2.0 speed: 480 Mb/s power: 200mA 
                                             chip-ID: 5986:02d5 class-ID: 0e02 
                                             Hub-3: 2-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 3 rev: 2.0 speed: 480 Mb/s chip-ID: 1d6b:0002 class-ID: 0900 
                                             Hub-4: 2-1:2 info: Intel Integrated Rate Matching Hub ports: 8 rev: 2.0 speed: 480 Mb/s chip-ID: 8087:0024 
                                             class-ID: 0900 
                                             Hub-5: 3-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 4 rev: 2.0 speed: 480 Mb/s chip-ID: 1d6b:0002 class-ID: 0900 
                                             Hub-6: 4-0:1 info: Full speed (or root) Hub ports: 4 rev: 3.0 speed: 5 Gb/s chip-ID: 1d6b:0003 class-ID: 0900 
                                  Sensors:   System Temperatures: cpu: 47.0 C mobo: N/A 
                                             Fan Speeds (RPM): cpu: 3631 
                                  Repos:     Packages: apt: 1781 lib: 871 
                                             Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/antix.list 
                                             1: deb http://mxlinux.mirrors.tds.net/mxlinux/antix/buster/ buster main nonfree nosystemd
                                             Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/buster-backports.list 
                                             1: deb http://deb.debian.org/debian/ buster-backports main contrib non-free
                                             Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/debian-stable-updates.list 
                                             1: deb http://mirror.us.oneandone.net/debian/ buster-updates main contrib non-free
                                             Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/debian.list 
                                             1: deb http://mirror.us.oneandone.net/debian/ buster main contrib non-free
                                             2: deb http://security.debian.org/ buster/updates main contrib non-free
                                             Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/google-chrome.list 
                                             1: deb [arch=amd64] http://dl.google.com/linux/chrome/deb/ stable main
                                             No active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/insync.list 
                                             No active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/jitsi-stable.list 
                                             No active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/onion.list 
                                             Active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/teams.list 
                                             1: deb [arch=amd64] https://packages.microsoft.com/repos/ms-teams/ stable main
                                             No active apt repos in: /etc/apt/sources.list.d/various.list 
                                  Processes: CPU top: 5 of 174 
                                             1: cpu: 6.4% command: firefox-esr pid: 3322 mem: 385.7 MiB (2.4%) 
                                             2: cpu: 3.8% command: firefox-esr pid: 3410 mem: 250.2 MiB (1.5%) 
                                             3: cpu: 2.2% command: xorg pid: 2624 mem: 63.2 MiB (0.3%) 
                                             4: cpu: 0.6% command: sudo pid: 11834 mem: 3.68 MiB (0.0%) 
                                             5: cpu: 0.4% command: conky pid: 3155 mem: 10.5 MiB (0.0%) 
                                             Memory top: 5 of 174 
                                             1: mem: 385.7 MiB (2.4%) command: firefox-esr pid: 3322 cpu: 6.4% 
                                             2: mem: 250.2 MiB (1.5%) command: firefox-esr pid: 3410 cpu: 3.8% 
                                             3: mem: 151.1 MiB (0.9%) command: firefox-esr pid: 3504 cpu: 0.3% 
                                             4: mem: 139.4 MiB (0.8%) command: firefox-esr pid: 3531 cpu: 0.1% 
                                             5: mem: 66.1 MiB (0.4%) command: firefox-esr pid: 10648 cpu: 0.0% 
                                  Info:      Processes: 174 Uptime: 53m wakeups: 3 Init: SysVinit v: 2.93 runlevel: 5 default: 5 tool: service Compilers: 
                                             gcc: 8.3.0 alt: 8 Shell: Bash (sudo) v: 5.0.3 running-in: roxterm inxi: 3.3.06 
                                  harry@biker:~
                                  $ 
                                  
                                  harry@biker:~
                                  $ sudo apt-get -f install
                                  Reading package lists... Done
                                  Building dependency tree       
                                  Reading state information... Done
                                  0 upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 0 not upgraded.
                                  

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                                  Not all who Wander are Lost.
                                  I'm not outa place. I'm from outer space.

                                  Linux Registered User # 475019
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