Install on Zotac Zbox CI327?
by wwp
Hello there,
(after a looong time not using Fedora, just back to it!)
I've tried installing Fedora on a Zotac Zbox CI327 (Intel Celeron
N3450 inside) but this happens to fail. I've tried F25 but it has
not the right kernel to make it (I've read about 4.10 minimum), then
tried F26-Alpha-1.7 Live and Rawhide-20170518 Live but none could
reach the graphical login. They both boot, some steps take a lot of
time and I end up in a state I don't understand but which is not
friendly ;-).
Here's a link to a rdsosreport.txt file generated using Rawhide, I must
admit that I don't know what to do now..
https://paste.fedoraproject.org/paste/iRx8d~7Luk2TC3bsaDuuT15M1UNdIGYhyRL...
BTW, I could install and run a Ubuntu 17.10 daily
(artful-desktop-amd64-20170519.iso) - wow it starts up pretty quickly -
and that gave me hope!
Any hint or experience w/ such hardware?
Regards,
--
wwp
5 years, 4 months
How to turn on networking from rescue boot
by vendor@billoblog.com
So... I did a "sudo dnf upgrade" and things seemed to do well.
However, when I rebooted, it hangs on bootup with the statment "Holding
until bootup processes complete" or something like that -- I'm doing
this from memory. I tried with a couple of older kernels, but they also
hung.
I assume that this is some transient thing associated with the upgrade.
Over the years, I've had glitches appear on an upgrade and disappear on
the next upgrade. Accordingly, I'd like to boot into rescue mode and
see if I can upgrade again.
However, I've forgotten how to turn on wifi networking from rescue mode.
Can anybody point me to a tutorial?
Thanks,
billo
5 years, 5 months
Makemkv Incompatible with mmdtsdec
by Stephen Morris
Hi,
With the sudo dnf upgrade I have just done I received the following
messages, which I'm not sure what to do about.
Problem: package makemkv-1.12.2-2.fc27.x86_64 obsoletes mmdtsdec <
1.12.2-2.fc27 provided by mmdtsdec-1.12.0-1.fc27.i686
- cannot install the best update candidate for package
mmdtsdec-1.12.0-1.fc27.i686
- cannot install the best update candidate for package
makemkv-1.12.0-1.fc27.x86_64
regards,
Steve
5 years, 9 months
[SOLVED] Re: Very slow boot in F27 after recent update
by Gianluca Cecchi
On Fri, May 4, 2018 at 9:32 AM, Gianluca Cecchi <gianluca.cecchi(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
> I'm not subscribed to receive all the e-mails, so I answer to my own.
> Hope not to scramble the thread order...
>
> Thanks for answering.
> Here the output requested.
> Possibly before the update, chronyd and gssproxy (and I see also libvirtd)
> went into a sort of parallel background not preventing display manager
> login completion?
> In fact in about 10-13 seconds (I have an SSD disk on the laptop) I had
> the gdm login page....
>
> [g.cecchi@ope46 ~]$ sudo systemd-analyze time
> Startup finished in 1.379s (kernel) + 1.965s (initrd) + 1min 49.668s
> (userspace) = 1min 53.012s
> [g.cecchi@ope46 ~]$
>
> [g.cecchi@ope46 ~]$ sudo systemd-analyze blame
> 1min 30.134s gssproxy.service
> 1min 15.937s chronyd.service
> 30.043s NetworkManager-wait-online.service
> 17.876s libvirtd.service
> 1.102s dracut-initqueue.service
> 1.015s lvm2-monitor.service
>
>
It seems latest updates have solved my problems, both if network cable is
connected and without it.
My network card on laptop is this one from "lspci -v":
05:00.0 Ethernet controller: Qualcomm Atheros AR8151 v2.0 Gigabit Ethernet
(rev c0)
Subsystem: ASUSTeK Computer Inc. Device 1851
Flags: bus master, fast devsel, latency 0, IRQ 35
Memory at dc800000 (64-bit, non-prefetchable) [size=256K]
I/O ports at 9000 [size=128]
Capabilities: [40] Power Management version 3
Capabilities: [48] MSI: Enable+ Count=1/1 Maskable- 64bit+
Capabilities: [58] Express Endpoint, MSI 00
Capabilities: [6c] Vital Product Data
Capabilities: [100] Advanced Error Reporting
Capabilities: [180] Device Serial Number ff-bd-21-9b-14-da-e9-ff
Kernel driver in use: atl1c
Kernel modules: atl1c
It seems combination of latest kernel (4.16.6-202.fc27.x86_64) and latest
packages I have again my old behavior.
With network cable connected to an automatic dhcp connection:
[g.cecchi@ope46 ~]$ sudo systemd-analyze time
Startup finished in 1.386s (kernel) + 1.328s (initrd) + 8.891s (userspace)
= 11.606s
[g.cecchi@ope46 ~]$
[g.cecchi@ope46 ~]$ sudo systemd-analyze blame
4.568s ntpdate.service
2.145s NetworkManager-wait-online.service
1.168s cups.service
1.158s plymouth-quit-wait.service
1.019s abrtd.service
819ms lvm2-monitor.service
716ms systemd-udev-settle.service
712ms libvirtd.service
. . .
Without network cable connected (and without wirelsss autoconnect)
[g.cecchi@ope46 ~]$ sudo systemd-analyze time
Startup finished in 1.389s (kernel) + 2.002s (initrd) + 8.702s (userspace)
= 12.094s
[g.cecchi@ope46 ~]$
and
[g.cecchi@ope46 ~]$ sudo systemd-analyze blame
6.337s NetworkManager-wait-online.service
1.189s cups.service
1.181s dracut-initqueue.service
1.021s abrtd.service
971ms lvm2-monitor.service
886ms plymouth-quit-wait.service
865ms systemd-udev-settle.service
682ms firewalld.service
641ms libvirtd.service
. . .
dnf summary for latest updates has been:
Installed:
kernel.x86_64 4.16.6-202.fc27 kernel-core.x86_64
4.16.6-202.fc27
kernel-devel.x86_64 4.16.6-202.fc27 kernel-modules.x86_64
4.16.6-202.fc27
kernel-modules-extra.x86_64 4.16.6-202.fc27
python2-ntlm-auth.noarch 1.1.0-1.fc27
Upgraded:
ansible.noarch 2.5.2-1.fc27
cinnamon-themes.noarch 1:1.6.2-1.fc27
copy-jdk-configs.noarch 3.3-9.fc27
httpd.x86_64 2.4.33-5.fc27
httpd-filesystem.noarch 2.4.33-5.fc27
httpd-tools.x86_64 2.4.33-5.fc27
hwdata.noarch 0.312-1.fc27
kdiagram.x86_64 2.6.1-2.fc27
kernel-headers.x86_64 4.16.6-202.fc27
libpsl.x86_64 0.18.0-2.fc27
mate-panel.x86_64 1.20.1-5.fc27
mate-panel-libs.x86_64 1.20.1-5.fc27
mint-themes.noarch 1:1.6.2-1.fc27
mint-themes-gtk3.noarch 1:1.6.2-1.fc27
mint-x-icons.noarch 1.4.7-1.fc27
mint-y-icons.noarch 1.1.4-1.fc27
mint-y-theme.noarch 1:1.6.2-1.fc27
mod_ssl.x86_64 1:2.4.33-5.fc27
opencv.x86_64 3.2.0-15.fc27
opencv-contrib.x86_64 3.2.0-15.fc27
opencv-core.x86_64 3.2.0-15.fc27
powerdevil.x86_64 5.12.4-2.fc27
publicsuffix-list-dafsa.noarch 20180419-1.fc27
python2-opencv.x86_64 3.2.0-15.fc27
python2-requests_ntlm.noarch 1.1.0-1.fc27
python2-winrm.noarch 0.3.0-1.fc27
selinux-policy.noarch 3.13.1-283.34.fc27
selinux-policy-devel.noarch 3.13.1-283.34.fc27
selinux-policy-targeted.noarch 3.13.1-283.34.fc27
spirv-tools-libs.i686 2018.3.0-0.1.20180407.git26a698c.fc27
spirv-tools-libs.x86_64 2018.3.0-0.1.20180407.git26a698c.fc27
vim-common.x86_64 2:8.0.1788-1.fc27
vim-enhanced.x86_64 2:8.0.1788-1.fc27
vim-filesystem.noarch 2:8.0.1788-1.fc27
vim-minimal.x86_64 2:8.0.1788-1.fc27
vulkan.i686 1.1.73.0-1.fc27
vulkan.x86_64 1.1.73.0-1.fc27
vulkan-filesystem.noarch 1.1.73.0-1.fc27
Cheers,
Gianluca
5 years, 9 months
Could LightDM be bad?? (LONG)
by Beartooth
I keep three PCs on my desk, running Fedora behind a KVM switch: #1 is
my present biggest fastest, #2 its predecessor, and #3 that one's
predecessor; I try try keep them as similar as is feasible.
They've all been having troubles for months, which have only gotten worse.
Under F27, they kept filling up with some sort of cruft, to the point
of refusing dnf upgrade; but when I found any of the cruft, it was in
places where I dared not lay about me with a cyber-battleaxe. I jumped
to F28 the day of release.
At this point, none of the three is usable at all without some dodge or
other.
#2 and #3 have each been wiped, twice, with different releases of DBAN,
followed each time with a netinstall of F28 with Mate, and then dnf
upgrade daily. All their boot messages show green OK. Those end with
"Started Light Display Manager."
Usually they proceed to a login box in front of the F28 display of blue
light-conducting fibers. That accepts my password, churns a little way,
and ends with a monitor full of blue horizontal lines, plus a few white
lines in the middle and at the bottom; there is nothing legible.
By doing Alt-Ctrl-F2, I get a display which lets me log in as root; I
keep doing dnf upgrades, and trying startx, every day. I also reboot
whenever there's a kernel change.
Startx always flashes a couple times, then fails with a few lines of
text, beginning with an attempt to adopt my monitor size (called "1920
1080" -- not 1920x1080),losing contact, and ending by saying that the
Xserver "terminated successfully."
I'd like to try replacing LDM with something else; how do I do that??
(I like Mate well, and would prefer not to swap it out,too)
Finally, #1 has two F28 kernels -- which do no better than on #2 nor #3
-- and a rescue kernel from F26. Sic. Twenty-six, not 27 nor 28. But
that rescue kernel does support almost my whole GUI (I miss Pan badly.),
and I don't have to descend to the console.
#1 got F28 by upgrading with dnf from F27, and still has a lot of stuff
on it that I'd rather copy to #2 and #3 directly than by way of solid
state storage, if I dare risk malware. (I don't know where else all the
cruft could have come from, apart from malware, but I hope someone here
does.)
--
Beartooth Staffwright, Not Quite Clueless Power User
Remember I know little (precious little!) of where up is.
5 years, 10 months
F28 suspend
by Berend De Schouwer
I've got a laptop that has started misbehaving on suspend.
About 1 in 10 suspends the laptop fails to fully suspend. It switches
mostly off (screen off, etc.) but some of the motherboard keeps
running. I know some of the motherboard keeps running because:
- the wifi light remains on
- the laptop will get hot because the fans don't start
The laptop does not respond to the power button to wake up. It's
necessary to force halt & reboot the laptop by holding the power button
down for a few seconds.
9 out of 10 times suspend works fine.
This appears to be a BIOS or kernel issue, since the last entries in
the logs are:
May 29 09:02:17 sieve-deschouwer-co-za systemd[1]: Reached target
Sleep.
May 29 09:02:17 sieve-deschouwer-co-za systemd[1]: Starting Suspend...
May 29 09:02:17 sieve-deschouwer-co-za systemd-sleep[21435]: Suspending
system...
May 29 09:02:17 sieve-deschouwer-co-za kernel: PM: suspend entry (deep)
-- Reboot --
On a successful suspend I will additionally get:
May 29 08:21:32 sieve-deschouwer-co-za kernel: PM: Syncing filesystems
... done.
This started at the same time as I upgraded to F28. The laptop has
previously worked fine since F24 or F25, or maybe earlier.
It's happened with a few different F28 kernel patchlevels.
product: HP ProBook 450 G2 (L8A81ES#ACQ)
model name : Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-5500U CPU @ 2.40GHz
00:00.0 Host bridge: Intel Corporation Broadwell-U Host Bridge -OPI
(rev 09)
Linux sieve-deschouwer-co-za 4.16.11-300.fc28.x86_64 #1 SMP Tue May 22
18:29:09 UTC 2018 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
Can anyone help me debug before I enter a bugzilla?
Berend
5 years, 10 months
GNOME shell / login crash
by andrea
Hi
I am experiencing a lot of crashes just after logging in into GNOME.
I am using Fedora 28 fully updated and upgraded from 27.
I have already tried to remove all the extensions from .local/share/gnome-shell/extensions
But it still happens.
It does not happens always, but as soon as it happens I have to reboot.
Any ideas?
5 years, 10 months
udisks2 configuration
by François Patte
Bonjour,
I want to be able to open a crypted device as a non-root user and I
modified the file
/usr/share/polkit-1/actions/org.freedesktop.UDisks2.policy
in order to do that.
That works, but it is not a good thing to modify a file from the distrib
to create a local configuration.
There is an empty directory /etc/udisks2/modules.conf.d where I tried to
guess what I could put inside for my purpose, but everything failed.
I did not find a clear doc about the udisks2 configuration.
Does anyone knows how to proceed?
Thank you.
--
François Patte
UFR de mathématiques et informatique
Laboratoire CNRS MAP5, UMR 8145
Université Paris Descartes
45, rue des Saints Pères
F-75270 Paris Cedex 06
Tél. +33 (0)6 7892 5822
http://www.math-info.univ-paris5.fr/~patte
5 years, 10 months
Latest update no more wifi
by Gianluca Cecchi
It seems today update I lost wifi support, that i used yesterday without
problems
today kernel: 4.16.10-300.fc28.x86_64
yesterday kernel: kernel-4.16.8-300.fc28.x86_64
other possible related packages:
NetworkManager-openvpn.x86_64 1:1.8.4-1.fc28
NetworkManager-openvpn-gnome.x86_64 1:1.8.4-1.fc28
May 24 09:06:07 ope46 NetworkManager[735]: <info> [1527145567.4812]
wifi-nl80211: (wlp3s0): using nl80211 for WiFi device control
May 24 09:06:07 ope46 NetworkManager[735]: <info> [1527145567.4816] device
(wlp3s0): driver supports Access Point (AP) mode
May 24 09:06:07 ope46 NetworkManager[735]: <info> [1527145567.4832]
manager: (wlp3s0): new 802.11 WiFi device
(/org/freedesktop/NetworkManager/Devices/3)
May 24 09:06:07 ope46 NetworkManager[735]: <info> [1527145567.4856] device
(wlp3s0): state change: unmanaged -> unavailable (reason 'managed',
sys-iface-state: 'external')
then many of this type:
May 24 09:43:22 ope46 NetworkManager[735]: <info> [1527147802.1365] device
(wlp3s0): set-hw-addr: s
et MAC address to AA:8F:A1:D9:3B:44 (scanning)
May 24 09:43:22 ope46 kernel: IPv6: ADDRCONF(NETDEV_UP): wlp3s0: link is
not ready
May 24 09:43:22 ope46 NetworkManager[735]: <info> [1527147802.1659] device
(wlp3s0): supplicant interface state: inactive -> disabled
May 24 09:43:22 ope46 NetworkManager[735]: <info> [1527147802.1662] device
(wlp3s0): supplicant interface state: disabled -> inactive
May 24 09:43:22 ope46 wpa_supplicant[663]: wlp3s0: Reject scan trigger
since one is already pending
In Gnome control center settings, in WIFI section I see
No WI-FI Adapter Found
Make sure you have a WI-FI adapter plugged and turned on
with nmcli
[root@ope46 firmware]# nmcli con up AndroidAP-notepro
Error: Connection activation failed: No suitable device found for this
connection.
[root@ope46 firmware]#
Any one else?
Thanks
Gianluca
5 years, 10 months