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I have unattended-upgrade set up on my Ubuntu systems. Occasionally I will log in remotely to one of them and I'll see a message informing me that I need to reboot the system (in order to complete an upgrade). Is there a way to determine the specific package (or set of packages) which is triggering this notice?
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Home Home Percona Monitoring and Management Percona Monitoring Plugins MySQL Software MongoDB Software PostgreSQL Software Kubernetes Operators Playback Reference Legacy documentation¶ You should upgrade to the most recent version for documentation support. The documentation for product versions that are either outdated or have reached their end-of-life is available in a PDF format. Outdated docum
This document is a summary of what you need to know to do build Debian configuration packages. It is not intended to be a replacement for the official Debian documentation, but is instead an introduction to Debian development with a particular emphasis on describing in detail only the best ways to do each part of making a package (rather than starting from the underlying, annoying primitives) and
This document provides instructions for contributing a new Haskell package to Debian. It describes initializing a Darcs repository for the package, generating the initial Debian packaging files, committing the package to the pkg-haskell Darcs repository, and building and uploading the package to Debian. Future updates are committed via Darcs and announced on the pkg-haskell mailing list.Read less
These directions provide two methods of installing Chef client on a node running Ubuntu or Debian. Nodes are hosts whose configuration that you want to manage using Chef. In general, installing chef-client on a node includes: Installing Ruby and Other Dependencies Installing Chef Configuring Chef Typically, chef-client is installed on Ubuntu and Debian systems using one of three possible methods
Linux is always a preferred operating system for people who want their server to be robust, stable, secure and private in nature. It is also customizable, which allows the developers to create an environment according to their needs. Also, while⦠Steam Deck has been the boon for Linux users as it has exposed a lot of Windows users to Linux, and they now have an idea that it is powerful enough to r
1. Introduction The intended use of such a newly created archive is to install it only on your own box, not to get them into the official Debian distribution. To follow the 'official' process, please study the Debian New Maintainers' Guide. Normal Debian packages get a proper source package, including a debian/rules file which automates the steps involved in creating the binary package. Here we ju
My way or the Highway Create your own Debian or Ubuntu packages Roll you own When you're discovering Linux, especially the system administration aspects of it, you'll sooner or later will want to create and maybe even publish your own packages. Here is a small introduction in the fine art of creating Debian packages. As it happens, this can also be used to create 'virtual' packages, packages that
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A blog about things I do: Debian, Linux, Python, whatever Some time ago, I asked what are the common solutions for services remote logging. It was suggested scribe, an application log server developed at Facebook and later released as an open source project, and we finally managed to get this ready for Debian squeeze. Scribe requires a couple of other tools to work: thrift, a framework for service
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