Hello,
How can I tell that I have the most up to date Kernel for F32, Gnome, etc.
Thanks
Andrew
On 18/10/2020 15:18, users-request(a)lists.fedoraproject.org wrote:
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Today's Topics:
1. Re: Need help with dnf excludes (Ed Greshko)
2. Re: OT: Maildir vs. mh folders? (Tim)
3. Re: lp card not found (Roger Heflin)
4. F32 Update problems? (Andrew Wood)
5. Re: OT: Maildir vs. mh folders? (Ranjan Maitra)
6. Re: F32 Update problems? (ITwrx)
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Date: Sun, 18 Oct 2020 15:17:07 +0800
From: Ed Greshko <ed.greshko(a)greshko.com>
Subject: Re: Need help with dnf excludes
To: users(a)lists.fedoraproject.org
Message-ID: <9dfe1832-7fcf-6f3d-4a0e-bda96106525d(a)greshko.com>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8; format=flowed
On 18/10/2020 14:47, ToddAndMargo via users wrote:
> MumbleĀ MumbleĀ ........
I do not know what that means.
---
The key to getting good answers is to ask good questions.
------------------------------
Date: Sun, 18 Oct 2020 21:52:52 +1030
From: Tim <ignored_mailbox(a)yahoo.com.au>
Subject: Re: OT: Maildir vs. mh folders?
To: users(a)lists.fedoraproject.org
Message-ID:
<2db079150c1488e981d273d00ad20da6f3a4e790.camel(a)yahoo.com.au>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="UTF-8"
On Sat, 2020-10-17 at 20:48 -0500, Ranjan Maitra wrote:
> There is one approach and that is set LD_PRELOAD to set the hostname
> as localhost.localdomain from this example in:
>
https://catonmat.net/simple-ld-preload-tutorial
I wouldn't mess with telling software to use a different hostname than
it expects, you might find you break some aspect of how it uses the
network.
> But if it does not matter, then I do not need to worry at all.
Doesn't matter to the mail client. It just wants unique filenames per
email, and the different hostnames help. It might help you, too, if
you ever had to debug a mail issue. You'd be able to tell where a
message came from simply by reading the filename.
But, as I said. Generally, you don't see the filenames of emails, you
use an email program that's an interface.
There's a syntax to the email filenames for maildir: There's a unique
id for each message, that's a lengthy part of the filename, it can be
construed from hostnames and datestamps. And there's suffixes added
which are flags for message statuses (e.g. that it's been read).
Horsing around with the filenames just risks doing something that
causes a failure. It's not like the rest of the filename is a
particular sane thing for humans to read, anyway. It's all just a big
long code.