It is not possible, at least not with an easy and safe way.
A fresh install of Ubuntu 12.10 64bit is the only safe way to have Ubuntu 12.10 64bit installed.
Maybe there are some techniques you could try, but it's more likely to cause problems which will result in an unstable system.
For more inf...
1. Site is working fine. 2. Make a commit and the CSS is messed up. 3. Revert the commit. 4. Site is still not working. 5. Aaaaaaaaaaaaarrrrrrrrrrggggggggggghhhhhhhhhh!!!!
1. Something is perfect. 2. Make something more perfect, causing infinite doom. 3. Revert the change. 4. Infinite doom still happens. 5. Curl up into a ball under a rock and hope you survive.
Let's say I ssh into a computer and I want to copy a file from the local host to the now active ssh location, whats the command for this? All I see from scp is the other way around
to scp to your computer from the remote ssh session though...
i think your computer needs to have an ssh server on it...
since most systems don't have that, it's easier to pull from remote from your computer directly
using the scp user@remote... method
but here's a question, why're you doing this from terminal? You could just SFTP to the remote system from within nautilus, and then copy/paste files as you normally would in the Ubuntu GUI
outside of the hypothetical, most people who are using a server and are going to allow you to SCP things are going to give you some level of access to that server
either by telling you their login creds, or giving you your own.
Ubuntu Linux 12.04.1 With LAMP stack.
The goal is to setup a web server that can send mail via the PHP mail() function, which uses localhost. The mail must then be relayed to an ISP domain smtp.isp-domain.co.za
Please note the domain names have been replaced in this question and probably don’...
We have an existing /dev/sda disk, we are adding an identical /dev/sdb
I want to place these two disks in a raid-0 array.
Can I do that without reformating /dev/sda?
@cipricus given that you said it still occurred - albeit only once - yes the kernel is still the likely cause. Mint Nadia is not relevant here since it still uses both udev & the same kernel. I'm surprised that you've jumped ship - xubuntu would be the equivalent and logical progression.
I'm running a tightvnc server on Ubuntu 11.04 with a Gnome fallback session. Things seem to work fine except that when I try launching an application that needs xfonts-100dpi. All application menus are shown as little boxes instead of characters. It's as if the fonts are missing. The strange thin...
I have a php web application on Netbeans on my Ubuntu , and server is CentOS on a virtualBox .
Suddenly uploading to server stopped and I'm getting these errors for non-root user :
Failed:
file backup_restore.php Cannot upload file backup_restore.php (unknown reason).
file ...
The link pointing to Ubuntu about derivatives page is broken.
Located at http://askubuntu.com/faq page
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Using and administering Ubuntu, including official Ubuntu derivatives.
After an update yesterday, my flash audio became extremely choppy and MPD will not play any music (log says "decoder_thread: Unrecognized URI"). Anyone seen issues like this before?
And, now that you mention it, it did look weird anti-clockwise.. I just couldn't figure out what was weird about it. Now I know. I'm not sure whether I'm being sarcastic or not.. I like it clockwise.
Open the terminal. the shortcut is:
Ctrl + Alt + T
Then type this command:
sudo rfkill unblock all
If it did not work from the beginning.Try typing it again like 2 or 3 times and then see
Sometimes the hard switch won't work. So this command works like a hard switch and helps enabling the ...
I have software which needs to run as a non-root user, but needs to listen on port 80 and 443.
With iptables, this isn't all that difficult:
sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-port 8080
sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -i eth0 -p tcp --dport 443 -j ...