# SOME DESCRIPTIVE TITLE. # FIRST AUTHOR , YEAR. # msgid "" msgstr "" "Project-Id-Version: d-i-manual_post-install\n" "Report-Msgid-Bugs-To: debian-boot@lists.debian.org\n" "POT-Creation-Date: 2017-02-02 20:39+0000\n" "PO-Revision-Date: 2016-04-08 20:25+0000\n" "Last-Translator: NAME \n" "Language-Team: Norwegian nynorsk \n" "Language: nn\n" "MIME-Version: 1.0\n" "Content-Type: application/x-xml2pot; charset=UTF-8\n" "Content-Transfer-Encoding: 8bit\n" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:5 #, no-c-format msgid "Next Steps and Where to Go From Here" msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:13 #, no-c-format msgid "Shutting down the system" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:15 #, no-c-format msgid "" "To shut down a running &debian-gnu; system, you must not reboot with the " "reset switch on the front or back of your computer, or just turn off the " "computer. &debian-gnu; should be shut down in a controlled manner, otherwise " "files might get lost and/or disk damage might occur. If you run a desktop " "environment, there is usually an option to log out available " "from the application menu that allows you to shutdown (or reboot) the system." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:25 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Alternatively you can press the key combination Ctrl Alt Del or Control Shift " "Power on Macintosh systems. If the key " "combinations do not work, a last option is to log in as root and type the " "necessary commands. Use reboot to reboot the system. Use " "halt to halt the system without powering it off " " Under the SysV init system halt had the " "same effect as poweroff, but with systemd as init system " "(the default since jessie) their effects are different. . " "To power off the machine, use poweroff or " "shutdown -h now. The systemd init system provides " "additional commands that perform the same functions; for example " "systemctl reboot or systemctl poweroff." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:61 #, no-c-format msgid "If You Are New to Unix" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:62 #, no-c-format msgid "" "If you are new to Unix, you probably should go out and buy some books and do " "some reading. A lot of valuable information can also be found in the Debian Reference. This list of Unix FAQs contains a number of UseNet " "documents which provide a nice historical reference." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:70 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Linux is an implementation of Unix. The Linux " "Documentation Project (LDP) collects a number of HOWTOs and online " "books relating to Linux. Most of these documents can be installed locally; " "just install the doc-linux-html package (HTML " "versions) or the doc-linux-text package (ASCII " "versions), then look in /usr/share/doc/HOWTO. " "International versions of the LDP HOWTOs are also available as &debian; " "packages." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:91 #, no-c-format msgid "Orienting Yourself to &debian;" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:92 #, no-c-format msgid "" "&debian; is a little different from other distributions. Even if you're " "familiar with Linux in other distributions, there are things you should know " "about &debian; to help you to keep your system in a good, clean state. This " "chapter contains material to help you get oriented; it is not intended to be " "a tutorial for how to use &debian;, but just a very brief glimpse of the " "system for the very rushed." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:103 #, no-c-format msgid "&debian; Packaging System" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:104 #, no-c-format msgid "" "The most important concept to grasp is the &debian; packaging system. In " "essence, large parts of your system should be considered under the control " "of the packaging system. These include: " "/usr (excluding /usr/local) /var (you could make " "/var/local and be safe in there) " " /bin " " /sbin " " /lib For instance, if you replace /usr/bin/perl, that will work, but then if you upgrade your perl package, the file you put there will be replaced. Experts can get " "around this by putting packages on hold in aptitude." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:145 #, no-c-format msgid "" "One of the best installation methods is apt. You can use the command line " "version of apt or full-screen text version " "aptitude. Note apt will also let you merge main, " "contrib, and non-free so you can have export-restricted packages as well as " "standard versions." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:156 #, no-c-format msgid "Additional Software Available for &debian;" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:157 #, no-c-format msgid "" "There are official and unofficial software repositories that are not enabled " "in the default &debian; install. These contain software which many find " "important and expect to have. Information on these additional repositories " "can be found on the &debian; Wiki page titled The Software Available for &debian;'s Stable Release." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:169 #, no-c-format msgid "Application Version Management" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:170 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Alternative versions of applications are managed by update-alternatives. If " "you are maintaining multiple versions of your applications, read the update-" "alternatives man page." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:180 #, no-c-format msgid "Cron Job Management" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:181 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Any jobs under the purview of the system administrator should be in " "/etc, since they are configuration files. If you have a " "root cron job for daily, weekly, or monthly runs, put them in /etc/" "cron.{daily,weekly,monthly}. These are invoked from /" "etc/crontab, and will run in alphabetic order, which serializes " "them." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:190 #, no-c-format msgid "" "On the other hand, if you have a cron job that (a) needs to run as a special " "user, or (b) needs to run at a special time or frequency, you can use either " "/etc/crontab, or, better yet, /etc/cron.d/" "whatever. These particular files also have an extra field that " "allows you to stipulate the user account under which the cron job runs." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:199 #, no-c-format msgid "" "In either case, you just edit the files and cron will notice them " "automatically. There is no need to run a special command. For more " "information see cron(8), crontab(5), and /usr/share/doc/cron/" "README.Debian." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:214 #, no-c-format msgid "Further Reading and Information" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:215 #, no-c-format msgid "" "If you need information about a particular program, you should first try " "man program, or " "info program." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:221 #, no-c-format msgid "" "There is lots of useful documentation in /usr/share/doc " "as well. In particular, /usr/share/doc/HOWTO and " "/usr/share/doc/FAQ contain lots of interesting " "information. To submit bugs, look at /usr/share/doc/debian/bug*. To read about &debian;-specific issues for particular programs, " "look at /usr/share/doc/(package name)/README.Debian." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:232 #, no-c-format msgid "" "The Debian web site contains a " "large quantity of documentation about &debian;. In particular, see the " "Debian GNU/Linux FAQ " "and the Debian Reference. An index of more &debian; documentation is " "available from the Debian " "Documentation Project. The &debian; community is self-supporting; to " "subscribe to one or more of the Debian mailing lists, see the Mail List Subscription page. Last, but not least, the Debian Mailing List Archives contain a wealth of information on " "&debian;." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:250 #, no-c-format msgid "" "A general source of information on GNU/Linux is the Linux Documentation Project. There you will find the " "HOWTOs and pointers to other very valuable information on parts of a GNU/" "Linux system." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:266 #, no-c-format msgid "Setting Up Your System To Use E-Mail" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:267 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Today, email is an important part of many people's life. As there are many " "options as to how to set it up, and as having it set up correctly is " "important for some &debian; utilities, we will try to cover the basics in " "this section." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:274 #, no-c-format msgid "" "There are three main functions that make up an e-mail system. First there is " "the Mail User Agent (MUA) which is the program a user " "actually uses to compose and read mails. Then there is the Mail " "Transfer Agent (MTA) that takes care of transferring messages " "from one computer to another. And last there is the Mail Delivery " "Agent (MDA) that takes care of delivering incoming mail to the " "user's inbox." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:284 #, no-c-format msgid "" "These three functions can be performed by separate programs, but they can " "also be combined in one or two programs. It is also possible to have " "different programs handle these functions for different types of mail." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:290 #, no-c-format msgid "" "On Linux and Unix systems mutt is historically a very " "popular MUA. Like most traditional Linux programs it is text based. It is " "often used in combination with exim or sendmail as MTA and procmail as MDA." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:297 #, no-c-format msgid "" "With the increasing popularity of graphical desktop systems, the use of " "graphical e-mail programs like GNOME's evolution, KDE's " "kmail or Mozilla's thunderbird (in " "&debian; available as icedove The reason " "that thunderbird has been renamed to icedove in &debian; has to do with licensing issues. Details are outside " "the scope of this manual. ) is becoming more popular. " "These programs combine the function of a MUA, MTA and MDA, but can — " "and often are — also be used in combination with the traditional Linux " "tools." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:317 #, no-c-format msgid "Default E-Mail Configuration" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:318 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Even if you are planning to use a graphical mail program, it is important " "that a traditional MTA/MDA is also installed and correctly set up on your " "&debian-gnu; system. Reason is that various utilities running on the " "system Examples are: cron, " "quota, logcheck, aide, … can send important notices by e-mail " "to inform the system administrator of (potential) problems or changes." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:333 #, no-c-format msgid "" "For this reason the packages exim4 and " "mutt will be installed by default (provided you did " "not unselect the standard task during the installation). " "exim4 is a combination MTA/MDA that is relatively " "small but very flexible. By default it will be configured to only handle e-" "mail local to the system itself and e-mails addressed to the system " "administrator (root account) will be delivered to the regular user account " "created during the installation The forwarding of mail for " "root to the regular user account is configured in /etc/aliases. If no regular user account was created, the mail will of course " "be delivered to the root account itself. ." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:352 #, no-c-format msgid "" "When system e-mails are delivered they are added to a file in /var/" "mail/account_name. The e-mails can be " "read using mutt." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:362 #, no-c-format msgid "Sending E-Mails Outside The System" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:363 #, no-c-format msgid "" "As mentioned earlier, the installed &debian; system is only set up to handle " "e-mail local to the system, not for sending mail to others nor for receiving " "mail from others." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:369 #, no-c-format msgid "" "If you would like exim4 to handle external e-mail, " "please refer to the next subsection for the basic available configuration " "options. Make sure to test that mail can be sent and received correctly." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:375 #, no-c-format msgid "" "If you intend to use a graphical mail program and use a mail server of your " "Internet Service Provider (ISP) or your company, there is not really any " "need to configure exim4 for handling external e-mail. " "Just configure your favorite graphical mail program to use the correct " "servers to send and receive e-mail (how is outside the scope of this manual)." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:384 #, no-c-format msgid "" "However, in that case you may need to configure individual utilities to " "correctly send e-mails. One such utility is reportbug, a " "program that facilitates submitting bug reports against &debian; packages. " "By default it expects to be able to use exim4 to " "submit bug reports." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:392 #, no-c-format msgid "" "To correctly set up reportbug to use an external mail " "server, please run the command reportbug --configure and " "answer no to the question if an MTA is available. You will " "then be asked for the SMTP server to be used for submitting bug reports." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:403 #, no-c-format msgid "Configuring the Exim4 Mail Transport Agent" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:404 #, no-c-format msgid "" "If you would like your system to also handle external e-mail, you will need " "to reconfigure the exim4 package You " "can of course also remove exim4 and replace it with " "an alternative MTA/MDA. :" msgstr "" #. Tag: screen #: post-install.xml:416 #, no-c-format msgid "# dpkg-reconfigure exim4-config" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:418 #, no-c-format msgid "" "After entering that command (as root), you will be asked if you want split " "the configuration into small files. If you are unsure, select the default " "option." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:424 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Next you will be presented with several common mail scenarios. Choose the " "one that most closely resembles your needs." msgstr "" #. Tag: term #: post-install.xml:433 #, no-c-format msgid "internet site" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:434 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Your system is connected to a network and your mail is sent and received " "directly using SMTP. On the following screens you will be asked a few basic " "questions, like your machine's mail name, or a list of domains for which you " "accept or relay mail." msgstr "" #. Tag: term #: post-install.xml:445 #, no-c-format msgid "mail sent by smarthost" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:446 #, no-c-format msgid "" "In this scenario your outgoing mail is forwarded to another machine, called " "a smarthost, which takes care of sending the message on to " "its destination. The smarthost also usually stores incoming mail addressed " "to your computer, so you don't need to be permanently online. That also " "means you have to download your mail from the smarthost via programs like " "fetchmail." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:456 #, no-c-format msgid "" "In a lot of cases the smarthost will be your ISP's mail server, which makes " "this option very suitable for dial-up users. It can also be a company mail " "server, or even another system on your own network." msgstr "" #. Tag: term #: post-install.xml:466 #, no-c-format msgid "mail sent by smarthost; no local mail" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:467 #, no-c-format msgid "" "This option is basically the same as the previous one except that the system " "will not be set up to handle mail for a local e-mail domain. Mail on the " "system itself (e.g. for the system administrator) will still be handled." msgstr "" #. Tag: term #: post-install.xml:478 #, no-c-format msgid "local delivery only" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:479 #, no-c-format msgid "This is the option your system is configured for by default." msgstr "" #. Tag: term #: post-install.xml:487 #, no-c-format msgid "no configuration at this time" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:488 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Choose this if you are absolutely convinced you know what you are doing. " "This will leave you with an unconfigured mail system — until you " "configure it, you won't be able to send or receive any mail and you may miss " "some important messages from your system utilities." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:499 #, no-c-format msgid "" "If none of these scenarios suits your needs, or if you need a finer grained " "setup, you will need to edit configuration files under the /etc/" "exim4 directory after the installation is complete. More " "information about exim4 may be found under /" "usr/share/doc/exim4; the file README.Debian.gz has further details about configuring exim4 " "and explains where to find additional documentation." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:510 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Note that sending mail directly to the Internet when you don't have an " "official domain name, can result in your mail being rejected because of anti-" "spam measures on receiving servers. Using your ISP's mail server is " "preferred. If you still do want to send out mail directly, you may want to " "use a different e-mail address than is generated by default. If you use " "exim4 as your MTA, this is possible by adding an " "entry in /etc/email-addresses." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:528 #, no-c-format msgid "Compiling a New Kernel" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:529 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Why would someone want to compile a new kernel? It is often not necessary " "since the default kernel shipped with &debian; handles most configurations. " "Also, &debian; often offers several alternative kernels. So you may want to " "check first if there is an alternative kernel image package that better " "corresponds to your hardware. However, it can be useful to compile a new " "kernel in order to:" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:539 #, no-c-format msgid "" "handle special hardware needs, or hardware conflicts with the pre-supplied " "kernels" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:545 #, no-c-format msgid "" "use options of the kernel which are not supported in the pre-supplied " "kernels (such as high memory support)" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:551 #, no-c-format msgid "optimize the kernel by removing useless drivers to speed up boot time" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:556 #, no-c-format msgid "create a monolithic instead of a modularized kernel" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:561 #, no-c-format msgid "run an updated or development kernel" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:566 #, no-c-format msgid "learn more about linux kernels" msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:575 #, no-c-format msgid "Kernel Image Management" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:576 #, no-c-format msgid "Don't be afraid to try compiling the kernel. It's fun and profitable." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:580 #, no-c-format msgid "" "To compile a kernel the &debian; way, you need some packages: " "fakeroot, kernel-package, " "linux-source-2.6 and a few others which are probably " "already installed (see /usr/share/doc/kernel-package/README.gz for the complete list)." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:589 #, no-c-format msgid "" "This method will make a .deb of your kernel source, and, if you have non-" "standard modules, make a synchronized dependent .deb of those too. It's a " "better way to manage kernel images; /boot will hold the " "kernel, the System.map, and a log of the active config file for the build." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:597 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Note that you don't have to compile your kernel the " "&debian; way; but we find that using the packaging system to " "manage your kernel is actually safer and easier. In fact, you can get your " "kernel sources right from Linus instead of linux-source-2.6, yet still use the kernel-package " "compilation method." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:606 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Note that you'll find complete documentation on using kernel-" "package under /usr/share/doc/kernel-package. This section just contains a brief tutorial." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:613 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Hereafter, we'll assume you have free rein over your machine and will " "extract your kernel source to somewhere in your home directory " " There are other locations where you can extract kernel sources and " "build your custom kernel, but this is easiest as it does not require special " "permissions. . We'll also assume that your kernel version " "is &kernelversion;. Make sure you are in the directory to where you want to " "unpack the kernel sources, extract them using tar xf /usr/src/" "linux-source-&kernelversion;.tar.xz and change to the directory " "linux-source-&kernelversion; that will have been " "created." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:633 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Now, you can configure your kernel. Run make xconfig " "if X11 is installed, configured and being run; run make " "menuconfig otherwise (you'll need libncurses5-dev installed). Take the time to read the online help and choose " "carefully. When in doubt, it is typically better to include the device " "driver (the software which manages hardware peripherals, such as Ethernet " "cards, SCSI controllers, and so on) you are unsure about. Be careful: other " "options, not related to a specific hardware, should be left at the default " "value if you do not understand them. Do not forget to select Kernel " "module loader in Loadable module support (it is not " "selected by default). If not included, your &debian; installation will " "experience problems." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:648 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Clean the source tree and reset the kernel-package " "parameters. To do that, do make-kpkg clean." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:653 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Now, compile the kernel: fakeroot make-kpkg --initrd --" "revision=1.0.custom kernel_image. The version number of " "1.0 can be changed at will; this is just a version number " "that you will use to track your kernel builds. Likewise, you can put any " "word you like in place of custom (e.g., a host name). Kernel " "compilation may take quite a while, depending on the power of your machine." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:663 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Once the compilation is complete, you can install your custom kernel like " "any package. As root, do dpkg -i ../&kernelpackage;-" "&kernelversion;-subarchitecture_1.0." "custom_&architecture;.deb. The subarchitecture part is an optional sub-architecture, " "such as 686, depending on what kernel options you " "set. dpkg -i will install the kernel, along with some " "other nice supporting files. For instance, the System.map will be properly installed (helpful for debugging kernel " "problems), and /boot/config-&kernelversion; will be " "installed, containing your current configuration set. Your new kernel " "package is also clever enough to automatically update your boot loader to " "use the new kernel. If you have created a modules package, you'll need to " "install that package as well." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:683 #, no-c-format msgid "" "It is time to reboot the system: read carefully any warning that the above " "step may have produced, then shutdown -r now." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:688 #, no-c-format msgid "" "For more information on &debian; kernels and kernel compilation, see the " "Debian Linux Kernel Handbook. " "For more information on kernel-package, read the fine " "documentation in /usr/share/doc/kernel-package." msgstr "" #. Tag: title #: post-install.xml:704 #, no-c-format msgid "Recovering a Broken System" msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:705 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Sometimes, things go wrong, and the system you've carefully installed is no " "longer bootable. Perhaps the boot loader configuration broke while trying " "out a change, or perhaps a new kernel you installed won't boot, or perhaps " "cosmic rays hit your disk and flipped a bit in /sbin/init. Regardless of the cause, you'll need to have a system to work " "from while you fix it, and rescue mode can be useful for this." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:715 #, no-c-format msgid "" "To access rescue mode, select rescue from the boot " "menu, type rescue at the boot: " "prompt, or boot with the rescue/enable=true boot " "parameter. You'll be shown the first few screens of the installer, with a " "note in the corner of the display to indicate that this is rescue mode, not " "a full installation. Don't worry, your system is not about to be " "overwritten! Rescue mode simply takes advantage of the hardware detection " "facilities available in the installer to ensure that your disks, network " "devices, and so on are available to you while repairing your system." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:732 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Instead of the partitioning tool, you should now be presented with a list of " "the partitions on your system, and asked to select one of them. Normally, " "you should select the partition containing the root file system that you " "need to repair. You may select partitions on RAID and LVM devices as well as " "those created directly on disks." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:740 #, no-c-format msgid "" "If possible, the installer will now present you with a shell prompt in the " "file system you selected, which you can use to perform any necessary " "repairs. For example, if you need to reinstall the " "GRUB boot loader into the master boot record of the first hard disk, you " "could enter the command grub-install '(hd0)' to do " "so. " msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:752 #, no-c-format msgid "" "If the installer cannot run a usable shell in the root file system you " "selected, perhaps because the file system is corrupt, then it will issue a " "warning and offer to give you a shell in the installer environment instead. " "You may not have as many tools available in this environment, but they will " "often be enough to repair your system anyway. The root file system you " "selected will be mounted on the /target directory." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:761 #, no-c-format msgid "In either case, after you exit the shell, the system will reboot." msgstr "" #. Tag: para #: post-install.xml:765 #, no-c-format msgid "" "Finally, note that repairing broken systems can be difficult, and this " "manual does not attempt to go into all the things that might have gone wrong " "or how to fix them. If you have problems, consult an expert." msgstr ""