On Mon, 17 Dec 2018 at 15:04, Peter Nabbefeld
wrote:
>
> since some days, I'm noticing HD is too busy, and my laptop is very slow
> in some cases.
>
>
It might also be worth checking the health of your hard disk with "smartctl
-A /dev/sd". Look out for "Reallocated Event Count", "Current Pending
On 8 August 2018 at 02:33, Turritopsis Dohrnii Teo En Ming <
turritopsis.dohr...@teo-en-ming.com> wrote:
> Good morning from Singapore,
>
>
> Can I build Arch Linux from Scratch like Linux from Scratch?
>
It's certainly possible to build all of ArchLinux's packages from source
using the ABS. My a
On 17 July 2018 at 15:48, David C. Rankin
wrote:
> It's like there is something between:
>
> 09:20:24 phoinix systemd[1]: Started Session c18 of user david.
> and
> 09:20:28 phoinix sshd[2654]: Received disconnect from 66.76.46.195 port
> 59956:11: disconnected by user
>
> that isn't data trans
I've moved or cloned my general-use Arch system between disks more times
than I can count. This is what LVM is for. If you're not using LVM (or
BTRFS), I recommend you start, but in the meantime, the simplest solution
when moving between systems is to dd the contents of each partition from
the sour
On 14 August 2017 at 13:48, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Mon, 14 Aug 2017 14:03:45 +0200, mpan wrote:
> >> why does a package from official repositories mentions what version
> >> of a dependency is required?
> >Because it may be that it is working only with that particular
> >version.
>
> That doesn
On 24 July 2017 at 08:54, Junayeed Ahnaf via arch-general <
arch-general@archlinux.org> wrote:
> I've installed ArchLinux on 3 desktops so far, and I've done them
> successfully, so I must have *RTFM* , I was just wondering why is it
> hard to configure wifi. Since I failed to configure wifi with
On 27 January 2017 at 12:12, Peter Nabbefeld wrote:
> I've got problems with MariaDB not working.
>
I think you might want to read the "Installation" section on the Wiki:
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/MySQL#Installation
In particular, I think you forgot to run mysql_install_db.
Cheers,
On 2 December 2016 at 22:29, Merlin Büge wrote:
>> Personally, I'd rather modify the start-up process a tiny bit so that
>> GPT inside LUKS gets parsed. I just try to strip off unnecessary
>> 'overhead' / layers of my system.
> If you have 8 GiB or more and not hibernating, don't bother with swa
On 23 February 2016 at 08:32, Frank Schaffhaeuser
wrote:
> This topic again? Seriously? The last 'discussion' from Feb.8th thankfully
> just died down
> and apart from spamming subscriber's inboxes had no useful effect...
> Please, not again
Hang on, I absolutely agree with you that I'm sick of
The nature of ArchLinux as a rolling-release distro means that ISO
downloads are not a good measure of the number of users at all. (Most users
downloaded an ISO once, a long time ago, and not for each release as for
other distros.) Add to that the fact that there are torrent links for the
ISO as we
On 16 February 2015 at 18:14, Kevin Ott wrote:
> > 1) I'm using SDDM now, but even with KDE4, I was unable to get SDDM to
> > actually launch a Plasma session. After entering my details, I get a
> black
> > screen and no further activity. I have to switch to another console, log
> > in, and invok
On 16 February 2015 at 13:23, Antonio Rojas wrote:
> > 2) I used to have some global shortcuts for launching certain apps. I
> > don't seem able to set these up any more. After setting a shortcut on a
> > lancher in the panel (e.g. Firefox), nothing happens when I actually hit
> > the shortcut co
After switching to Plasma 5 from KDE SC 4, I have a couple of small issue,
and I wonder if anyone else already has a solution?
1) I'm using SDDM now, but even with KDE4, I was unable to get SDDM to
actually launch a Plasma session. After entering my details, I get a black
screen and no further act
On 11 January 2015 at 22:44, Michael Dahlberg wrote:
> On January 11, 2015 at 5:36:35 PM, Oliver Temlin (tem...@gmail.com) wrote:
> On 11 January 2015 at 21:38, Michael Dahlberg wrote:
> > I recently had a hard drive failure which resulted in my system having a
> corrupted /var. I removed /var a
On 9 December 2014 at 23:00, John Doe wrote:
> Please help, after i686 install screen is unreadable blocky white squares.
>
>
How did you perform the install? Did you follow the guide at
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Beginners_Guide ? If so, it would be a
good idea to read back through eac
On 7 November 2014 12:01, arnaud gaboury wrote:
> >
> > Did you try deleting the file and start downloading again?
>
> Not sure what you call "the file", but I already tried many times to
> remove core/linux then run again $ ABSROOT=. abs core/linux.
>
> I can manually download the kernel and pac
On 3 November 2014 16:24, Mateus Rodrigues Costa
wrote:
> Em Mon Nov 03 2014 at 14:08:11, Paul Gideon Dann
> escreveu:
> >
> > I'd forgotten about this, although I mentioned it a few posts back:
> >
> > # locale
> > locale: Cannot set LC_CTYPE to
On 3 November 2014 15:44, Mauro Santos wrote:
> On 03-11-2014 15:26, Paul Gideon Dann wrote:
> > So that explains why my locale wasn't being set correctly. However, it
> > doesn't explain why I'm seeing broken rendering of special characters in
> > the termi
On 3 November 2014 15:05, Mauro Santos wrote:
> On 03-11-2014 14:03, Paul Gideon Dann wrote:
> > My best bet at this stage is that I have a corrupted file somewhere, but
> > pacman -Qqkk doesn't show up anything obvious. I'd think it was an issue
> > with a new
On 3 November 2014 11:36, Mateus Rodrigues Costa
wrote:
> Shouldn't you also have the en_US locales available? Just in case?
> Also, why enable the ISO locales if you can run basically with only the
> UTF-8 ones?
>
I've tried enabling the en_US locales, and it doesn't help. I suspect the
issues
On 3 November 2014 13:37, AIS Information wrote:
>
> i think you may just have a typo. shouldn't it be "en_GB.UTF-8" instead
> of "en_GB.utf8"?
>
Thanks; I've tried various combinations. Mostly, I've used en_GB.UTF-8, as
that matches the entry in locale.conf, and worked fine previously.
Your or
On 3 November 2014 11:03, Jürgen Werner wrote:
> Am 03.11.2014 11:03, schrieb Paul Gideon Dann:
>
> On 3 November 2014 09:45, Jürgen Werner wrote:
>>
>> You have to run
>>>
>>> # locale-gen
>>>
>>> Jürgen, note my original post:
>&g
On 3 November 2014 10:00, Paul Gideon Dann wrote:
>
> Any more ideas?
>
Oh BTW, I've also tried bypassing my ZSH config entirely, but no difference.
Paul
On 3 November 2014 09:45, Jürgen Werner wrote:
> You have to run
>
> # locale-gen
>
Jürgen, note my original post:
> I've checked locale.gen and rerun locale-gen without any effect. I've
also tried rerunning mkinitpio for good measure.
Paul
On 3 November 2014 09:24, Jesse Jaara wrote:
> Maybe you have the lang set somewhere in your shell configfile. Have you
> tried with a new user?
>
Hmm; yeah, getting somewhere now. I haven't made any modifications to my
shell config for a while, but I did find this (I use zprezto):
if [[ -z "LA
On 31 October 2014 15:42, Mateus Rodrigues Costa
wrote:
> 2014-10-31 13:34 GMT-02:00 Paul Gideon Dann :
> >
> > # sudo localectl set-locale en_GB.utf8
> > Failed to issue method call: Invalid Locale data.
> >
> > Could this be a corrupted file? (Feasible, as we d
On 31 October 2014 14:20, Mateus Rodrigues Costa
wrote:
> 2014-10-31 12:14 GMT-02:00 Paul Gideon Dann :
>
> > Is there some additional configuration I need beyond /etc/locale.conf
> now?
> > I've checked locale.gen and rerun locale-gen without any effect. I
I'm stumped: I've had LANG=en_GB.UTF8 in /etc/locale.conf ever since the
switch to systemd, but in the last few days since my previous reboot,
something's changed (maybe systemd 216?) and now I find that, even though
/etc/locale.conf still contains en_GB, I get:
# echo $LANG
en_US.UTF8
This is al
On 27 October 2014 09:55, Christian Hesse wrote:
> Damjan Georgievski on Thu, 2014/10/23 19:40:
> > On 12 October 2014 14:28, Thomas Bächler wrote:
> > > Intel released a new microcode update that disables an instruction on
> > > Haswell CPUs. However, Linux doesn't handle this very well and in
On Thursday 21 Aug 2014 13:40:48 Leonid Isaev wrote:
> On Thu, Aug 21, 2014 at 11:56:06AM -0500, Bigby James wrote:
> > > > It seems this is just a change in the default settings, nothing more.
> > >
> > > I know, but not everyone follows systemd-devel. So, just updating
> > > systemd would lead t
On Thursday 21 Aug 2014 16:24:22 Manolo Martínez wrote:
> On 08/21/14 at 11:17am, Magnus Therning wrote:
> > On Thu, Aug 21, 2014 at 07:39:50AM +0200, Yamakaky wrote:
> > > Hi
> > >
> > > It's good to have a real vim package, but the `clipboard` option is now
> > > disabled (see `vim --version`).
On Thursday 31 Jul 2014 09:07:00 Doug Newgard wrote:
> > Your database is probably out of date. Try:
> >
> > # pacman -Syy
> >
> > and try again.
> >
> > Paul
>
> No, do not do -Syy, do -Syu or -Syyu. -Syy just leads to problems.
It *just* leads to problems? Mmm; it *may* lead to problems, yes
On Thursday 31 Jul 2014 18:48:46 Karthik K wrote:
> Trying to install ImageMagick from the Arch repos, but I am constantly
> getting a 404 not found error
>
> "pacman -Ss imagemagick" returns
> extra/imagemagick 6.8.9.5-1
> An image viewing/manipulation program
>
> But "pacman -S imagemagick"
On Saturday 19 Jul 2014 15:08:51 Alexander Rødseth wrote:
> /tmp being too small for building packages after a "standard" Arch
> Linux installation, in combination with yaourt using /tmp by default
> is a problem. A simple workaround is to run yaourt with --tmp
> /somewhere/with/enough/space.
When
On Thursday 10 Jul 2014 19:42:39 Scott Lawrence wrote:
> Hey,
>
> Never tried that particular piece of reckless foolery :). However, I'd guess
> that once the libraries were replaced with incompatible versions, the
> installation scripts would start to fail, and then you'd be pretty badly
> stuck.
On Thursday 10 Jul 2014 22:10:28 droe6 wrote:
> Not even that. You can have functioning 32bit programs running
on a 64bit
> system. The only reason I can see to change is if you somehow
installed a
> 64bit system on a 32 bit architecture system.
The OP already explained that he wants to make thi
On Tuesday 24 Jun 2014 10:07:31 Sander Jansen wrote:
> > But the new problem is: Why this service automatically start? I never
> > manually enabled mdmonitor, and I cannot find its link in
> > /etc/systemd/system/ .
> >
> > Regards.
>
> It's part of the udev rule in /usr/lib/udev/rules.d/63-md-ra
On Thursday 08 May 2014 09:53:41 Lukas Jirkovsky wrote:
> On Thu, May 8, 2014 at 9:46 AM, Christos Nouskas wrote:
> > On 8 May 2014 09:43, Olivier Langlois wrote:
> >> Since a recent update (I have first noticed a couple of weeks ago this
> >> new systemd enhancement), systemd started to automati
On Wednesday 30 Apr 2014 23:26:48 Rodrigo Rivas wrote:
> Although the original problem has already been solved, I'll post my
> trick to debug this kind of issues with systemd:
>
> * Before doing the thing that causes the problem run as root
> `systemctl start debug-shell`. If the problem is in the
On Wednesday 30 Apr 2014 11:46:03 Mauro Santos wrote:
> Check the output of journalctl and look for lines with timeout (use grep
> -i timeout).
>
> I've experienced this before (90 seconds timeout) and I found out that
> some systemd service related to the user session was not terminating,
> and s
On Wednesday 30 Apr 2014 11:08:14 Mike Cloaked wrote:
> Just a comment about boot times. The overall boot performance will depend
> not only on optimising an individual setup, but also is dependent on the
> hardware as well as which boot manager is being used. So an older laptop
> with a hard driv
On Friday 18 Apr 2014 10:29:56 Jerome Leclanche wrote:
> Hi
>
> With Qt5 becoming more and more available throughout Qt apps
> (especially as KDE progresses into the switch), I think it's time to
> consider adopting an updated naming scheme.
>
> IMHO:
> - Qt4 apps should use the -qt4 suffix
> - Q
On Thursday 27 Mar 2014 16:45:35 message wrote:
> On 2014-03-25 15:59, arch-general-requ...@archlinux.org wrote:
> >
--
> >
> > Message: 1
> > Date: Mon, 24 Mar 2014 22:49:06 +0100
> > From: Jakub Klinkovsk?
> > Subject: Re: [ar
On Thursday 27 Mar 2014 09:07:23 Nicolas Iooss wrote:
> c) Create a package ("linux-src"?) which install the kernel sources
> and provides an easy way to customize the config before making the packages
> (with pkgbuild). Currently linux-grsec AUR package provides this feature by
> using the MENUCON
On Thursday 20 Mar 2014 11:07:55 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> I decided, when writing the wiki, to setup the container network
> static IP (example given) INSIDE the container.
> This approach solves the interfaces being DOWN issue for any
network
> profile and sounds in fact a more best-practice.
> T
On Wednesday 19 Mar 2014 20:04:27 message wrote:
> On 2014-03-18 13:01, arch-general-requ...@archlinux.org wrote:
> > --
> >
> > Message: 7
> > Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2014 12:30:34 +0100
> > From: Ralf Mardorf
> > Subject: Re: [arch-general] user management error
> >
> > Y
On Wednesday 19 Mar 2014 12:52:55 Gesh wrote:
> Dear all,
> I've been rereading the old arguments on the rc.conf split.
> Disregarding everything discussed there, one interesting
> point came up during that discussion.[1]
> Is it possible to have some configuration file, e.g.
> /etc/systems/service
On Tuesday 18 Mar 2014 10:28:05 message wrote:
> No, the system does not start as root.
>
> After many reboots, am unable to sign-in directly as normal user 'a'.
> Have to sign in as 'root' (command 'su' not recognised), then change to
> 'a' using 'su a'. Access to /home directory 'a' (/home/a) is
On Monday 17 Mar 2014 12:00:10 Mauro Santos wrote:
> I suspect we might have been talking about 2 different things all along.
> What I and Arnaud have been talking about is the tap interface on the
> host, not the interface inside the container, which of course should be
> properly configured by th
On Monday 17 Mar 2014 09:55:11 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> > I guess someone will have to ask about it, either in the mailing list or
> > irc, I haven't done so before because systemd-{nspawn,networkd} have
> > lots of new functionality and I'm not sure I understand them all.
>
> After I related this
On Wednesday 12 Mar 2014 15:21:23 Ary Kleinerman wrote:
> I'm thinking to use Arch for an Asterisk server. Nowadays I'm using
> Ubuntu 12.04LTS, but I can see all distribution changing to the new
> init system (systemd). I wanna change all my scripts to be compatible
> with systemd. Furthermore, my
On Wednesday 12 Mar 2014 17:32:27 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> It was UP before I brought vb down. So you have your answer : yes.
OK, so in that case, I'd recommend not doing anything special on the host to
bring the vb-
dahlia interface up. It's behaving just like a normal interface would on a real
On Wednesday 12 Mar 2014 16:01:00 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> See my previous post : I want to learn. Then, the container will one day be
> a production server. So my idea is to test now everything, then take a
> snapshot and build a prod server with much more complicated network
> services and setting
On Wednesday 12 Mar 2014 14:21:05 Mauro Santos wrote:
> > Can I ask you both why you chose this route of creating a private network?
> > As far as I can tell, by default systemd-spawn will allow the container
> > to use the host's interface. I would have thought that would be adequate
> > for most
On Wednesday 12 Mar 2014 15:20:01 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> > Can I ask you both why you chose this route of creating a private network?
> > As far as I can tell, by default systemd-spawn will allow the container
> > to use the host's interface. I would have thought that would be adequate
> > for mos
On Wednesday 12 Mar 2014 14:06:30 Mauro Santos wrote:
> No netctl here :)
>
> I systemd-networkd enabled on boot and 3 files in /etc/systemd/network
>
> > cat brkvm.netdev
>
> [NetDev]
> Name=brkvm
> Kind=bridge
>
> > cat brkvm.network
>
> [Match]
> Name=brkvm
>
> [Network]
> Description=Brid
On Wednesday 12 Mar 2014 14:48:38 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> Right. I am left after I boot my machine (the host) with this :
>
> 4: vb-dahlia: mtu 1500 qdisc noop master br0
> state DOWN group default qlen 1000
> link/ether 62:a2:6b:f4:0f:87 brd ff:ff:ff:ff:ff:ff
>
> I have to manually
> # ip l
On Tuesday 11 Mar 2014 18:03:20 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> > OK, so you really just need basic internet connectivity; you don't
> > have any special filtering requirements. When you boot the
> > container, can it see the enp7s0 interface? That is, is the enp7s0
> > interface visible both from the host
On Tuesday 11 Mar 2014 15:45:19 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> The container is dedicated to be a test server for months
before I set
> up a production server (not on my machine this time !). A lot
of web
> services will be hosted on the container.
> The container is a way to test my settings for web a
On Tuesday 11 Mar 2014 13:06:23 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> > systemd-networkd is still really new. If you're having difficulty with it,
> > I recommend simply using netctl, which is a bit more mature.
>
> I do for part of the setup on host. I am trying to do zero network
> config on container, thus t
On Tuesday 11 Mar 2014 11:06:32 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> > Hi Arnaud, I don't think you need the /etc/netctl/ethernet profile at all.
> > The enp7s0 interface is being absorbed into the bridge, and so should not
> > be considered on its own any more. Otherwise, this looks OK. Are you
> > seeing any
On Monday 10 Mar 2014 18:57:38 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I am setting up a network for a container.
>
> I have a bridge br0 with a eth adapter "enp7s0" and a tap device "tap0"
>
>
> ***
> /etc/netctl/bridge
> Description="Bridge connection"
> Interface=br0
> Co
On Monday 10 Mar 2014 16:20:25 Cao, Renzhi wrote:
> Thanks Paul!
>The reason why I copy /bin/* to /mnt/bin is my/mnt/bin is not exists.
> I don't know what happens, it seems this is deleted when I try to fix my
> problem. I will see if my system works well, if not, I will be back again
> :)
On Monday 10 Mar 2014 15:40:13 John WH Smith wrote:
> By the way, I
> strongly believe you will fix things faster if you like
your environment
> (I assume it is Arch here, of course). Being used to your
system is much
> more important than its stability when it comes to your
sysadmin speed
> of
On Monday 10 Mar 2014 15:48:15 Cao, Renzhi wrote:
> I really appreciate Emil Lundberg, Paul Gideon Dann, Temlin Oliv?r, ,
> Guus Snijders' great suggestion, you are right, that's my fault to use
> /dev/mapper/arch_root_image as the root partition, now I can login the
&
On Monday 10 Mar 2014 10:08:06 y...@marupa.net wrote:
> I love Arch, but not for servers. I prefer Debian on my server. Despite all
> the dire warnings given to keep an eye on Arch's web site about certain
> upgrades, its still all too frequent user intervention is necessary where
> nothing is stat
On Monday 10 Mar 2014 14:52:23 Cao, Renzhi wrote:
> Hi,
> Thank you for giving suggestions, I have tried the one you suggest, and
> here is the result: #ls /mnt/sda2
> boot/,grub/,home/,initramfs-fallback.img,,initramfs.img,lost+fount/,memtest8
> 6+/,syslinux/,vmlinuz-linux #ls /mnt/sda3
> /bo
On Monday 10 Mar 2014 03:51:04 Cao, Renzhi wrote:
> Hi, all:
>
> I really have no idea for the pacman upgrading fails issue, so I
> summarize the problem I meet, and the things I try, if any one can give me
> suggestions of what I miss something or I do something wrong, I really
> appreciate,
On Friday 07 Mar 2014 15:09:27 Ary Kleinerman wrote:
> Hi,
> I'm a new Archer and I'm planning to install arch linux in a production
> server environment, but I have doubts because Arch is a rolling release. My
> question is: what does it happen when there are big changes? e.g. changes
> in the fil
On Friday 07 Mar 2014 09:26:19 Caorenzhi wrote:
> Thank you! I remember when I run the command to find out the packages I
> should remove, it shows: lilo, grub-common, initvlinux( something like
> this), but I don't know how to move them to /usr/bin. I try directly mv
> lilo to /usr/bin, and use th
On Friday 07 Mar 2014 09:12:39 Caorenzhi wrote:
> Thank you Paul, I will check it in my lab later and tell you the details.
I
> try add ip eth0 yesterday , and the system says there is no eth0.
In that case, you need to do:
# ip link
to see a list of your network interfaces. It might not be cal
On Friday 07 Mar 2014 08:46:02 Caorenzhi wrote:
> Thank you for your good suggestion! I think I can use pacman to
remove the
> packages, however, I cannot connect to Internet after chroot, so
cannot use
> pacman to update. Do you have any idea?
Assuming you can plug your computer in with an ethe
On Friday 07 Mar 2014 12:28:56 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> I read a lot, especially when it comes to networking. As for me, it is
> the trickiest part of administrating my machine.
Yeah, networking can get complex very quickly. (I'm by no means an expert
either!)
> I found many posts
> asking help a
On Thursday 06 Mar 2014 23:46:59 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> I finally managed to boot the container with a working network and a
> static IP. I only used netctl, as systemd-networkd is still a mistery
> to me.
[...]
> It lacks in
> fact a good example, from the container creation to the network setup.
On Thursday 06 Mar 2014 23:01:30 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> On Thu, Mar 6, 2014 at 8:00 PM, arnaud gaboury
> wrote:
> >> 1) Two new virtual interfaces are create: one that is visible to the
> >> container, and one that is visible to the host. The host now has two
> >> interfaces, which may be bridge
On Thursday 06 Mar 2014 16:14:19 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> > This configuration make no sense whatsoever.
> >
> > 1) You create a bridge with no ports. What purpose does it serve?
> > 2) If you want to add enp7s0 as a port, why do you have a configuration
> > for enp7s0? If an interface is a bridge
On Thursday 06 Mar 2014 14:03:54 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> I am running a machine "hortensia" with a container "dahlia". As the
> container will be a server, I want to have one IP for hortensia and
> another one for dahlia.
>
> On hortensia, with dhcpcd.service and systemd-networkd both disabled,
>
Is anyone else seeing breakage of KDE
compositing with glibc 2.19-2? Large areas are
unrendered: window contents and the plasma
desktop are black, although my panel is visible.
Seems OK when I turn of compositing. I've tried
going back and forth, and it's definitely the
glibc update that's
On Thursday 13 Feb 2014 17:58:05 Damjan Georgievski wrote:
> > Yeah, I think it's possible to get systemd to poll a script, or there's
> > always cron (or a timer
> > unit) that should allow us to manually inspect a process and restart it if
> > necessary. But it
> > would be cooler if there were
On Thursday 13 Feb 2014 13:36:35 Denis A. Altoé Falqueto wrote:
> On Thu, Feb 13, 2014 at 1:29 PM, Paul Gideon Dann wrote:
> > Yeah, though actually I'm just really surprised that, given the incredible
> > administrative benefits of systemd, there isn't currently anyth
On Thursday 13 Feb 2014 16:05:05 Rodrigo Rivas wrote:
> Ok... I'll take the chance to practice my DBus abilities...
> It is a bit long, but it kind of works. Just replace the print() call
> with your favourite sendmail function and you'll get a notification
> every time any of the units specified i
On Thursday 13 Feb 2014 16:11:56 Thomas Bächler wrote:
> Am 13.02.2014 16:05, schrieb Rodrigo Rivas:
> > Ok... I'll take the chance to practice my DBus abilities...
> > It is a bit long, but it kind of works. Just replace the print() call
> > with your favourite sendmail function and you'll get a n
On Thursday 13 Feb 2014 13:41:21 Damien Churchill wrote:
> You could use unit overrides[0] to add the OnFailure to provided
> units. So should be able to set it up for any service you are
> interested in receiving notifications for, I would assume.
Yes, absolutely, but this only works for a subset
On Thursday 13 Feb 2014 14:21:36 ushi wrote:
> Am 13.02.2014 13:04, schrieb Paul Gideon Dann:
> > Hello all,
> >
> > Does anyone know of any standard system for receiving notifications
> > from systemd for unit state changes? I currently use Monit for the
> >
On Thursday 13 Feb 2014 13:35:59 Thomas Bächler wrote:
> Am 13.02.2014 13:04, schrieb Paul Gideon Dann:
> > Does anyone know of any standard system for receiving
> > notifications from systemd for unit state changes? I currently
> > use Monit for the monitoring of many proces
Hello all,
Does anyone know of any standard system for receiving
notifications from systemd for unit state changes? I currently
use Monit for the monitoring of many processes, and it'll e-mail
me when things happen (e.g. a process was restarted). Since
switching to systemd, it's felt a bit s
On Wednesday 12 Feb 2014 21:00:54 arnaud gaboury wrote:
> > You'll have to build a custom kernel.
>
> ah...
> Another new step for me.
> fine, I learn, I learn.
That's what makes ArchLinux so awesome: once you're done, your
understanding will be greatly expanded. As you move from project
to pr
On Thursday 30 Jan 2014 11:46:38 Nowaker wrote:
> > A couple months ago, I started getting I/O errors (see below)
whenever
> > I tried to do journalctl
>
> You are able to read all the journald files, aren't you? You are running
> cp -r so it looks like so. `cp` would die with non-zero exit statu
On Thursday 23 Jan 2014 21:59:06 Plonky Duby wrote:
> You can use docker. http://docs.docker.io/en/latest/installation/archlinux/
Thank you; I was not aware of Docker. It looks *awesome*.
Paul
On Tuesday 14 Jan 2014 23:17:53 Maxime Gauduin wrote:
> It is indeed no longer required with VCS sources, and has never been with
> tarballs since those are extracted every time you run makepkg so files you
> might have changed are overwritten anyway. However I sometimes find useful
> to keep doing
On Monday 13 Jan 2014 11:03:32 Bigby James wrote:
> That was how I discovered the multi-version dependencies: As pacman will
> only allow a single version of a package to be installed on the system at a
> given time, I was frequently alerted to "updates" of dependency gems I had
> installed. Middle
On Monday 13 Jan 2014 17:58:59 Maxime Gauduin wrote:
> I only use a few ruby packages. However, you said it yourself, ruby and
> pacman both have different uses, my point was: do not change the content of
> a dir managed by pacman, do so elsewhere. I'm not saying you shouldn't ever
> use both. In t
On Monday 13 Jan 2014 16:35:16 Maxime Gauduin wrote:
> > For system-wide gems, I do "sudo gem install ". That works because
> > I've restored
> > /etc/gemrc so that it reads simply "gem:", instead of "gem:
> > --user-install". I'm still not clear
> > on why this configuration file is altered in t
On Monday 13 Jan 2014 12:59:28 Maxime Gauduin wrote:
> IMHO, the reason why you would choose to use rubygem over pacman depends of
> how extensive a ruby user you are. I like to have gems handled by pacman,
> but I only use a few of them and don't need to have several versions of the
> same gem. Ha
On Monday 13 Jan 2014 13:17:13 Magnus Therning wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 13, 2014 at 11:45 AM, Simon Hanna wrote:
> > Since ruby allready comes with a package manager (mentioned earlier), I
> > never downloaded anything from the aur, but used rubygems instead. My
> > question is, if we really need to h
On Monday 13 Jan 2014 11:38:57 Alfredo Palhares wrote:
> I agree with you, some ruby-packages just are a royal pain in the arse to
> maintain. Sometimes i wish I just when with rbenv[1] and call it a day. I
> still have some packages that use the old naming convention.
>
> But like you said the wo
On Sunday 05 Jan 2014 23:03:23 Mark Lee wrote:
> This all boils down to what does Arch consider a bug. If code that
> cannot be compiled in parallel is a bug then Arch should make parallel
> building the default (since these are bugs that upstream should fix). If
> instead it is not a bug but is th
On Friday 03 Jan 2014 16:26:27 Thomas Bächler wrote:
> Error and inexperience can occur while learning. If you upload to the
> AUR, I expect you to have polished and finished material, not your first
> draft.
>
> There's enough places with kind people who will look at your PKGBUILD
> and point out
On Friday 03 Jan 2014 15:49:27 Thomas Bächler wrote:
> If you are not "experienced", you should think about your operating
> system choice. We are not a kindergarten, we are a distribution with a
> target audience of experienced and advanced users.x
I reckon plenty of Arch users weren't used to cu
On Friday 03 Jan 2014 15:33:05 Martti Kühne wrote:
> Because I have a strong opinion about this. Also to prevent people
> from running into this who are not that experienced in making things
> work.
If someone makes more than a few packages, they will have encountered
makepkg.conf, to
at least s
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