Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: "Krzysztof Krzyzaniak (eloy)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
* Package name: libdbix-class-perl
Version : 0.3
Upstream Author : Matt S. Trout <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
* URL : http://search.cpan.org/~agrundma/DBIx-Class/
* License : (Perl:
On Mon, Sep 19, 2005 at 08:12:49PM +0100, Alastair McKinstry wrote:
> Interesting, but very specific to the caching example. There are other
> useful parts of the proposal, too: e.g. if libraries are in ~/lib then
> its easy to have $LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/lib work on multiple
> applications
I
I took a look at your site a couple of hours ago...
and I want to tell you that I'd really love to trade links with you.
I think your site has some really good stuff related to my site's topic
of fax machines and would be a great resource for my visitors.
In fact, I went ahead and added your si
On Mon, 19 Sep 2005 18:25:39 +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Marco d'Itri) wrote:
>On Sep 19, Henrique de Moraes Holschuh <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> Easily done. Conflict with all packages providing blacklist entries by
>> themselves, and convert everything else. This will keep things safe for
>> si
On Mon, Sep 19, 2005 at 09:32:21AM +0200, Marco d'Itri wrote:
> > PROPOSAL 2: ~/.etc/${package_name}/
> Renaming every configuration file is insane. Not even worth discussing.
What about home-etc[1] approach?
This way applications need patches, but it doesn't break anything, and in
the same time
On Sep 20, Bartosz Fenski aka fEnIo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> What about home-etc[1] approach?
Anything which requires a distribution to modify a very large number of
applications is evil and not worth a discussion.
--
ciao,
Marco
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On Tue, Sep 20, 2005 at 02:01:56PM +0200, Marco d'Itri wrote:
> > What about home-etc[1] approach?
> Anything which requires a distribution to modify a very large number of
> applications is evil and not worth a discussion.
Everything which could make users' headache less nagging is worth
discussi
On Sep 20, Bartosz Fenski aka fEnIo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I don't say it's the only solution, but imho something has to be done to
> start fixing mess in ~/.
If you want to do something:
- useful
- which benefits every distribution
- requiring little effort
then start lobbying application d
On Mon, Sep 19, 2005, Alastair McKinstry wrote:
> Interesting, but very specific to the caching example. There are other
> useful parts of the proposal, too: e.g. if libraries are in ~/lib then
> its easy to have $LD_LIBRARY_PATH=$HOME/lib work on multiple
> applications; also
> for an install
I have no idea why you've copied this to the binutils upstream list,
debian-devel, et cetera...
On Tue, Sep 20, 2005 at 10:09:03AM -0400, Camm Maguire wrote:
> Greetings!
>
> Do we have a plan or policy regarding packages which need to depend on
> binutils-dev? Is there now or will there ever be
Greetings!
Do we have a plan or policy regarding packages which need to depend on
binutils-dev? Is there now or will there ever be in the future a
stable binary api, by which I mean one that might be good for a year
or more of development on average? In such a case, would binary api
compatibilit
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Hi all,
I'm about to send a bug to Java packages that depend on libant1.6-java
to change that dependency to 'ant'.
Here is the full explanation with the list of packages:
http://pkg-java.alioth.debian.org/ant/
And here is the package list so you don
Hello All:
I have noticed a behavior which I can't quite understand. I
had noticed that some of my computers getting files from
http.us.debian.org had consistently lower bandwidths than others
pointed to the same source.
I have investigated this by grabbing individual files with wget and I
On Sun, Sep 18, 2005 at 01:33:29PM +0200, Andreas Metzler wrote:
> Michael Vogt <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
[..]
> The remapping features seems not to work with deb-src entries.
>
>
> (SID)[EMAIL PROTECTED]:/tmp$ apt-get -o
> APT::URL-Remap::http://merkel.debian.org/~aba/debian/=h
On Tue, Sep 20, 2005 at 11:42:06AM -0400, Camm Maguire wrote:
> OK, but this is a pity. I still don't understand why this need be the
> case.
Because the interface between BFD and binutils is subject to change and
does on a regular basis, and there are not enough users to bother doing
anything m
Hi all,
as some might have noticed, the last subversion upload do unstable
introduced a package for the java bindings, libsvn-javahl. However,
David Kimdom added support for this because people asked and it "Just
Worked (tm)", AFAICT.
The current situation, though, is that it's completely broken,
Greetings, and thanks so much for your helpful reply!
Daniel Jacobowitz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I have no idea why you've copied this to the binutils upstream list,
> debian-devel, et cetera...
>
Well, upstream for some idea of their release and versioning number
plans, debian-devel as th
On 05-Sep-20 13:41, Raphaël Hertzog wrote:
> Alioth is running out of space and that's mostly because of the
> debian-ppc64 archive.
>
> Please use the alioth project for what it is: a project coordination
> place. Not a Debian repository.
>
> Please remove the archive and host it somewhere else.
Guilherme de S. Pastore wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> Now, we have two possible situations for the next days: either someone
> will volunteer and get that fixed soon, so it "Just Works (tm)" once
> again and we can leave it there for people who really care for it, or it
> will be dropped, as, more than und
Em Ter, 2005-09-20 às 09:34 -0500, Carlo Segre escreveu:
> Any insights? Is this a bug, if so for what package?
I have no idea and haven't investigated what causes this, but it seems
like perfectly reasonable behaviour to me, for a simple reason: it's
more than one machine, and they all have to s
On Thu, Sep 15, 2005 at 02:40:06PM -0700, Christopher Crammond wrote:
> I was curious as to where I might be able to find out what
> non-command-line interfaces into .deb packages are available. For
> instance, is there a C interface that could pull out information such as
> Name, Version, Release
* Michael Vogt ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) [050910 15:57]:
> I'm happy to tell you that apt is able to use those index files
> now. Robert Lemmen and I implmeneted the needed support.
you might be interessted that secure-testing.debian.net has now "native"
support for index diffs (even though only very sh
On Tue, Sep 20, 2005 at 05:44:34PM +0200, Andreas Jochens wrote:
> I currently have no other place to host a public archive for the
> native 64-bit Debian-ppc64 port. Because of this, I did not yet
> delete the debian-ppc64 archive from alioth as you requested.
Debian have access to two openpower
On 05-Sep-20 19:01, Bastian Blank wrote:
> On Tue, Sep 20, 2005 at 05:44:34PM +0200, Andreas Jochens wrote:
> > I currently have no other place to host a public archive for the
> > native 64-bit Debian-ppc64 port. Because of this, I did not yet
> > delete the debian-ppc64 archive from alioth as you
Michael,
That little example is very cool and sure do appreciate you taking the
time to help me out. I got the source code and can take if from here.
Thank-you very much.
-- christopher
Michael Vogt wrote:
On Thu, Sep 15, 2005 at 02:40:06PM -0700, Christopher Crammond wrote:
I
On Tue, Sep 20, 2005 at 07:11:53PM +0200, Martin Schulze wrote:
> The recently released security update of XFree86 in DSA 816 for sarge
> and woody has caused the host security.debian.org to saturate its
> 100MBit/s network connection entirely. Due to the large number of X
> packages, the gross si
Le mardi 20 septembre 2005 à 15:05 -0400, David Nusinow a écrit :
> The modular packages will prevent this sort of thing from happening in the
> future. While this will continue to be a problem throughout the lifetime of
> sarge, hopefully for etch and beyond the X packages won't be a culprit for
>
Dear list,
[CC'ed to debian-science since I imagine that's where most of the
FORTRAN users are. Please follow up to -devel.]
With the latest g++ ABI transition soon to be finished, I have to ask
whether a similar transition is planned for g77 to gfortran. It appears
that the ABI of code generat
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Matthijs Mohlmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
* Package name: python-pyrss2gen
Version : 0.1.1
Upstream Author : Andrew <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
* URL : http://www.dalkescientific.com/Python/PyRSS2Gen.html
* License : BSD
Description
Package: wnpp
Severity: wishlist
Owner: Russ Allbery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
* Package name: libstat-lsmode-perl
Version : 0.50
Upstream Author : Mark-Jason Dominus <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
* URL : http://www.plover.com/~mjd/perl/lsMode/
* License : GPL or Artistic
De
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2005/9/17, Paolo Pantaleo <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Package: xmms
> Version: 1.2.10+cvs20050209-2
> Severity: grave
> Justification: renders package unusable
>
>
>
> -- System Information:
> Debian Release: testing/unstable
> APT prefers testing
> APT policy: (500, 'testing')
> Architecture: i3
* Josselin Mouette [Tue, 20 Sep 2005 21:38:34 +0200]:
> Don't worry, we'll still have KDE for that.
I know this is just teasing, but anyway: a kdelibs upload (the biggest
module) is << 70 mb (*). xorg-x11 is almost 170 mb.
(*) Half of which is documentation, which I've been considering
* sean finney [Mon, 19 Sep 2005 06:13:30 -0400]:
> echo "# user defined blacklists converted from hotplug" > $tmpfile
> cat $blacklist_files | grep -vE '^[[:space:]]*#' | \
> sed -ne 's/^\(.*\)/install \1 /bin/true' > $tmpfile
> ucf $tmpfile /etc/modprobe.d/hotplug-blacklists
Doesn't modp
Hello --
I guess this is the right place to dump an idea, right ?
Here it goes. I wondered about a clever way to load my iptables ruleset via
init.d's script. Surprisingly, I didn't find any with Debian. I didn't search
that much though.
I just wrote one that please me and will dump it here so t
This is obviously a good idea. Having it in the FHS would be ideal.
Unfortunately, this sort of standardization seems to be slow by nature.
--
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Thomas Bushnell wrote:
This is not the correct way to orphan a package.
True. However, it is entirely legitimate for a maintainer to decide that a
package is worthless and withdraw it, which is what Andres Salomon is
planning to do. In fact, it's a kindness to the QA volunteers.
The orpha
Marco D'Itri wrote:
It's arguable how much drivers blacklisting is critical.
It's uncommon for users to do it, and as long as they read the
NEWS.Debian email before rebooting nothing bad will happen anyway.
Almost every time a user does it, it's because it's critical. You cannot
expect users
On Tue, 2005-09-20 at 21:39 -0400, Nathanael Nerode wrote:
> This is obviously a good idea. Having it in the FHS would be ideal.
>
> Unfortunately, this sort of standardization seems to be slow by nature.
Someone suggested lobbying the app developers.
--
---
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Hello Samuel,
Am Mi den 21. Sep 2005 um 3:12 schrieb Samuel Jean:
> Here it goes. I wondered about a clever way to load my iptables ruleset via
> init.d's script. Surprisingly, I didn't find any with Debian. I didn't search
> that much though.
Well,
toi muon hoi gia ve may bay di BALAN (mot chieu) vao khoang thang 10 den thang 11?
hay cho toi gia ve cua mot so hang.
Gia ve re nhat?
Send instant messages to your online friends http://uk.messenger.yahoo.com
On Wed, Sep 21, 2005 at 01:12:38AM -, Samuel Jean wrote:
> Here it goes. I wondered about a clever way to load my iptables ruleset via
> init.d's script. Surprisingly, I didn't find any with Debian. I didn't search
> that much though.
Have a look at Shorewall -- it does similar things to what
On Wed, Sep 21, 2005 at 06:33:47AM +0200, Klaus Ethgen wrote:
> Hello Samuel,
>
> Am Mi den 21. Sep 2005 um 3:12 schrieb Samuel Jean:
> > Here it goes. I wondered about a clever way to load my iptables ruleset via
> > init.d's script. Surprisingly, I didn't find any with Debian. I didn't
> > sea
On Thu, Aug 25, 2005 at 10:41:10AM +0200, Marc Chantreux wrote:
> zsh provides some things i've never seen in bash, for example :
> - file globbing flags, so you can set case insensitivity,
That's a thing bash has: "shopt -s nocaseglob". For the rest...
--
Lionel
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