Frans Pop <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Saturday 05 August 2006 21:20, martin f krafft wrote:
>> I envision a tool (warning: braindump ahead) that we install *by
>> default* on a standard system, which uses cron to wake up once a day
>
> I think that installing it by default is not really an op
Alle Saturday 05 August 2006 21:20, martin f krafft ha scritto:
> So I made a mistake in the mdadm version currently in testing, and
> published [0] to -testing and -user at the same time as I uploaded
> a new version.
Hello,
Thinking as a mere user, the first thing I would do is check the bug re
Am Donnerstag, den 03.08.2006, 22:40 +0200 schrieb Andreas Barth:
> add that suite to their /etc/apt/sources.list; it is still not
> recommended for everyone, and packages in proposed-updates are not yet
> released.
http://www.de.debian.org/releases/stable/errata
Then we should remove the part w
On Sun, Aug 06, 2006 at 03:57:22PM +0200, Henning Makholm wrote:
> Scripsit Roland Mas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Yeah, I hadn't thought of that. But, ehm, since news bits can be
> > classified per source package, they could be generated once a day, fed
> > to dak and friends, in the pool and pushed
On Sun, Aug 06, 2006 at 12:38:31PM +0300, Lars Wirzenius wrote:
> per second (assuming even distribution). That is not an irrelevant
> amount of traffic even with static web pages, never mind dynamically
> generated, customized RSS feeds.
Just a diff in addition to what has already been said on th
also sprach Henning Makholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006.08.06.1457 +0100]:
> I wonder how much it would confuse apt and its friends if we simply
> piggybacked the information onto the Packages records by adding a new
> field (with the entire text or just an URL), but without bumping the
> version num
Scripsit Roland Mas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Yeah, I hadn't thought of that. But, ehm, since news bits can be
> classified per source package, they could be generated once a day, fed
> to dak and friends, in the pool and pushed to the mirrors.
I wonder how much it would confuse apt and its friends
On Sun, Aug 06, 2006 at 12:36:59PM +0100, martin f krafft wrote:
> also sprach Roland Mas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006.08.06.1114 +0100]:
> > Yeah, I hadn't thought of that. But, ehm, since news bits can be
> > classified per source package, they could be generated once a day, fed
> > to dak and frie
On Sun, Aug 06, 2006 at 01:28:04PM +0200, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
> What does the LSB 3.1 say about amd64 and libdirs? Does it require lib
> to contain 32bit libs?
Does this same question apply to other 64bit arches, like sparc64 or powerpc64
for example ?
Friendly,
Sven Luther
--
To UNS
also sprach Roland Mas <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006.08.06.1114 +0100]:
> Yeah, I hadn't thought of that. But, ehm, since news bits can be
> classified per source package, they could be generated once a day, fed
> to dak and friends, in the pool and pushed to the mirrors.
Yes, definitely. We should u
also sprach Lionel Elie Mamane <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2006.08.06.0516 +0100]:
> The service is attractive, but mailing to root... To my great regret,
> on many machine, mail to local users does not get read these days
It would be configurable, just like cron-apt and apt-listchanges
are.
--
Please
What does the LSB 3.1 say about amd64 and libdirs? Does it require lib
to contain 32bit libs?
MfG
Goswin
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Lars Wirzenius, 2006-08-06 11:40:06 +0200 :
> One million users polling once day, causing one kilobyte of HTTP
> traffic, results in 30 gigabytes of traffic per month, and about 11
> hits per second (assuming even distribution). That is not an
> irrelevant amount of traffic even with static web pa
su, 2006-08-06 kello 11:33 +0200, Stefano Zacchiroli kirjoitti:
> Regarding how to implement it, the most interesting part seems to be
> creating the server side part of the service and make DDs use it. I
> agree with the user comment about using RSS for that.
One million users polling once day, c
On Sat, Aug 05, 2006 at 08:20:55PM +0100, martin f krafft wrote:
> I envision a tool (warning: braindump ahead) that we install *by
> default* on a standard system, which uses cron to wake up once a day
> and check online for important announcements regarding all installed
> packages, and mails the
Hi.
User Here.
RSS would be great, actually. It may not be the flashing red light you're
looking for, but a feed or two for each suite announcing critical updates would
be very much appreciated. Maybe you could ship Firefox (or all the
aggregators in the archive) with something like that
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