· maxim wexler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I'd like to be able to cp or mv certain files from a
> dir according to their timestamp.
Use "find" and "xargs".
Alexander Skwar
--
Any sufficiently advanced bug is indistinguishable from a feature.
-- Rich Kulawiec
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.
· maxim wexler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I can't get it to work. I used -ctime, -mtime, -mmin.
How did you use it?
Alexander Skwar
--
Cold, adj.:
When the politicians walk around with their hands in their own pockets.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
· Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Not in the way that causes the problems, of -5ing everything. When i used
> etc-update, I wuld go through the list, accepting some changes and
> rejecting others, then -5 the remainder, which were often example configs.
That's what I do as well.
> That's no
maxim wexler wrote:
>> find has many options related to searching by time
>> (hours,
>> minutes, etc) and you can select by atime, ctime or
>> mtime. It's
>> all in the man page
>>
>
> I can't get it to work. I used -ctime, -mtime, -mmin.
> The files were created on the 26th of this month us
On Thursday 28 September 2006 21:43, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Router 3rd and 4th net interface problem':
> I'm pretty confused. I'm trying to get the system in question to
> behave like a solid-state router that you can plug an ethernet jack
> into and be on the ne
On Thursday 28 September 2006 21:18, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Router 3rd and 4th net interface problem':
> My buddy just told me that most modern NICs do "autosensing" so they
> don't require a crossover cable. Is that right?
Yes, all GigE cards are required to do
> eth0 is connected to the WAN (DSL modem/router), and ath0, eth1, and
> eth2 are all meant to allow other systems to connect to the LAN via
> DHCP. Should I be configuring eth1 and eth2 as 192.168.0.1?
No. Consider the case where your system needs to send an IP packet to
192.168.0.100. How wi
On Friday 29 September 2006 01:04, Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
> On Thursday 28 September 2006 17:53, Wolfgang Illmeyer
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user] emerge -D
>
> pulling in more than it should these days?!':
> > If I remember
> > correctly, -D usually meant "do not downgr
On 9/28/06, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
eth0 is connected to the WAN (DSL modem/router), and ath0, eth1, and
eth2 are all meant to allow other systems to connect to the LAN via
DHCP. Should I be configuring eth1 and eth2 as 192.168.0.1?
No. Consider the case where your system needs to se
Grant,
I have never made a cross over cable before, probs best to look on google,
there is bound to be a guide somewhere.
As for you settings, I can't see anything wrong with them.
My buddy just told me that most modern NICs do "autosensing" so they
don't require a crossover cable. Is that
On Thu, Sep 28, 2006 at 02:15:04PM -0700, Daevid Vincent wrote:
> Something has changed recently with 'emerge'. Whenever I use the -D option,
> which I am pretty much in the habbit of typing 'emerge -Dav' or 'emerge
> -Davu world/system', I notice it pulling in more stuff than it should. It
> never
> I have a Gentoo router with eth0 connected to the WAN (DSL modem/router)
> and ath0 connected to the LAN. It works perfectly.
>
> I've added two ethernet cards and I'm trying to connect from another
> machine to one of the new cards (eth1 and eth2). ifconfig shows the cards
> are detected just
> find has many options related to searching by time
> (hours,
> minutes, etc) and you can select by atime, ctime or
> mtime. It's
> all in the man page
I can't get it to work. I used -ctime, -mtime, -mmin.
The files were created on the 26th of this month using
abcde. All the other files in the
On 9/28/06, Daevid Vincent <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
But when I do
emerge -Dav sys-apps/baselayout
It pulls in baselayout, python, perl, openssl (clearly the last two are not
needed or related to baselayout)
Not true at all.
With the right USE flags, baselayout depends on coreutils, which
On Friday 29 September 2006 01:20, Daevid Vincent wrote:
> Yes. 'deep' is exactly what I expect -D to do. My incancation is the same
> as it's been for years, its' that -D acts more like a -u now.
--deep and -D are the same thing
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Friday 29 September 2006 01:32, Daevid Vincent wrote:
> > Portage is developing quite fast at the moment so it is quite
> > possible that you have discovered some change in behaviour (either due to
> > a bug or due to permanent changes) but I don't see anything wrong in this
> > mail... What mak
Well, seeing like this..you're right :p
Nico wrote:
> you think bad :)
Nope! I agree with the OP. My plain "2 buttons + scroller" mouse wasn't
detected too. So I copied my old xorg.conf.
I really think xorg configuration should be more user friendly. Woking X
is crucial for not getting newbies scared. ;-)
--
Best regards,
Daniel
--
John Blinka wrote:
> Hi, all,
>
> I run Gentoo on a very old 150 mhz pentium laptop. As you can imagine,
> it's painful to update Gentoo packages on it. I've been attempting
> to use distcc and crossdev so that the more more modern i686 machines on my
> local network can do most of the compiling
On Thu, 2006-09-28 at 14:05 -0400, John Blinka wrote:
> Hi, all,
>
> I run Gentoo on a very old 150 mhz pentium laptop. As you can imagine,
> it's painful to update Gentoo packages on it. I've been attempting
> to use distcc and crossdev so that the more more modern i686 machines on my
> local n
you think bad :)
> -Original Message-
> Portage is developing quite fast at the moment so it is quite
> possible that
> you have discovered some change in behaviour (either due to a
> bug or due to
> permanent changes) but I don't see anything wrong in this
> mail... What makes
> you think it pulls in
Yes. 'deep' is exactly what I expect -D to do. My incancation is the same as
it's been for years, its' that -D acts more like a -u now.
DÆVID
> -Original Message-
> From: Wolfgang Illmeyer [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Sent: Thursday, September 28, 2006 3:53 PM
> To: gentoo-user@lists.ge
Hi group,
I notice that after emerge -u system all the links of
the form /usr/bin/i386-pc-linux-gnu/*,
/usr/i386-pc-linux-gnu/bin/* and
/usr/i386-pc-linux-gnu/lib/* point nowhere(flashing
white on red).
Since this is a 686, should I worry? Is it safe to
just delete them or should they be fixed, a
On Thursday 28 September 2006 17:53, Wolfgang Illmeyer
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote about 'Re: [gentoo-user] emerge -D
pulling in more than it should these days?!':
> If I remember
> correctly, -D usually meant "do not downgrade".
That was -U (--upgrade-only), which is no longer documented.
--
"I
Catalin Trifu wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Is FEATURES properly set in /etc/make.conf.
>
Yes, FEATURES="distcc"
> I think you should use distcc-config --set-hosts to set the compiling farm
> hosts and localhost is not necessary.
>
I've used distcc-config. All it does is write to /etc/distc
Am Donnerstag, 28. September 2006 23:15 schrieb Daevid Vincent:
> Something has changed recently with 'emerge'. Whenever I use the -D option,
> which I am pretty much in the habbit of typing 'emerge -Dav' or 'emerge
> -Davu world/system', I notice it pulling in more stuff than it should. It
> never
On Thursday 28 September 2006 00:09, Bryce Verdier wrote:
> I've had it up for a couple of days. Nothing seriously wrong yet.
> Although, watching live TV on my box is a little choppier now... for
> some reason. The "chmod +s mythfrontend" did help, but its still not
> fluid on the live tv playback
On Thursday 28 September 2006 23:15, Daevid Vincent wrote:
> Something has changed recently with 'emerge'. Whenever I use the -D option,
> which I am pretty much in the habbit of typing 'emerge -Dav' or 'emerge
> -Davu world/system', I notice it pulling in more stuff than it should. It
> never acte
Something has changed recently with 'emerge'. Whenever I use the -D option,
which I am pretty much in the habbit of typing 'emerge -Dav' or 'emerge
-Davu world/system', I notice it pulling in more stuff than it should. It
never acted like this before. It's only been within the past few weeks. On
an
Hi,
Is FEATURES properly set in /etc/make.conf.
I think you should use distcc-config --set-hosts to set the compiling farm
hosts and localhost is not necessary.
Did you check if /etc/conf.d/distcc is correctly configured on all the boxes
like on which interface they listen on a
On Thu, 2006-28-09 at 11:14 +0200, Wolfgang Illmeyer wrote:
> Hi,
>
> Have a look at sys-block/gpart, it can probably help you.
Yes, I discovered gpart last night. It can be a useful tool for
partition problems, although in this case it has turned out that
testdisk was what I needed.
gpart doesn
Okay, I figured out why this wasn't working basicially. For whatever reason
my menu.1st file was no longer a symlink to grub.conf. therefore no matter
what changes I was making to grub.conf were not being read (duh). It was
just coincidence that all my kernels were working since they all pointed to
Now I love Gentoo as a distribution, but the way to setup X *must* be
improved! I have just finished installing on an older Athlon with a Nvidia
2mx graphic card.
Xorg -configure just fails: it says it can't detect my mouse (it's an IBM ps/2
trackpoint).
xorgconfig gives an unusable config.
In
Hi Mick,
on Monday, 2006-09-25 at 22:54:49, you wrote:
> I must be doing something wrong:
>
> $ ./recoverpics
> ./recoverpics: line 1: /bin: is a directory
> ./recoverpics: line 2: /bin: is a directory
> ./recoverpics: line 3: syntax error near unexpecte
On 9/27/06, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have a Gentoo router with eth0 connected to the WAN (DSL modem/router) and
ath0 connected to the LAN. It works perfectly.
I've added two ethernet cards and I'm trying to connect from another machine
to one of the new cards (eth1 and eth2). ifconfi
Hi, all,
I run Gentoo on a very old 150 mhz pentium laptop. As you can imagine,
it's painful to update Gentoo packages on it. I've been attempting
to use distcc and crossdev so that the more more modern i686 machines on my
local network can do most of the compiling for this i586 box. However,
I
maxim wexler wrote:
Hi group,
I don't even know if this is a problem because my unit
is a 686 but these all display in flashing white on
red:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ ls -l /usr/i386*/bin
total 0
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 57 Dec 20 2005 addr2line ->
/usr/i386-pc-linux-gnu/binutils-bin/2.15.92.0.2/ad
On Thursday 28 September 2006 18:16, maxim wexler wrote:
> Hi group,
>
> I'd like to be able to cp or mv certain files from a
> dir according to their timestamp.
>
> man cp mentions the '--preserve' option but I don't
> think that's what I need.
>
> Does somebody know of some sort of script or perl
I used to use this for moving old mail to an archive folder. Just change the
directories, and you should be golden.
alias archive='find ~/.maildir/inbox/cur -mtime +30 -exec mv {}
~/.maildir/inbox/archive/cur/. \;'
Dave
On Thu, 28 Sep 2006 09:24:25 -0700
darren kirby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 9/28/06, maxim wexler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'd like to be able to cp or mv certain files from a
dir according to their timestamp.
man cp mentions the '--preserve' option but I don't
think that's what I need.
Does somebody know of some sort of script or perl or
python pass that'll do it
quoth the maxim wexler:
> Hi group,
>
> I'd like to be able to cp or mv certain files from a
> dir according to their timestamp.
Have a look at find. You can whip up a one-liner using the -atime, -mtime
or -ctime tests (depending on your intent) and use -exec to do the cp or
mv...
> -Maxim
-d
Hi group,
I'd like to be able to cp or mv certain files from a
dir according to their timestamp.
man cp mentions the '--preserve' option but I don't
think that's what I need.
Does somebody know of some sort of script or perl or
python pass that'll do it?
-Maxim
Hi group,
I don't even know if this is a problem because my unit
is a 686 but these all display in flashing white on
red:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ ls -l /usr/i386*/bin
total 0
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 57 Dec 20 2005 addr2line ->
/usr/i386-pc-linux-gnu/binutils-bin/2.15.92.0.2/addr2line
lrwxrwxrwx 1 r
On Thursday 28 September 2006 05:19, Grant wrote:
> I have a Gentoo router with eth0 connected to the WAN (DSL modem/router)
> and ath0 connected to the LAN. It works perfectly.
>
> I've added two ethernet cards and I'm trying to connect from another
> machine to one of the new cards (eth1 and eth
On 07:12 Thu 28 Sep , Grant wrote:
> >> I have a Gentoo router with eth0 connected to the WAN (DSL modem/router)
> >and
> >> ath0 connected to the LAN. It works perfectly.
> >>
> >> I've added two ethernet cards and I'm trying to connect from another
> >machine
> >> to one of the new cards (
On Thu, 28 Sep 2006 07:12:47 -0700, Grant wrote:
> > > config_eth0="192.168.1.2 netmask 255.255.255.0"
> > > config_ath0="192.168.0.1 broadcast 192.168.0.255 netmask
> > > config_eth1="192.168.0.1 broadcast 192.168.0.255 netmask
> > > config_eth2="192.168.0.1 broadcast 192.168.0.255 netmask
>
> D
> I have a Gentoo router with eth0 connected to the WAN (DSL modem/router) and
> ath0 connected to the LAN. It works perfectly.
>
> I've added two ethernet cards and I'm trying to connect from another machine
> to one of the new cards (eth1 and eth2). ifconfig shows the cards are
> detected just
Grant gmail.com> writes:
> I've added two ethernet cards and I'm trying to connect from another machine
> to one of the new cards (eth1 and eth2).
Hello Grant,
If you look at /etc/conf.d/net.example, you'll get some ideas.
I have a machine with (4) interfaces and here is what I use
for /etc/
Rumen Yotov qrypto.org> writes:
> A couple of week ago, I installed a system using 2006.1 Livecd
To day, I took a look at the /etc/group file and found 'gentoo'
listed in several groups, including wheel
(wheel audio cdrom usb users games) to be specific.
I'm thinking this must be a ves
On Thursday 28 September 2006 09:44, Suranga Kasthuriarachchi wrote:
> Please anyone have experience about asterisk setup. and I'm very new to
> asterisk. so please help me to configure my asterisk server.
> i need to know like what are the basic requirement for to setup asterisk..
http://www.free
Hi all,
I've setup a user Apache setup but for some reason I cannot htaccess
the cgi-bin in the one folder.
here is the details :
.htaccess in /home/user/public_html/cgi-bin
AuthType Basic
AuthUserFile /etc/apache2/htpasswd/user
AuthName "user"
require valid-user
satisfy any
httpd.conf
Hi,
Have a look at sys-block/gpart, it can probably help you.
In your other thread you mentioned you had no space for backing up a
partition. Too bad I didn't have the idea earlier, but you could create
a "copy on write" partiton, for example with network block devices (needs
kernel support an
On 21:19 Wed 27 Sep , Grant wrote:
> I have a Gentoo router with eth0 connected to the WAN (DSL modem/router) and
> ath0 connected to the LAN. It works perfectly.
>
> I've added two ethernet cards and I'm trying to connect from another machine
> to one of the new cards (eth1 and eth2). ifcon
quoth the Suranga Kasthuriarachchi:
> i need to know like what are the basic requirement for to setup asterisk..
http://chayden.net/Asterisk/SeUpAsteriskAtHome.htm
http://www.voip-info.org/wiki/view/Asterisk%40home+Handbook+Wiki
http://nerdvittles.com/index.php?p=61
http://dumbme.voipeye.com.au/a
Dear all,Please anyone have experience about asterisk setup. and I'm very new to asterisk. so please help me to configure my asterisk server.i need to know like what are the basic requirement for to setup asterisk..
Thanking you,Suranga
On Wed, 27 Sep 2006 22:17:08 -0700, David Grant wrote:
> Can anyone recommend a good non-ndiswrapper USB wireless 802.11g NIC?
http://www.scan.co.uk/Products/ProductInfo.asp?WebProductID=369495
I used one with my iBook for around 9 months. It worked well with the
zd1211 drivers, which are now in
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