2008/8/12 Justin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> Zhou Rui schrieb:
>>
>> Hi,
>> I got 2 blocks in today's portage updating, they are about the gnome:
>>
>> $ emerge -pvuDN world
>>
>> These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
>>
>> Calculating world dependencies ... done!
>> [ebuild U ] dev
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 02:59:03PM +0800, Shaochun Wang wrote:
> After adding the preup() function, it works now!
>
It seems that I celebrate too early. It still doesn't work. As a
matter of fact, it is so weird!
After executing the command "brctl addbr br0", the interface br0 is
available only f
On Dienstag, 12. August 2008, b.n. wrote:
> Volker Armin Hemmann ha scritto:
> >> So I can rephrase my question as those two:
> >> Why didn't those projects use the Linux kernel?
> >
> > because they wanted to do something different.
>
> Yes, very probably. However it's a kind of decision I don't
At Mon, 11 Aug 2008 14:50:38 -0700 Joshua D Doll <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Allan Gottlieb wrote:
>> I was away for two weeks and am not trying to do an --update world.
>>
>> Gnome 2.22 has gone stable so there are a number of pkgs to emerge and
>> a few blockers. (full output is below)
>>
>> I
Volker Armin Hemmann ha scritto:
But projects like Haiku and ReactOS created also most of userland from
scratch, not only the kernels.
reactos tries to copy windows - so it will be using the windows userland.
haiku tries to be beos - it is will be able to run beos apps. Also some posix-
app
Matthew R. Lee wrote:
Google earth upgraded over the weekend to version 4.2.205.5730. It installed
fine but it runs like shit. The rendering is so slow as to be completely
unusable. The previous version worked fine so I tried to go back to it but
it's gone, at least according to eix.
Anybody el
On Montag, 11. August 2008, b.n. wrote:
> Volker Armin Hemmann ha scritto:
> > there are many shells. sh, bash, bsh. korn, csh, zsh, dash, tcsh,
> > why make a new one, if you can do incredible stuff with zsh? A shell is
> > not so easy to create.
>
> I understand. I wondered if *conceptually
Allan Gottlieb wrote:
I was away for two weeks and am not trying to do an --update world.
Gnome 2.22 has gone stable so there are a number of pkgs to emerge and
a few blockers. (full output is below)
I can't understand the first blocker msg
[blocks B ] http://www.gnome.org/projects/totem/
Google earth upgraded over the weekend to version 4.2.205.5730. It installed
fine but it runs like shit. The rendering is so slow as to be completely
unusable. The previous version worked fine so I tried to go back to it but
it's gone, at least according to eix.
Anybody else having the same prob
Volker Armin Hemmann ha scritto:
there are many shells. sh, bash, bsh. korn, csh, zsh, dash, tcsh, why
make a new one, if you can do incredible stuff with zsh? A shell is not so
easy to create.
I understand. I wondered if *conceptually new* shells were
present.That's why I thought about
I was away for two weeks and am not trying to do an --update world.
Gnome 2.22 has gone stable so there are a number of pkgs to emerge and
a few blockers. (full output is below)
I can't understand the first blocker msg
[blocks B ] http://www.gnome.org/projects/totem/
Description:
Zhou Rui schrieb:
Hi,
I got 2 blocks in today's portage updating, they are about the gnome:
$ emerge -pvuDN world
These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
Calculating world dependencies ... done!
[ebuild U ] dev-libs/libxml2-2.6.32 [2.6.31] USE="python readline
-bootstrap -bu
Thanks everyone. I was actually hoping for a "read the google, newb"
response, as long as it had the right search terms, cause I didn't have a
clue what to google for :). So again, thanks, I've downloaded a pile of
howto's to my workstation and I work on it on my dead time.
On Sun, Aug 10, 2008 at
Matthew Daubenspeck wrote:
> I am migrating from an amd64 based colo server to a linode system that
> is not amd64, so I don't think most of the automated methods would work,
> although I could be wrong...
Linode? Like http://www.linode.com/? If so, they're starting to support
64-bit (e.g. the Ubu
You could try findsmb, its part of samba. It will list all systems
which respond to netbios requests, on your network.
-dave
Mark Knecht wrote:
Is there a simple way for me to discover the IP address of any random
Windows machine that dropped by and hooked up to my network?
Extra points if the
Hi,
I got 2 blocks in today's portage updating, they are about the gnome:
$ emerge -pvuDN world
These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
Calculating world dependencies ... done!
[ebuild U ] dev-libs/libxml2-2.6.32 [2.6.31] USE="python readline
-bootstrap -build -debug -doc -exa
On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 10:44:43AM -0500, Albert Hopkins wrote:
> The easiest thing to do would be to migrate system, P2V, as is. I dont'
> know what virtual server software you are using, but there are tools to
> do this (plus with Linux it's easy enough doing manually).
>
> Aside from that if y
On Mon, 2008-08-11 at 11:31 -0400, Matthew Daubenspeck wrote:
> In short, I am working on a server migration going from a physical box
> to a virtual system. I pretty much need everything (software-wise)
> identical. What is the best way to do that? I was looking at outputting
> the data from equer
b.n. gmail.com> writes:
> Is there a Linux system somewhere with a *non-GNU* userland?
Linux From Scratch allows you to build from the kernel up.
I'm sure there are efforts (both dead and struggling) to
do something similar to that you have articulated here,
in this discussion.
Volker's comme
In short, I am working on a server migration going from a physical box
to a virtual system. I pretty much need everything (software-wise)
identical. What is the best way to do that? I was looking at outputting
the data from equery to a file, then emerging everything in that file.
Is there an easier
Probably this sequence needs appropriate c-flags changing in make.conf file
after each switching (if I use different ones for 4.3 and <4.3). Doesn't
it?
=== On Monday 11 August 2008, Jan Schneiders wrote: ===
> You can put gcc 4.1 in a slot on your system and choose to compile
> programs
You can put gcc 4.1 in a slot on your system and choose to compile
programs that don't work with the newest version, with the old version:
# emerge -av sys-devel/gcc:4.1 (you may have to unmask: "echo "=sys-
devel/gcc-4.1.2 ~x86" >> /etc/portage/package.keywords)
# gcc-config -l
# gcc-config
2008/8/11, Peter Wood <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> I don't really mind using the ~x86 version of these packages, but wonder why
> the old, stable packages won't compile with a newer gcc. Isn't gcc supposed
> to be downward compatible?
>
No, take a look here:
http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=198121
Hi list,
A few days ago I upgraded gcc from 4.1.2 to 4.3.1-r1 (upgrading
Eclipse-sdk to the latest ~x86 version made installing gcc 4.3.1-r1
necessary, so I thought I would stick with it on my test box).
Now I am re-emerging world and have noticed that a number of packages
which compiled fine
On Sun, Aug 10, 2008 at 7:11 PM, b.n. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I ask it here because I really don't know where to ask it.
>
> Is there a Linux system somewhere with a *non-GNU* userland?
>
> I wonder in particular if:
> - there are Linux systems using the BSD userlands
> - there are Lin
On Sun, Aug 10, 2008 at 7:11 PM, b.n. <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I ask it here because I really don't know where to ask it.
>
> Is there a Linux system somewhere with a *non-GNU* userland?
>
> I wonder in particular if:
> - there are Linux systems using the BSD userlands
> - there are Lin
Hi Felix,
That what it exactly. I couldn't notice it because there were tons of
files in that directory.
I appreciate your help,
Ivan
On Sun, 2008-08-10 at 22:12 -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 11, 2008 at 12:57:26PM +, Ivan Alden wrote:
> > Hi all,
> >
> > I was working in a
On Sat, Aug 9, 2008 at 9:14 PM, Alan McKinnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> You nasty horrible terrible man you. Did you have to remind me of that? :-)
>
> Notebook was delivered 10 days ago on a Friday. That night I read the post
> about it on slashdot. I'm so pissed about this card that I'm tend
On Fri, Aug 08, 2008 at 12:47:35PM +0100, Stroller wrote:
>
> preup() {
> if [[ ${IFACE} == "br0" ]] ;
> then sleep 30 ;
> fi
> return 0
> }
> $
>
> Note that the preup is added in an attempt to overcome similar problems to
> those you describe - starting or resta
29 matches
Mail list logo