On Tue, Feb 3, 2009 at 5:39 AM, Andrew Gaydenko wrote:
>
> Ups.. He-he... :-) I have thought it is "frame per second" - is related to "3D
> reality reconstruction", where GL, *fps* and such are needed, used, told
> about. Fine! Probably there are not-FPS :-) beauty ("rich 3D") games for
> little b
On Tuesday 03 February 2009 09:08:31 Paul Hartman wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 10:34 PM, Andrew Gaydenko wrote:
> > On Tuesday 03 February 2009 07:15:29 Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> >> > Ups.. He-he... :-) I have thought it is "frame per second" - is
> >> > related to "3D reality reconstruction",
Paul Hartman wrote:
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 9:20 PM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Am I going crazy? In google.com, when I enter a search query and press
ENTER, nothing happens. Note: only on the *English* google.com. You get
there by clicking the "Google.com in English" link. It's this:
http:/
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 9:20 PM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> Am I going crazy? In google.com, when I enter a search query and press
> ENTER, nothing happens. Note: only on the *English* google.com. You get
> there by clicking the "Google.com in English" link. It's this:
>
> http://www.google.co
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 10:34 PM, Andrew Gaydenko wrote:
> On Tuesday 03 February 2009 07:15:29 Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
>> > Ups.. He-he... :-) I have thought it is "frame per second" - is related
>> > to "3D reality reconstruction", where GL, *fps* and such are needed,
>> > used, told about. Fine
Dirk Uys wrote:
[...]
Have anyone else successfully built kde4.2?
No problems here on AMD64. I didn't use anything outside portage.
Hi
I'm trying to emerge kde-4.2, but the kde-base/systemsettings-4.2.0
ebuild fails:
Scanning dependencies of target kdeinit_kxkb
[ 23%] Building CXX object
kcontrol/kxkb/CMakeFiles/kdeinit_kxkb.dir/kdeinit_kxkb_automoc.o
[ 24%] Building CXX object
kcontrol/kxkb/CMakeFiles/kdeinit_kxkb.dir/rules.
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
[...]
The only thing I can recommend is rebuilding system, and then rebuilding
world to make sure everything is rebuilt using the same toolchain,
including the toolchain itself. Pretty much the same as installing from
scratch though, but at least you won't have to con
Miernik wrote:
Before I had ~amd64 in ACCEPT_KEYWORDS, but in the middle of this
upgrade I thought it was a bad idea, because many programs failed to
compile, so I removed that from make.conf, and did run
'emerge --empty-tree world'
which downgraded everything back to stable. But one thing I cou
Stroller wrote:
>
> On 2 Feb 2009, at 22:52, Miernik wrote:
>
>> !!! Invalid PORTDIR_OVERLAY (not a dir): '/usr/portage/local/layman/
>> java-overlay'
>
> Have you tried removing that from your make.conf?
And after restarting squash_portage (no idea why it didn't start before)
it even built t
Stroller wrote:
>
> On 2 Feb 2009, at 22:52, Miernik wrote:
>
>> !!! Invalid PORTDIR_OVERLAY (not a dir): '/usr/portage/local/layman/
>> java-overlay'
>
> Have you tried removing that from your make.conf?
Yes, no effect:
przehyba ~ # revdep-rebuild -i
* Configuring search environment for re
On Tuesday 03 February 2009 07:15:29 Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> > Ups.. He-he... :-) I have thought it is "frame per second" - is related
> > to "3D reality reconstruction", where GL, *fps* and such are needed,
> > used, told about. Fine! Probably there are not-FPS :-) beauty ("rich 3D")
> > games
Andrew Gaydenko wrote:
On Tuesday 03 February 2009 06:24:40 Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Difficult to find an FPS without violence. Even in Consoles and MS
Windows. Why? FPS = First Person *Shooter*. Shooter = guns and kills ;)
Ups.. He-he... :-) I have thought it is "frame per second" - is re
On Tuesday 03 February 2009 06:26:58 Kenneth Prugh wrote:
>
> It may not be an fps, but I recommend checking out
> games-strategy/hedgewars if you haven't already.
Thanks, is wgetting just now.
Andrew Gaydenko wrote:
On Tuesday 03 February 2009 06:24:40 Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Difficult to find an FPS without violence. Even in Consoles and MS
Windows. Why? FPS = First Person *Shooter*. Shooter = guns and kills ;)
Ups.. He-he... :-) I have thought it is "frame per second" - is re
On Tuesday 03 February 2009 06:24:40 Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> Difficult to find an FPS without violence. Even in Consoles and MS
> Windows. Why? FPS = First Person *Shooter*. Shooter = guns and kills ;)
Ups.. He-he... :-) I have thought it is "frame per second" - is related to "3D
reality r
On Tue, 3 Feb 2009 06:20:24 +0300
Andrew Gaydenko wrote:
> On Tuesday 03 February 2009 06:00:40 Tom wrote:
> > I played Wolfenstein 3D as I was 7, and Doom when I was 8.
> > And I'm in no way disturbed...I think ;)
> >
> > I think you can turn off gore in quake 3,so maybe anything (free)
> > deri
Andrew Gaydenko wrote:
On Tuesday 03 February 2009 06:00:40 Tom wrote:
I played Wolfenstein 3D as I was 7, and Doom when I was 8.
And I'm in no way disturbed...I think ;)
I think you can turn off gore in quake 3,so maybe anything (free)
derived from that engine also has the option!?
Tom
Ok,
Am I going crazy? In google.com, when I enter a search query and press
ENTER, nothing happens. Note: only on the *English* google.com. You
get there by clicking the "Google.com in English" link. It's this:
http://www.google.com/ncr
Does the ENTER key work for anyone? I'm on Firefox 3.0.
On Tuesday 03 February 2009 06:00:40 Tom wrote:
> I played Wolfenstein 3D as I was 7, and Doom when I was 8.
> And I'm in no way disturbed...I think ;)
>
> I think you can turn off gore in quake 3,so maybe anything (free)
> derived from that engine also has the option!?
>
> Tom
Ok, I'll clarify f
I played Wolfenstein 3D as I was 7, and Doom when I was 8.
And I'm in no way disturbed...I think ;)
I think you can turn off gore in quake 3,so maybe anything (free)
derived from that engine also has the option!?
Tom
On 2 Feb 2009, at 22:52, Miernik wrote:
!!! Invalid PORTDIR_OVERLAY (not a dir): '/usr/portage/local/layman/
java-overlay'
Have you tried removing that from your make.conf?
Stroller.
On Tuesday 03 Feb 2009, Robin Atwood wrote:
> No the problem was that Ctrl-Alt-Backspace is not the same as restarting
> xdm. Doing that, I got the new login screen.
Next problem. I am compiling @kdepim-4.2 and it fails because it can't find
KdepimLibs_CONFIG. I saw this before with nepomuk. Sear
> Oh I get it, the computer doesn't want me to see the Obama video. Yes
> that's funny.
>
> Seriously folks. This conversation is WAY off topic. Could those
> interested in this topic please find another venue - even a PRIVATE
> conversation - before this errupts into some sort of
090203 Robin Atwood wrote:
> I have a completely current 3.5.10 system running, so I thought
> I would get a situation where I could choose which system to login to.
> I get my original KDM 3.5 login screen and no new options
> and when I login I do get my original desktop environment,
> albeit wit
> Andrew Gaydenko wrote:
> Has ~amd64 portage such games for my 7 years old son?
Nexuiz seems petty blood free...
But I have integrated graphics, so I haven't been able to turn the
effects all the way on (or use a resolution > 800x600)
Pariksheet
On Tue, 3 Feb 2009 00:37:51 +0200, Dimitris Kavadas wrote:
> emerge: there are no ebuilds to satisfy "=x11-libs/qt-3.3.8-r3".
> (dependency required by
> "net-wireless/kdebluetooth-1.0_beta1-r2" [installed]) (dependency
> required by "world" [argument])
>
> So, what seems to be the problem?
Try
On Mon, 02 Feb 2009 09:22:29 -0600, Harry Putnam wrote:
> The idea from above is to end up with:
>
> localversion1
> localversion2 -> .version
> .version
>
> Where:
>localversion1 contains HOSTNAME
>.version contains number `N' (current build)
>localversion2 is symlinked to .version
On Sunday 01 February 2009, Joerg Schilling wrote:
> Mick wrote:
> > Hi All,
> >
> > I do not seem to be able to run star with the correct options despite
> > some experimenting ... and was hoping you could correct my errors.
>
> Try the command lines from the example section in the man page ;-)
On Mon, 02 Feb 2009 09:22:29 -0600
Harry Putnam wrote:
> Neil Bothwick writes:
>
> > cd /usr/src/linux
> > echo "$(hostname)-" >localversion1
> > ln -s .version localversion2
> >
> > will give each kernel a name with the hostname and version
> > added. .version is automatically incremented each
Has ~amd64 portage such games for my 7 years old son?
On Mon, 02 Feb 2009 17:38:42 -0500
ABCD ABCD wrote:
[...]
> It appears that you may have changed your CHOST at some point in the
> past - if so, you may want to try rebuilding sys-libs/libperl and
> dev-lang/perl, which may fix this error (you might want to try that
> even if you *haven't* changed
Dale wrote:
> Typo there I think. Try revdep-rebuild -i and see if that helps.
Unfortunately it didn't help:
przehyba ~ # revdep-rebuild -i
* Configuring search environment for revdep-rebuild
* Checking reverse dependencies
* Packages containing binaries and libraries broken by a package u
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Arnau Bria wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I'm getting this errorn when trying to emerge pidgin:
>
> gcc-config error: Could not run/locate "i486-pc-linux-gnu-gcc"
>
> My CHOST is:
> # grep CHOST /etc/make.conf
> CHOST="i686-pc-linux-gnu"
>
>
> never changed...
Hello,
After updating portage via emerge --sync, I tried to perform world
update issuing the following command:
emerge -DupvN world
The command ended with the following message:
These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
Calculating dependencies... done!
emerge: there are no ebui
On Tuesday 03 Feb 2009, Paul Hartman wrote:
> On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 2:15 PM, Robin Atwood
wrote:
> > My first attempt at installing KDE 4.2 so trashed my desktop I had to
> > perform a general restore to remove all traces of it. I have a completely
> > current 3.5.10 system running, so I thought
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 2:15 PM, Robin Atwood wrote:
> My first attempt at installing KDE 4.2 so trashed my desktop I had to perform
> a general restore to remove all traces of it. I have a completely current
> 3.5.10 system running, so I thought I would get a situation where I could
> choose which
On Monday 02 Feb 2009, Grant wrote:
> >> >> One of my systems needed Real Time Clock -> PC-style 'CMOS' enabled
> >> >> in the kernel to prevent a Hardware Clock error at startup and to
> >> >> make the 'hwclock' command work. Another of my systems doesn't have
> >> >> Real Time Clock kernel suppo
Hi,
I'm getting this errorn when trying to emerge pidgin:
gcc-config error: Could not run/locate "i486-pc-linux-gnu-gcc"
make[6]: *** [blib/arch/auto/Purple/Purple.so] Error 1
make[6]: Leaving directory
`/var/tmp/portage/net-im/pidgin-2.5.2/work/pidgin-2.5.2/libpurple/plugins/perl/common'
make[5
My first attempt at installing KDE 4.2 so trashed my desktop I had to perform
a general restore to remove all traces of it. I have a completely current
3.5.10 system running, so I thought I would get a situation where I could
choose which system to login to. In fact, on my second attempt, I get
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 12:21 PM, Roy Wright wrote:
> Neil Bothwick wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, 02 Feb 2009 11:14:34 +0100 (CET), Helmut Jarausch wrote:
>>
>>> nice -19 emerge -j4 --buildpgkonly kde-base/kde-meta
>>>
>>> but it takes next to no time instead of hours and
>>> hasn't build the binary package
Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Mon, 02 Feb 2009 11:14:34 +0100 (CET), Helmut Jarausch wrote:
nice -19 emerge -j4 --buildpgkonly kde-base/kde-meta
but it takes next to no time instead of hours and
hasn't build the binary packages without any error messages.
What am I missing?
--buildpkg only works i
AllenJB schrieb:
Hi,
It looks like you've probably used the "x86" stage3 tarball instead of
the "i686" one. While you can change it [0], the best option is probably
to start again using the correct tarball.
Note that if you do want to change CHOST, you _MUST_ follow the guide[0]
or you will
Harry Putnam wrote:
> Harry Putnam writes:
>
>
>> Anyone else have trouble accessing cups documentation?
>>
>> Here using http://localhost:631 just fails with standard message
>> unable to connect to server at 631.
>>
>> The html stuff under /usr/share/cups/html/
>> appears to have the href li
Harry Putnam writes:
> Anyone else have trouble accessing cups documentation?
>
> Here using http://localhost:631 just fails with standard message
> unable to connect to server at 631.
>
> The html stuff under /usr/share/cups/html/
> appears to have the href links setup so that they point to som
On Sat, Jan 31, 2009 at 3:23 PM, Stroller
wrote:
>
> On 31 Jan 2009, at 21:10, Stroller wrote:
>>>
>>> ... Bigger than my
>>> monitor a fair bit so I'm able to pan around this monster by mousing
>>> to the screen edges which pans the rest into view. ...
>>
>> This is definitely available on Windo
On Sat, Jan 31, 2009 at 2:09 PM, Harry Putnam wrote:
> This list may be too good for its own good... hehe.
>
> Sorry to bring this up here but in fact the behavior I'll describe in
> a moment is something I've learned to love from yrs of linux us with
> this enabled. Including the last few yrs on
Anyone else have trouble accessing cups documentation?
Here using http://localhost:631 just fails with standard message
unable to connect to server at 631.
The html stuff under /usr/share/cups/html/
appears to have the href links setup so that they point to somewhere
on the file system that does
On Mon, Feb 2, 2009 at 9:04 AM, Dale wrote:
> Grant wrote:
Oh I get it, the computer doesn't want me to see the Obama video. Yes
that's funny.
Seriously folks. This conversation is WAY off topic. Could those
interested in this topic please find another venue - even a PRIVATE
co
Harry Putnam wrote:
> Dale writes:
>
>
>> The problem I ran into when I copied the old way, cp
>> arch/i386/boot/bzImage /boot, that wasn't the kernel but was a link to
>> the kernel in the x86 directory tree. When I copied the link then the
>> link got broke and then it appeared red on my scr
Grant wrote:
>>> Oh I get it, the computer doesn't want me to see the Obama video. Yes
>>> that's funny.
>>>
>>>
>> Oh, what an intelligent machine you've got ;-p
>> Did it already point you to Tarpley's biography about Hussein Obama ?
>> Or to Obma's con
>maybe a pointer to the documentation?
Is there such a thing? I mean a comprehensive guide for doing such work
on (not only) gentoo systems?
Tom
>> Oh I get it, the computer doesn't want me to see the Obama video. Yes
>> that's funny.
>>
> Oh, what an intelligent machine you've got ;-p
> Did it already point you to Tarpley's biography about Hussein Obama ?
> Or to Obma's connections to Brezinski (the one who wants t
>> >> One of my systems needed Real Time Clock -> PC-style 'CMOS' enabled in
>> >> the kernel to prevent a Hardware Clock error at startup and to make
>> >> the 'hwclock' command work. Another of my systems doesn't have Real
>> >> Time Clock kernel support enabled at all, and yet 'hwclock' works
>
Grant gmail.com> writes:
> CHOST="i486-pc-linux-gnu"
> It's a 32-bit CPU. I'm just confused as to why it doesn't qualify as
> a 686 instead of 486.
Run:
cat /proc/cpuinfo
to be certain about the cpu. YOu can usually do this with any boot/install
disk, prior to installation.
James
> It looks like you've probably used the "x86" stage3 tarball instead of the
> "i686" one. While you can change it [0], the best option is probably to
> start again using the correct tarball.
>
> Note that if you do want to change CHOST, you _MUST_ follow the guide[0] or
> you will end up with prob
Dale writes:
> The problem I ran into when I copied the old way, cp
> arch/i386/boot/bzImage /boot, that wasn't the kernel but was a link to
> the kernel in the x86 directory tree. When I copied the link then the
> link got broke and then it appeared red on my screen. I thought I was
> going nu
Neil Bothwick writes:
> cd /usr/src/linux
> echo "$(hostname)-" >localversion1
> ln -s .version localversion2
>
> will give each kernel a name with the hostname and version
> added. .version is automatically incremented each time you run make.
I'm sorry for being so dense but that isn't clear to
Dirk Heinrichs-2 wrote:
>
> Am Montag, 2. Februar 2009 14:03:29 schrieb reQuiem23:
>
>> when i remove checkfs, though, it
>> would not solve the problem of localmount being run before fsck, would
>> it?
>
> Sure it would.
>
>> the mounted /home part could still not be scanned, i suppose. am
On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 03:23:56 +
Stroller wrote:
> > make all modules_install install
> >
> > Which also, as a nice bonus, backs up your kernel config too.
>
> Does this not also add the system.map file & a couple of others to /
> boot ?
>
> I think I tried this &/or genkernel & when I looked
On Sunday 01 Feb 2009, Grant wrote:
> >> One of my systems needed Real Time Clock -> PC-style 'CMOS' enabled in
> >> the kernel to prevent a Hardware Clock error at startup and to make
> >> the 'hwclock' command work. Another of my systems doesn't have Real
> >> Time Clock kernel support enabled a
Am Montag, 2. Februar 2009 14:03:29 schrieb reQuiem23:
> when i remove checkfs, though, it
> would not solve the problem of localmount being run before fsck, would it?
Sure it would.
> the mounted /home part could still not be scanned, i suppose. am i wrong
> here?
Yes.
Bye...
Dirk
Sebastian Günther wrote:
> * Stroller (strol...@stellar.eclipse.co.uk) [01.02.09 00:23]:
>
>> On 31 Jan 2009, at 22:54, Grant wrote:
>>
>>
> Oh I get it, the computer doesn't want me to see the Obama video. Yes
> that's funny.
>
Oh, what an intelligent machine y
Bugzilla from en.a...@gmail.com wrote:
>
> -BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
> Hash: SHA1
>
> reQuiem23 wrote:
>> hi all,
>>
>> i just noticed some warnings in my bootup process. the order of the
>> services
>> in question is checkfs - localmount - fsck. however, checkfs does the
>> pending
On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 11:05:45 +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> --buildpkg only works if the dependent packages are installed,
Sorry, wrong way round, I meant dependencies, not dependent packages.
--
Neil Bothwick
God made wrinkles to show where smiles have been.
signature.asc
Description: PGP si
On Mon, 02 Feb 2009 11:14:34 +0100 (CET), Helmut Jarausch wrote:
> nice -19 emerge -j4 --buildpgkonly kde-base/kde-meta
>
> but it takes next to no time instead of hours and
> hasn't build the binary packages without any error messages.
> What am I missing?
--buildpkg only works if the dependent
* Stroller (strol...@stellar.eclipse.co.uk) [01.02.09 00:23]:
>
> On 31 Jan 2009, at 22:54, Grant wrote:
>
Oh I get it, the computer doesn't want me to see the Obama video. Yes
that's funny.
>>>
>>> Oh, what an intelligent machine you've got ;-p
>>> Did it already point you to Tarpley's
Hi,
again for the kde upgrade I'd like to prepare the upgrade
by build all necessary binary packages and do the real update
some times later when it doesn't matter if the machine is down
for some time
Using portage 2.2_rc23 I've just tried
nice -19 emerge -j4 --buildpgkonly kde-base/kde-meta
bu
Hi,
It looks like you've probably used the "x86" stage3 tarball instead of
the "i686" one. While you can change it [0], the best option is probably
to start again using the correct tarball.
Note that if you do want to change CHOST, you _MUST_ follow the guide[0]
or you will end up with probl
On Mon, 2 Feb 2009 03:23:56 +, Stroller wrote:
> > Which also, as a nice bonus, backs up your kernel config too.
>
> Does this not also add the system.map file & a couple of others to /
> boot ?
It add three files, the kernel, the config and System map. The first is
needed, the second is
Hi,
I just want to ask, Is there anyone, that have problem with "kernel path
slowdowns"? I think that this is made by i965GMA graphic card with GEM
support under 2.6.28 Kernel (bare, vanilla and gentoo sourcess). I've
tried Intel's patches from www.intellinuxgraphics.org but this also
don't work.
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