On Thursday 06 May 2010 17:03:54 Dale wrote:
> Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > On Thu, 06 May 2010 10:03:59 -0500, Dale wrote:
> Did you mean press e ?
> >>>
> >>> No.
> >>
> >> I don't see anything in the man page about hitting the c key. What
> >> does that do? I've used e, b and such but never h
On 2010-05-07, Albert Hopkins wrote:
> On Thu, 2010-05-06 at 20:27 +, Grant Edwards wrote:
>> I'm writing an init script for a daemon that needs to be started in a
>> particular directory, and I can't figure out how to do that with
>> start-stop-daemon.
>>
>> It always seems to start the daem
On 2010-05-06, Remy Blank wrote:
> I upgraded xorg-server to 1.7.6 (and the few associated packages) a few
> days ago, and since then I seem to spuriously loose some key presses
> when typing fast. This only happens in X, not on the console. The box is
> a Dell Latitude E6500 laptop.
[...]
> Thi
On 05/07/2010 02:09 AM, Remy Blank wrote:
I upgraded xorg-server to 1.7.6 (and the few associated packages) a few
days ago, and since then I seem to spuriously loose some key presses
when typing fast. This only happens in X, not on the console. The box is
a Dell Latitude E6500 laptop.
I have alr
On Thu, 2010-05-06 at 20:27 +, Grant Edwards wrote:
> I'm writing an init script for a daemon that needs to be started in a
> particular directory, and I can't figure out how to do that with
> start-stop-daemon.
>
> It always seems to start the daemon in '/' regardless of the current
> working
I upgraded xorg-server to 1.7.6 (and the few associated packages) a few
days ago, and since then I seem to spuriously loose some key presses
when typing fast. This only happens in X, not on the console. The box is
a Dell Latitude E6500 laptop.
I have already re-emerged all necessary drivers (xf86-
I'm writing an init script for a daemon that needs to be started in a
particular directory, and I can't figure out how to do that with
start-stop-daemon.
It always seems to start the daemon in '/' regardless of the current
working directory when start-stop-daemon is invoked.
--
Grant Edwards
Am 06.05.2010 18:24, schrieb Daniel Troeder:
> On 05/05/2010 10:23 PM, Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
>> Am 05.05.2010 22:17, schrieb Stefan G. Weichinger:
>>
>>> Remember that I said: "I am not sure which HOWTO I followed" ?
>>>
>>> What if I didn't use aes-256-ecb?
> You don't need to supplay that i
On Wednesday 05 May 2010 13:52:20 Fredrik Andersson wrote:
> Hi fellow gentoo users
>
> I'm trying to connect my laptop to my HTC Hero using wpa_supplicant,
> has anyone done this?
>
> this is what I see in wpa_cli when I do scan_result
>
> #bssid / frequency / signal level / flags / ssid
> #02:
On 05/05/2010 10:23 PM, Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
> Am 05.05.2010 22:17, schrieb Stefan G. Weichinger:
>
>> Remember that I said: "I am not sure which HOWTO I followed" ?
>>
>> What if I didn't use aes-256-ecb?
You don't need to supplay that information to cryptsetup, it can
(should) autodetect
On Thu, 06 May 2010 13:07:37 -0230, Roger Mason wrote:
> This what grep SATA kernel-config says:
>
> # CONFIG_BLK_DEV_IDE_SATA is not set
> CONFIG_SATA_PMP=y
> CONFIG_SATA_AHCI=m
> CONFIG_SATA_SIL24=m
> CONFIG_SATA_SVW=m
> CONFIG_SATA_MV=m
> CONFIG_SATA_NV=m
> CONFIG_SATA_QSTOR=m
> CONFIG_SATA_PR
Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Thu, 06 May 2010 10:03:59 -0500, Dale wrote:
Did you mean press e ?
No.
I don't see anything in the man page about hitting the c key. What
does that do? I've used e, b and such but never heard of c.
It drops you to the grub command l
On 6 May, Roger Mason wrote:
> Stroller writes:
>
>> On 6 May 2010, at 09:37, Roger Mason wrote:
>>> ...
>>> I just built a new machine (celeron 3 GHz) using a script that builds
>>> the kernel using genkernel and a config that is copied from that of
>>> the
>>> kernel on the install cd.
>>
>> A
Stroller writes:
> On 6 May 2010, at 09:37, Roger Mason wrote:
>> ...
>> I just built a new machine (celeron 3 GHz) using a script that builds
>> the kernel using genkernel and a config that is copied from that of
>> the
>> kernel on the install cd.
>
> Are you sure ext[234] is compiled staticall
On Thu, 06 May 2010 10:03:59 -0500, Dale wrote:
> >> Did you mean press e ?
> >>
> > No.
> I don't see anything in the man page about hitting the c key. What
> does that do? I've used e, b and such but never heard of c.
It drops you to the grub command line, it's documented on the GRUB
Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Thu, 06 May 2010 08:34:49 -0500, Dale wrote:
Press c at the GRUB menu.
Did you mean press e ?
No.
I don't see anything in the man page about hitting the c key. What does
that do? I've used e, b and such but never heard of c.
Dale
:-)
Hi,
Does anyone possibly know of any tools in Open Source for exploring
DSP filter design? Something that might allow me to write equations,
stimulate the filter, see the results in a GUI?
Thanks,
Mark
On 6 May 2010, at 09:37, Roger Mason wrote:
...
I just built a new machine (celeron 3 GHz) using a script that builds
the kernel using genkernel and a config that is copied from that of
the
kernel on the install cd.
Are you sure ext[234] is compiled statically into the kernel in
this .con
On 6 May 2010, at 00:51, Iain Buchanan wrote:
...
... Inotify has two drawbacks which make it hard or even impossible
to use for Iain's use case:
a) It does not work recursively which means that you have to
create a
new handle for each subdirectory. Of course, this only means more
work
fo
Roger Mason writes:
>>> Can anyone suggest how to debug this?
Egg on face. The processor is listed in the bios as Intel EM64T.
Does that mean I should re-build this as an amd64 system? If the answer
to that is yes, then I don't understand why the x86 install CD booted
without problems.
Cheer
On Thu, 06 May 2010 08:34:49 -0500, Dale wrote:
> > Press c at the GRUB menu.
> Did you mean press e ?
No.
--
Neil Bothwick
RAM DISK is NOT an installation procedure!
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On 6 May 2010 13:38, Roger Mason wrote:
> Mick writes:
>
>> On 6 May 2010 09:37, Roger Mason wrote:
>>>
>>> Can anyone suggest how to debug this?
>>
>> When I get problems like this I usually run grub in a terminal and
>> then use autocompletion to find out what grub sees:
>>
>> root (hd <-
Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Thu, 06 May 2010 10:08:42 -0230, Roger Mason wrote:
I assume you mean to boot from the install CD then chroot into the new
install and run grub from bash?
Press c at the GRUB menu.
Did you mean press e ?
Dale
:-) :-)
On 2010-04-18 2:05 PM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Apr 2010 13:37:40 -0400, Tanstaafl wrote:
>> Like I said, I have a bunch of *individual* logs (for individual
>> ebuilds)... I was hoping for something a little easier to manage/read,
>> all in one file...
> My preferred approach is to add m
On Thu, 06 May 2010 10:08:42 -0230, Roger Mason wrote:
> I assume you mean to boot from the install CD then chroot into the new
> install and run grub from bash?
Press c at the GRUB menu.
--
Neil Bothwick
The human mind ordinarily operates at only ten per cent of its
capacity ... the rest is
Mick writes:
> On 6 May 2010 09:37, Roger Mason wrote:
>>
>> Can anyone suggest how to debug this?
>
> When I get problems like this I usually run grub in a terminal and
> then use autocompletion to find out what grub sees:
>
> root (hd <--tab
>
> it will list all partitions and hopefully h
On 6 May 2010 09:37, Roger Mason wrote:
> Hello all,
>
> I just built a new machine (celeron 3 GHz) using a script that builds
> the kernel using genkernel and a config that is copied from that of the
> kernel on the install cd. The latter was downloaded and burned from a
> very recent autobuild.
Hello all,
I just built a new machine (celeron 3 GHz) using a script that builds
the kernel using genkernel and a config that is copied from that of the
kernel on the install cd. The latter was downloaded and burned from a
very recent autobuild.
The build process appears to complete successfully
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