I have a laptop that has been running Linux Kernel 2.6.30 Gentoo-R8 (gentoo
sources, don't remember which version) for a while. It has a Broadcom 4306 Rev
2
wireless card that has been working well with that kernel. I extracted the
firmware from the broadcom-wl-4.150.10.5 blob a while ago using
On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 11:44 AM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> On 08/12/2010 07:24 PM, Paul Hartman wrote:
>>
>> [...]
>> In X the UI responsiveness randomly goes bad, keyboard especially. At
>> first it'll be fine, then simply using Konsole and typing will begin
>> to slow down. Also, screen output
On Fri, 2010-08-13 at 09:03 +0800, Thomas Yao wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 13, 2010 at 5:46 AM, dan blum wrote:
> >
> > I am currently running xorg 1.7, which crashes very frequently. When I used
> > to run xorg 1.65 everything was running fine. Can anyone clue me in on
> > how to emerge an older vers
Stroller wrote:
On 11 Aug 2010, at 19:16, Dale wrote:
Stroller wrote:
On 10 Aug 2010, at 20:22, Hazen Valliant-Saunders wrote:
...
Good Luck getting people to change them frequently and haveing your
techs and it departments meeting complexity and length policy.
I'm pretty sure that's a tr
On Fri, Aug 13, 2010 at 5:46 AM, dan blum wrote:
>
> I am currently running xorg 1.7, which crashes very frequently. When I used
> to run xorg 1.65 everything was running fine. Can anyone clue me in on how
> to emerge an older version of the program.
>
> Thanks.
>
>
Maybe you should have a lo
On Thursday 12 August 2010 23:46:58 dan blum wrote:
> I am currently running xorg 1.7, which crashes very frequently. When I used
> to run xorg 1.65 everything was running fine. Can anyone clue me in on
> how to emerge an older version of the program.
>
> Thanks.
echo '>=x11-base/xorg-x11-1.7'
On 2010-08-12 23:46, dan blum wrote:
> I am currently running xorg 1.7, which crashes very frequently.
>When I used to run xorg 1.65 everything was running fine. Can
>anyone clue me in on how to emerge an older version of the program.
I assume you are talking about the xorg-server? Mask your cur
On 08/13/2010 12:46 AM, dan blum wrote:
I am currently running xorg 1.7, which crashes very frequently. When I used to
run xorg 1.65 everything was running fine. Can anyone clue me in on how to
emerge an older version of the program.
By masking 1.7 and above. >=x11-base/xorg-server-1.7
I am currently running xorg 1.7, which crashes very frequently. When I used to
run xorg 1.65 everything was running fine. Can anyone clue me in on how to
emerge an older version of the program.
Thanks.
On Thursday 12 August 2010 21:43:17 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Thursday 12 August 2010 20:21:23 Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > The command I use is:
> >
> > $ apg -m8 -x8 -MCNL
> > Badnack9
> > VeOsFid5
> > JucWeac9
> > EowtUzt1
> > SceybEf8
> > ByejCys1
>
> After following this thread I emerged apg, t
On Thursday 12 August 2010 20:21:23 Alan McKinnon wrote:
> The command I use is:
>
> $ apg -m8 -x8 -MCNL
> Badnack9
> VeOsFid5
> JucWeac9
> EowtUzt1
> SceybEf8
> ByejCys1
After following this thread I emerged apg, thinking it looked useful.
But according to the man page and apg --help, the only
On Thursday 12 August 2010 15:01:12 Stroller wrote:
> On 11 Aug 2010, at 21:30, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > ...
> > My users pick their own passwords - I present a list of 5 from apg
> > and let
> > them pick one
>
> apg's results seem awfully unmemorable by default.
>
> I tend to prefer random pass
Firefox just re-emerged. I dunno why, but it's usually benign. But I
get this message.
LOG: install
Fallback PaX marking -m
/var/tmp/portage/www-client/firefox-3.6.8/image///usr/lib/mozilla-firefox/firefox
LOG: postinst
What in the world does this mean? pax is not in flagedit. I
unde
On Thu, Aug 12, 2010 at 11:44 AM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> On 08/12/2010 07:24 PM, Paul Hartman wrote:
>>
>> [...]
>> In X the UI responsiveness randomly goes bad, keyboard especially. At
>> first it'll be fine, then simply using Konsole and typing will begin
>> to slow down. Also, screen output
Trying to start Mumble (version 1.2.2) aborts with:
SSL: Added CA certificates from '/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt'
No ciphers of at least 128 bit found
Aborted
I did file a bug about it
(http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=332245) but no solution thus
far. I don't know what to do. D
On 08/12/2010 07:24 PM, Paul Hartman wrote:
[...]
In X the UI responsiveness randomly goes bad, keyboard especially. At
first it'll be fine, then simply using Konsole and typing will begin
to slow down. Also, screen output in general seems to freeze until I
touch the mouse or keyboard. Even somet
On Fri, Aug 13, 2010 at 12:24 AM, Paul Hartman <
paul.hartman+gen...@gmail.com > wrote:
> Hi, I recently upgraded my kernel to 2.6.35.1 and my KDE to 4.5. After
> rebooting, I have some weird, possibly unrelated issues:
>
> During bootup, boot process hangs on "waiting for uevents" for ~30
> secon
Hi, I recently upgraded my kernel to 2.6.35.1 and my KDE to 4.5. After
rebooting, I have some weird, possibly unrelated issues:
During bootup, boot process hangs on "waiting for uevents" for ~30
seconds or so. I don't remember this ever happening before. As far as
I can tell everything still works
On 08/11/2010 07:37 PM, James wrote:
> Baseline- I'm lazy and not very smart:
>
> So my console output upon booting berated me
> about continuing to use sysfs. OK. So I removed
> it and built a new kernel (AMD 64).
>
> Everything works but the DVD. Ok, so
> I need a udev rule to fix it? Googling
On 12 Aug 2010, at 03:37, James wrote:
...
So my console output upon booting berated me
about continuing to use sysfs. OK. So I removed
it and built a new kernel (AMD 64).
Everything works but the DVD.
In what way doesn't it work?
Do you have something like /dev/dvd ? Where does it point to?
On 11 Aug 2010, at 21:30, Alan McKinnon wrote:
...
My users pick their own passwords - I present a list of 5 from apg
and let
them pick one
apg's results seem awfully unmemorable by default.
I tend to prefer random password generators that create pronounceable
nonsense words, by stringin
On 11 Aug 2010, at 19:16, Dale wrote:
Stroller wrote:
On 10 Aug 2010, at 20:22, Hazen Valliant-Saunders wrote:
...
Good Luck getting people to change them frequently and haveing
your techs and it departments meeting complexity and length policy.
I'm pretty sure that's a trivial setting fo
I have check it again ,I compile it into the kernel
On 12 August 2010 19:32, Alex Schuster wrote:
> sam new writes:
>
> > any one help?
>
> Yes, google. With 'rootfstype=ext4 initrd genkernel' the first hit shows
> bug #221245 (rootfs is incorrectly mounted as ext2). I assume you have
> ext4 com
thanks, I have google yet maybe wrong keywords ,yes i compiled as
module,does it comiled in kernel can slove the problem?
On 12 August 2010 19:32, Alex Schuster wrote:
> sam new writes:
>
> > any one help?
>
> Yes, google. With 'rootfstype=ext4 initrd genkernel' the first hit shows
> bug #221245
sam new writes:
> any one help?
Yes, google. With 'rootfstype=ext4 initrd genkernel' the first hit shows
bug #221245 (rootfs is incorrectly mounted as ext2). I assume you have
ext4 compiled as module?
Wonko
any one help?
On 12 August 2010 11:22, sam new wrote:
> Hi all,
>I transfer data to a new harddisk ,and use LVM . when it boots up
> ,the root is mounted as ext2 ,the real filesystem is ext4 ,how should I do ?
>
> here is /etc/fstab
> /dev/sda5 /boot ext3
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