> For deb packages, you can use binutils' ar; there's no need for dpkg.
> (IIRC, if you use rpm2tar, you don't need rpm installed unlike
> rpm2cpio, but I'm not 100% sure.)
>
You are right, rpm2targz doesn't require rpm to be installed. I found
I already had it installed yesterday (via libreoffice
Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday 22 February 2015 20:57:43 Dale wrote:
>> I think you need this:
>>
>> app-admin/logrotate
>>
>> Then I think a cron package is needed to run that, set to daily here I
>> think.
> It comes with logrotate:
>
> /etc/cron.daily/logrotate
>
The script does but if you d
On Sunday 22 February 2015 20:57:43 Dale wrote:
> I think you need this:
>
> app-admin/logrotate
>
> Then I think a cron package is needed to run that, set to daily here I
> think.
It comes with logrotate:
/etc/cron.daily/logrotate
--
Rgds
Peter.
lee wrote:
> IIUC, syslog-ng handles rotating the logs. Do I need to do something
> to make it rotate them?
I think you need this:
app-admin/logrotate
Then I think a cron package is needed to run that, set to daily here I
think.
Hope that helps.
Dale
:-) :-)
On Mon, 23 Feb 2015 01:07:55 +0100, lee wrote:
> > There's probably a saslauthd file in /etc/conf.d
>
> Hm, I need to check again to be sure whether there is or isn't.
>
> If there is, then how is it included into the startup script? And why
> isn't there anything in /etc/default for it, wher
On Sun, Feb 22, 2015 at 6:41 PM, lee wrote:
>
> To me it is one of the good reasons, and an important one. Plain text
> can usually always be read without further ado, be it from rescue
> systems you booted or with software available on different operating
> systems. It can be also be processed
On Sun, Feb 22, 2015 at 6:48 PM, lee wrote:
>
> Stroller writes:
>
> > On Wed, 18 February 2015, at 8:40 pm, lee wrote:
>
> The log file seem to be some sort of binary that doesn't display too
> well in less, and there doesn't seem to be any way to read them.
> >>>
> >>> I believe
On Sun, Feb 22, 2015 at 6:41 PM, lee wrote:
>
> Neil Bothwick writes:
>
> > On Wed, 18 Feb 2015 21:49:54 +0100, lee wrote:
> >
> >> > I wonder if the OP is using systemd and trying to read the journal
> >> > files?
> >>
> >> Nooo, I hate systemd ...
> >>
> >> What good are log files you can't rea
"Jan Sever" writes:
> On 02/19/2015 08:02 PM, Fernando Rodriguez wrote:
>> On Tuesday, February 17, 2015 7:26:05 PM lee wrote:
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> how do you read the log files when using syslog-ng?
>>>
>>> The log file seem to be some sort of binary that doesn't display too
>>> well in less, and the
Adam Carter writes:
>>
>> where are we supposed to set the parameters for saslauthd?
>>
>> I edited /etc/init.d/saslauthd, and that's probably not the right place
>> to put them?
>>
>
> There's probably a saslauthd file in /etc/conf.d
Hm, I need to check again to be sure whether there is or isn'
Neil Bothwick writes:
> On Wed, 18 Feb 2015 21:49:54 +0100, lee wrote:
>
>> > I wonder if the OP is using systemd and trying to read the journal
>> > files?
>>
>> Nooo, I hate systemd ...
>>
>> What good are log files you can't read?
>
> You can't read syslog-ng log files without some reading
Stroller writes:
> On Wed, 18 February 2015, at 8:40 pm, lee wrote:
The log file seem to be some sort of binary that doesn't display too
well in less, and there doesn't seem to be any way to read them.
>>>
>>> I believe this may be bug 406623.
>>>
>>> https://bugs.gentoo.org/sh
On 02/22/2015 03:26 AM, lee wrote:
> Nikos Chantziaras writes:
>
>> On a side note, someone should inform the portage devs that higher
>> priorities should equal lower numbers. Don't do it the opposite way to
>> the rest of the world, please :-P
>
> Why should "low" mean "high"? The rest of the
> On Feb 22, 2015, at 12:53, Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
>
>> On Sun, Feb 22, 2015 at 11:05:59AM +0100, Alain Didierjean wrote:
>> My so called memory, located somewhere in what's left of my old brain.
>>
>> I can't remember nor figure out how to set kdm keymap to azerty.
>> Help welcome,
>
> I s
On Sunday 22 February 2015 00:35:59 lee wrote:
> how would I solve this dependency problem:
>
> media-libs/openjpeg:2
>
> (media-libs/openjpeg-2.1.0:2/7::gentoo, ebuild scheduled for merge)
> conflicts with (app-text/mupdf-1.3_p20140118:0/1.3::gentoo, installed) ^
>^^^
> I
On Sun, Feb 22, 2015 at 1:35 AM, lee wrote:
> Hi,
>
> how would I solve this dependency problem:
>
>
> media-libs/openjpeg:2
>
> (media-libs/openjpeg-2.1.0:2/7::gentoo, ebuild scheduled for merge)
> conflicts with
> (app-text/mupdf-1.3_p20140118:0/1.3::gentoo, installed)
> ^
On Sunday 22 Feb 2015 14:53:19 Alain Didierjean wrote:
> - Mail original -
>
> > De: "Mick"
> > À: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> > Envoyé: Dimanche 22 Février 2015 12:19:25
> > Objet: Re: [gentoo-user] Memory leak
> >
> > On Sunday 22 Feb 2015 11:05:59 Alain Didierjean wrote:
> > > My s
On Sun, Feb 22, 2015 at 5:05 AM, Alain Didierjean
wrote:
> My so called memory, located somewhere in what's left of my old brain.
>
> I can't remember nor figure out how to set kdm keymap to azerty.
> Help welcome,
>
Just a suggestion that more accurate subject lines are more likely to
get you he
Nikos Chantziaras writes:
> On a side note, someone should inform the portage devs that higher
> priorities should equal lower numbers. Don't do it the opposite way to
> the rest of the world, please :-P
Why should "low" mean "high"? The rest of the world usually considers
"high" as high and "l
Joseph writes:
> Did anybody install "nomashine" on Gentoo?
> I run onto this instruction, but did not try it yet:
> http://www.thejach.com/view/2014/9/installing_nomachine_on_gentoo
>
> I'm running "nxclient-3.5xxx" and "nxserver-freenx-0.7xxx"
> and I'm afraid something will stop working on my
Hi,
how would I solve this dependency problem:
media-libs/openjpeg:2
(media-libs/openjpeg-2.1.0:2/7::gentoo, ebuild scheduled for merge) conflicts
with
- Mail original -
> De: "Mick"
> À: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Envoyé: Dimanche 22 Février 2015 12:19:25
> Objet: Re: [gentoo-user] Memory leak
>
> On Sunday 22 Feb 2015 11:05:59 Alain Didierjean wrote:
> > My so called memory, located somewhere in what's left of my old
> > brain.
>
On Sat, Feb 21, 2015 at 11:52 PM, Walter Dnes wrote:
> My DSL router modem is at 192.168.123.254. I have an HDHomerun
> network TV tuner that insists on coming up somewhere in the 169.254.X.Y
> block. Up until upgrading from 32 to 64 bits, I was able to see a 2nd
> eth0 (i.e. eth0:1) using the f
On Sat, Feb 14, 2015 at 1:30 AM, Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
> rpms and debs are both cpio files so the easy way is to unpack them and
> see what's going on:
>
> rpm2cpio name.rpm | cpio -iv --make-directories
> dpkg -x somepackage.deb ~/temp/
For deb packages, you can use binutils' ar; there's no nee
On Sat, Feb 7, 2015 at 3:13 PM, Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Sat, Feb 7, 2015 at 2:25 PM, Dale wrote:
>>
>> My partitions are something like this. Normal partitions, /boot and
>> root itself. /usr and /var on LVM.
>
> Gentoo dropped support for booting without mounting /usr early in boot
> a while ba
On Tue, Feb 3, 2015 at 7:05 PM, walt wrote:
> On 02/03/2015 03:29 AM, Tom H wrote:
>> On Mon, Feb 2, 2015 at 8:46 PM, walt wrote:
>>>
>>> This morning I got "waiting on lockfile foo in /usr/portage/distfiles"
>>> "locking not available" from my nfs3 clients when trying to download
>>> needed sour
On Sunday 22 Feb 2015 11:05:59 Alain Didierjean wrote:
> My so called memory, located somewhere in what's left of my old brain.
>
> I can't remember nor figure out how to set kdm keymap to azerty.
> Help welcome,
Have a look in /usr/share/keymaps/i386/azerty/
If your desired keymap is say:
fr
On Sun, Feb 22, 2015 at 11:05:59AM +0100, Alain Didierjean wrote:
> My so called memory, located somewhere in what's left of my old brain.
>
> I can't remember nor figure out how to set kdm keymap to azerty.
> Help welcome,
I set mine in an xorg config file to get qwertz not only in KDM but all o
My so called memory, located somewhere in what's left of my old brain.
I can't remember nor figure out how to set kdm keymap to azerty.
Help welcome,
On Sunday 22 Feb 2015 04:52:34 Walter Dnes wrote:
> My DSL router modem is at 192.168.123.254. I have an HDHomerun
> network TV tuner that insists on coming up somewhere in the 169.254.X.Y
> block. Up until upgrading from 32 to 64 bits, I was able to see a 2nd
> eth0 (i.e. eth0:1) using the fol
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