On Thursday 12 October 2006 01:42, PaulNM <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Dumb question':
> Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
> > It would of course solve the issue. *Nothing* short of a kernel
> > upgrade requires a reboot though. And I mean tha
On Thursday 12 October 2006 08:42, PaulNM wrote:
> Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
> > It would of course solve the issue. *Nothing* short of a kernel
> > upgrade requires a reboot though. And I mean that literally. So
> > usually not.
>
> Just being a bit pedantic here, but what about init? Even switchi
On Wednesday 11 October 2006 19:43, Michael Sullivan wrote:
> Wow, files can exist without file names. I think I found a topic for
> discussion in philosophy class...
Nope.
A file is an inode and that either eists or doesn't. A filename is just
a dentry in a directory, it is not the file itself
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
>
> It would of course solve the issue. *Nothing* short of a kernel upgrade
> requires a reboot though. And I mean that literally. So usually not.
>
Just being a bit pedantic here, but what about init? Even switching to
runlevel 1 would leave it running. Is it possible
On Thursday 12 October 2006 08:17, Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
> Thanks all. I guess I now understand how it works.
>
> Someone noted that if you update sshd for example, a restart would be in
> order afterward. This would seem to be true of a lot of programs. So
> would a total restart of the syst
On Wed, 11 Oct 2006 13:05:12 -0500, Thomas T. Veldhouse wrote:
> And ... if the startup scripts change or a major version bump occurs, a
> clean shutdown should happen BEFORE the new package is installed. The
> portage system really should shutdown any services before an upgrade
> occurs.
So
Nick Rout wrote:
which leads top the point that if you update a daemon like sshd, yopu
need to restart it, or else you are still running the old daemon.
And ... if the startup scripts change or a major version bump occurs, a
clean shutdown should happen BEFORE the new package is installed.
On Wed, 2006-10-11 at 12:23 -0400, Daniel Barkalow wrote:
> On Tue, 10 Oct 2006, Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
>
> > I have been using Gentoo for more than 2 years now and have always
> > wondered (but never asked - That's the "dumb" part) how Gentoo manages
> > to update a package that happens to be r
On Tue, 10 Oct 2006, Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
> I have been using Gentoo for more than 2 years now and have always
> wondered (but never asked - That's the "dumb" part) how Gentoo manages
> to update a package that happens to be running at the time.
>
> Given that the old version (the one running
On Wed, 11 Oct 2006 01:30:59 -0500, Anthony E. Caudel wrote:
> I suspected it might be memory. However I still find it difficult. If
> I'm running KDE for example, it requires at least kdelibs which is a lot
> to hold in memory.
Programs only load the libraries they use, you're unlikely to have
Dnia środa, 11 października 2006 06:21, Anthony E. Caudel napisał:
> I have been using Gentoo for more than 2 years now and have always
> wondered (but never asked - That's the "dumb" part) how Gentoo manages
> to update a package that happens to be running at the time.
>
> Given that the old versi
Troy Curtis Jr wrote:
> On 10/10/06, Anthony E. Caudel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> I have been using Gentoo for more than 2 years now and have always
>> wondered (but never asked - That's the "dumb" part) how Gentoo manages
>> to update a package that happens to be running at the time.
>>
>> Give
On Tue, 10 Oct 2006 23:42:33 -0500
"Troy Curtis Jr" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On 10/10/06, Anthony E. Caudel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > I have been using Gentoo for more than 2 years now and have always
> > wondered (but never asked - That's the "dumb" part) how Gentoo manages
> > to update
On 10/10/06, Anthony E. Caudel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I have been using Gentoo for more than 2 years now and have always
wondered (but never asked - That's the "dumb" part) how Gentoo manages
to update a package that happens to be running at the time.
Given that the old version (the one runn
I have been using Gentoo for more than 2 years now and have always
wondered (but never asked - That's the "dumb" part) how Gentoo manages
to update a package that happens to be running at the time.
Given that the old version (the one running) is deleted, how does it
manage to keep standing if you
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