Alle 21:51, martedì 13 giugno 2006, Ryan Tandy ha scritto:
> Mauro Arnoldi wrote:
> > My ati drivers doesn't want to compile:
> >
> > #emerge -pv ati-drivers
> >
> > These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
> >
> > Calculating dependencies... done!
> > [blocks B ] >=x11-base/xorg-
On 14 June 2006 05:25, Justin R Findlay wrote:
> On Wed, Jun 14, 2006 at 03:14:57AM +, b.n. wrote:
> > JimD wrote:
> > > I was hoping there were tools/editors for PDF/PS. What the heck do
> > > book writers use? I hope not a word processor. I am only working with
> > > small books and it is
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
checking for gcc... gcc
checking whether the C compiler (gcc -O2 -march=pentium4
-fomit-frame-pointer -pipe -mfpmath=sse -msse2 -mmmx -fPIC -Wl,-O1
-ldl-Wl,-O1) works... no
configure: error: installation or configuration problem: C compiler
cannot create executables.
Th
Hello. Sorry for my English if there is a more correct way of saying "Star
map". By Star Map I mean something that shows the position of starts, as
well as brightness. The more like photo, the better.
Star moves in the sky all the time:
1) the star map in 20:00 is different from 21:00
2) the star
alsa-driver is compiled into kernel, and emerge alsa-driver complains because of it and exits.On 6/11/06, Yun Xupeng <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:maybe you didn't compile drivers that your soundcard uses.
try emerge alsa-drivers again...
2006/6/12, Strake [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
-- I like Python & Linux
when I compiled my kernel, I only selected "Sound card support",but
didn't select any module that is supported by the kernel(Alas or oss),
then I emerge alsa-driver, and it works well.
ps:my english is poor,sorry :)
Strake wrote:
> alsa-driver is compiled into kernel, and emerge alsa-driver compl
I did an "emerge --sync" on my main machine, followed by
"emerge --ask --deep --update --world --fetchonly". It spent several
minutes at "Calculating world dependencies", with the "spinner" very
slowly moving. Eventually it ran. Subsequent calls to emerge ran at
the usual speed I'm accustomed
Walter Dnes wrote:
> I did an "emerge --sync" on my main machine, followed by
> "emerge --ask --deep --update --world --fetchonly". It spent
> several minutes at "Calculating world dependencies", with the
> "spinner" very slowly moving. Eventually it ran. Subsequent
> calls to emerge ran at th
Hi
according to revdep-rebuild, quite a few libraries on my system are broken.
But at the end of revdep-rebuild, it tells me, my system was consistent.
I think some libraries are really broken, because the sound of my vlc
player stutters sometimes lately.
I had some problems with the arts-daemon a
KStars (http://edu.kde.org/kstars/) has a command line mode for image
generation.
It should not be difficult to script that to generate an image, then
set it as the background.
dcm
On 6/14/06, 张 �|武 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello. Sorry for my English if there is a more correct way of saying
> according to revdep-rebuild, quite a few libraries on my system are broken.> But at the end of revdep-rebuild, it tells me, my system was consistent.This means the broken libraries don't belong to any package. Something touched/altered them (probably fix libtool script when updating gcc) so they
Norman Rieß wrote:
> broken /usr/kde/3.4/lib/kde3/kfileaudiopreview.la (requires
> /usr/kde/3.4/lib/libqtmcop.la)
You have upgraded to KDE-3.5.* ? Then 'rm -r /usr/kde/3.4'.
> broken /usr/lib/avifile-0.7/ac3pass.la (requires
> /usr/lib/libaviplayavformat.la)
The avi stuff is obsolete. Remo
>> according to revdep-rebuild, quite a few libraries on my system are
> broken.
>> But at the end of revdep-rebuild, it tells me, my system was consistent.
>
> This means the broken libraries don't belong to any package. Something
> touched/altered them (probably fix libtool script when updating g
> Norman Rieß wrote:
>> broken /usr/kde/3.4/lib/kde3/kfileaudiopreview.la (requires
>> /usr/kde/3.4/lib/libqtmcop.la)
>
> You have upgraded to KDE-3.5.* ? Then 'rm -r /usr/kde/3.4'.
>
>> broken /usr/lib/avifile-0.7/ac3pass.la (requires
>> /usr/lib/libaviplayavformat.la)
>
> The avi stuff is ob
On 6/13/06, anand kumar <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
I recently changed to Gentoo. I have a keyboard from hp with all
the new multimedia keys on it. I tried configuring them but showkey
doesnt recognise some of the keys. Is there any way to resolve this.
Previously these keys were getting
Hello. This might be OT but I am pretty interested in this and being
unlucky not able to find a real in-depth explanation of pipe on the
Internet.
How does pipe actually work? I mean, when there is a pipe like this:
$ appA | appB
What happen if appA produced output when appB is still busy processi
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 14:51:59 +0200 (CEST), Norman Rieß wrote:
> But why wasn´t this deleted by a emerge --depclean world or the unmerge
> in the update-process of that packages.
Because the files' datestamps and/or checksums had changed since they
were installed. Portage won't remove a file that
It's mode 2. When appB stops reading, appA will continue writing until
the pipe is full (about 4k I believe) at which time appA will block in
a write.
dcm
On 6/14/06, 张�|武 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello. This might be OT but I am pretty interested in this and being
unlucky not able to find a
张�|武 wrote:> Hello. This might be OT but I am pretty interested in this and being> unlucky not able to find a real in-depth explanation of pipe on the> Internet.> I think "man 7 pipe" gives quite precise explanation for this.
> How does pipe actually work? I mean, when there is a pipe like this:> $
On 6/13/06, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 6/13/06, Kevin O'Gorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> Something about this is just not clicking with me. I restored my backup to> an empty directory, chrooted to that directory, ran quickpkg on some of the
> packages I've been trying to re-emerg
On 6/14/06, Daniel Drake <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
> checking for gcc... gcc
> checking whether the C compiler (gcc -O2 -march=pentium4
> -fomit-frame-pointer -pipe -mfpmath=sse -msse2 -mmmx -fPIC -Wl,-O1
> -ldl-Wl,-O1) works... no
> configure: error: installation or config
On 6/13/06, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 6/13/06, Kevin O'Gorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Start digging. It completed just fine.
Ok, do this and send me the result.
# emerge --debug =dev-libs/glib-1.2.10-r5 >~/glib-merge.txt 2>&1
-Richard
PS. Please post further replies in
Neil Bothwick schrieb:
These files are owned by nothing and used by nothing. all they do is take
up a small amount of disk space. They won't start to think for themselves
unless you have skynet in your USE flags.
No, but my flags contain USE="hive-mind". Any problems with that?
--
gentoo
Norman Rieß wrote:
> Hi
>
> according to revdep-rebuild, quite a few libraries on my system are broken.
> But at the end of revdep-rebuild, it tells me, my system was consistent.
> I think some libraries are really broken, because the sound of my vlc
> player stutters sometimes lately.
> I had som
On Tue, 13 Jun 2006 22:26:44 +0200
Benno Schulenberg <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Arnau Bria wrote:
> > That's it! kdelibs! I can't figure why equery does not show it...
>
> It appears to have been fixed in gentoolkit-0.2.2. After a sync and
> an upgrade:
> $ equery depends fam
> [ Searchin
On 14 June 2006 14:12, 张韡武 wrote:
> Hello. This might be OT but I am pretty interested in this and being
> unlucky not able to find a real in-depth explanation of pipe on the
> Internet.
>
> How does pipe actually work? I mean, when there is a pipe like this:
> $ appA | appB
> What happen if appA p
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 07:42:43 -0700, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
> > treat dev-libs # emerge -avk =glib-1.2.10-r5
> >
> > These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
> >
> > Calculating dependencies -
> > emerge: there are no ebuilds to satisfy "virtual/glibc".
> > (dependency required by "dev
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 17:25:11 +0200, Norman Rieß wrote:
> No, but my flags contain USE="hive-mind". Any problems with that?
Not if you're a Windows user ;-)
--
Neil Bothwick
I will always cherish the initial misconceptions I had about you.
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
> This morning I noticed that gam_server was eating 80 90% of cpu...> I'm trying to find who installed gamin in my system, the dependency,> but I found nothing... ('equery depends gamin' shows nothing, with -a,
> equery breaks)Got inotify enabled in your kernel? See http://www.gentoo.org/news/en/gw
On 6/14/06, Kevin O'Gorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Done. Results attached. Sorry about the HTML. I hadn't noticed it
was turned on. And I generally oppose HTML mail.
Hmm, the problem first shows up here:
+ append-ldflags -ldl
+ [[ -z -ldl ]]
+ export 'LDFLAGS=-Wl,-O1 -ldl'
+ LDFLAGS='
On 6/14/06, Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 07:42:43 -0700, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
> > treat dev-libs # emerge -avk =glib-1.2.10-r5
> >
> > These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
> >
> > Calculating dependencies -
> > emerge: there are no ebuilds to sa
On Wednesday 14 June 2006 08:12, 张韡武 <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
about '[gentoo-user] how does a pipe work? Which process wait for which
one, or they don't actually wait each other?':
> How does pipe actually work? I mean, when there is a pipe like this:
> $ appA | appB
> What happen if appA produc
On 6/14/06, Neil Bothwick <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
up a small amount of disk space. They won't start to think for themselves
unless you have skynet in your USE flags.
Damn, and I was _so_ hoping that was really a valid USE flag! :->
That would have to be the coolest flag ever...we must find a
Le mercredi 14 juin 2006 à 17:30 +0800, 张 韡武 a écrit :
> Hello. Sorry for my English if there is a more correct way of saying "Star
> map". By Star Map I mean something that shows the position of starts, as
> well as brightness. The more like photo, the better.
I think the keyword to google at is
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 09:39:51 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
> Damn, and I was _so_ hoping that was really a valid USE flag! :->
> That would have to be the coolest flag ever...
Nah! The coolest, froopiest ever would be USE="towel" :)
--
Neil Bothwick
I'd prefer the non-smoking lifeboat, please.
Devon Miller wrote:
> KStars (http://edu.kde.org/kstars/) has a command line mode for image
> generation.
> It should not be difficult to script that to generate an image, then
> set it as the background.
>
> dcm
>
You can do the scripting using DCOP to change the background.
Here's an intro:
http
On Wed, Jun 14, 2006 at 05:30:04PM +0800, Penguin Lover ??? ?? squawked:
> Hello. Sorry for my English if there is a more correct way of saying "Star
> map". By Star Map I mean something that shows the position of starts, as
> well as brightness. The more like photo, the better.
The word you a
Devon Miller wrote:
> KStars (http://edu.kde.org/kstars/) has a command line mode for image
> generation.
> It should not be difficult to script that to generate an image, then
> set it as the background.
I always hoped for Celestia to have this functionality. It would be
wonderful to follow, let'
I use for my webcam the latest spca5xx driver. everything work well
until i want to test my webcam. When i try this thing
mplayer tv:// -tv
driver=v4l:width=352:height=288:outfmt=rgb24:device=/dev/video0:noaudio
-flip
91 audio & 208 video codecs
Playing tv://.
Selected driver: v4l
name: Vid
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Roy Wright wrote:
> Devon Miller wrote:
>> KStars (http://edu.kde.org/kstars/) has a command line mode for image
>> generation.
>> It should not be difficult to script that to generate an image, then
>> set it as the background.
>>
>> dcm
>>
> You can
Caster wrote:
[and snipped an attribution]
> > Equery should detect that gamin provides a virtual, and then
> > check for the dependents of that. Are you any good at Python?
> > :)
>
> You don't need. [...] Seems there is a bug... but kinda dead -
> http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=101420
I've just tried to install google earth and got the following:
Calculating dependencies ... done!
>>> Emerging (1 of 1) x11-misc/googleearth-4_beta to /
>>> checking ebuild checksums ;-)
>>> checking auxfile checksums ;-)
>>> checking miscfile checksums ;-)
>>> checking GoogleEarthLinux.bin ;-
1. Has anyone noticed if programs compiled with the latest gcc (4.1.1, I
believe) are any faster than those compiled with 3.4.6-r1? Also, is there any
difference in the required time to compile? Any other issues I should know
about with upgrading from 3.4.6-r1 to 4.1.1? (I use a pre-Prescott P4
On Tue, 2006-06-13 at 20:37 -0500, Teresa and Dale wrote:
> Ow Mun Heng wrote:
>
> >Hi guys,
> >
> > Am here in the US. Would like to purchase a Gentoo Branded sweatshirt.
> >There's one I found on Cafepress @29.99 which is hooded. Anyone knows of
> >one which does not have a hood?
> >
> >Pref
On 6/14/06, Jesse Hannah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
1. Has anyone noticed if programs compiled with the latest gcc (4.1.1, I
believe) are any faster than those compiled with 3.4.6-r1? Also, is there any
difference in the required time to compile? Any other issues I should know
about with upgradin
If I want to take full advantage of the new splitdebug feature. Should I then
emerge -e world? I don't think the backtraces doc [1] answers that.
[1] http://www.gentoo.org/proj/en/qa/backtraces.xml
--
Bo Andresen
pgpvq828oGjCZ.pgp
Description: PGP signature
On 6/14/06, Bo Ørsted Andresen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
If I want to take full advantage of the new splitdebug feature. Should I then
emerge -e world? I don't think the backtraces doc [1] answers that.
For "full" advantage, yes, you would need to emerge -e world, since
otherwise the debugging
On 6/14/06, Daniel da Veiga <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 6/14/06, Jesse Hannah <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 2. If I want to upgrade and rebuild my entire system (using a new gcc), is:
> emerge -u gcc
> emerge -e world
> the right thing to do? Am I missing anything there?
http://
On Wednesday 14 June 2006 23:28, Richard Fish wrote:
> For "full" advantage, yes, you would need to emerge -e world, since
> otherwise the debugging information will only be generated for new
> merges. And of course, any binary packages won't get debug symbols in
> any case.
Thanks. Good to know.
On 14/06/06, Iain Buchanan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion, unfortunately different encodings didn't make
much difference. However, I did notice this when I started firefox from
the command line:
$ firefox
No running windows found
Warning: Cannot convert string
"-b&h-lucid
Awesome tidbit, I'll be sure to file that one away. Also, if you're
configuring for a netboot, the definitive place to look is in the
kernel tree itself. I would especially recommend
Documentation/initrd.txt, which is great for netbooting something
that's not going to be a diskless thinclient.
Just built a system and all was going great, first time I have tried
Linux in a very long time. After finishing up the build all worked fine
till I was trying to get sound in place, followed the instructions for
alsa in the handbook.
Anyway, finished up, restarted the system, and now the syste
Everytime I boot my system I see this message:
==
/dev/cdrom: open failed: No medium found
==
Everytime I shut down my system I see these (those two lines were repeated 23
times during last shutdown):
On 6/14/06, Sean <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Just built a system and all was going great, first time I have tried
Linux in a very long time. After finishing up the build all worked fine
till I was trying to get sound in place, followed the instructions for
alsa in the handbook.
Anyway, finished u
On Thu, 15 Jun 2006 01:18:34 +0200, Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
> /dev/cdrom: open failed: No medium found
> Attempt to close device: '/dev/cdrom' which is not open.
> /dev/cdrom: open failed: No medium found
> Attempt to close device: '/dev/cdrom' which is not open.
Are you using LVM?
--
Neil B
On Thursday 15 June 2006 01:31, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> Are you using LVM?
Sure. So it's because of this?
# grep ^\ *filter /etc/lvm/lvm.conf
filter = [ "a/.*/" ]
Thanks for the pointer. I forgot to change that when I reinstalled after my
old
James Ausmus wrote:
On 6/14/06, Sean <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Just built a system and all was going great, first time I have tried
Linux in a very long time. After finishing up the build all worked fine
till I was trying to get sound in place, followed the instructions for
alsa in the handbook
On 6/14/06, Bo Ørsted Andresen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Like this:
# emerge -ep kontact kmail knode akregator | awk '$1~/ebuild/{print $4}' | \
sed -e 's/\-[0-9][A-Za-z0-9._-]*$//' | grep lib | xargs emerge -vp
This will merge all of system. I was thinking more like:
ldd `which kon
On 6/14/06, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 6/14/06, Kevin O'Gorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Done. Results attached. Sorry about the HTML. I hadn't noticed it
> was turned on. And I generally oppose HTML mail.
Hmm, the problem first shows up here:
+ append-ldflags -ldl
+ [
No problem-
May have just been a /etc/pam.d/* file that hadn't updated properly in
the first emerge of shadow.
Enjoy your new system (and Welcome to Gentoo, it sounds like!)
:)
-James
On 6/14/06, Sean <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
James Ausmus wrote:
> On 6/14/06, Sean <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrot
On Thursday 15 June 2006 02:01, Richard Fish wrote:
> I was thinking more like:
>
> ldd `which kontact kmail knode akregator` | grep '=>' | awk '{print $3}' \
> | sort | uniq | xargs equery belongs | grep '/' | sort | uniq \
> | xargs printf "=%s\n" | xargs emerge -p --oneshot
>
> (Ok peopl
Just in case others are interested I ended out with this script:
===
#/bin/bash
for arg in $@; do
if [[ "${arg}" =~ "^\-" ]]; then
EMERGE_ARGS="${EMERGE_ARGS} ${arg}"
else
BINARIES="${BINARIES} ${arg}"
On 6/14/06, Kevin O'Gorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I would guess you're out of ideas then, except in desperation, I tried
looking for just part
of that: "-W1" and came up with some stuff I hope will further inspire you:
Nope, all of that is normal...
But before you go breaking a braincell
On 6/14/06, Bo Ørsted Andresen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Just in case others are interested I ended out with this script:
Very nice!
-Richard
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Trying to setup my system to support my nvidia vid card.
Per instructions I am supposed to enable agpgart in the kernel, which is
under device drivers--->
character devices--->
--- /dev/agpgart (agp support)
As you can see above my system does not allow anything to be done for
Sean wrote:
Trying to setup my system to support my nvidia vid card.
Per instructions I am supposed to enable agpgart in the kernel, which is
under device drivers--->
character devices--->
--- /dev/agpgart (agp support)
As you can see above my system does not allow anything to be done
James Ausmus wrote:
No problem-
May have just been a /etc/pam.d/* file that hadn't updated properly in
the first emerge of shadow.
Enjoy your new system (and Welcome to Gentoo, it sounds like!)
:)
-James
Thanks, looking forward to trying it out.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Thursday 15 June 2006 04:24, Sean wrote:
> Trying to setup my system to support my nvidia vid card.
>
> Per instructions I am supposed to enable agpgart in the kernel, which is
> under device drivers--->
> character devices--->
> --- /dev/agpgart (agp support)
>
> As you can see abov
Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote:
On Thursday 15 June 2006 04:24, Sean wrote:
Trying to setup my system to support my nvidia vid card.
Per instructions I am supposed to enable agpgart in the kernel, which is
under device drivers--->
character devices--->
--- /dev/agpgart (agp support
Sean wrote:
> > How do I enable this in the kernel towards getting my nvidia card
> > working?
"---" means it's enabled (another part of your kernel wants it built-in)
> Additional, when I run the glxinfo | grep direct, the reponse I get is
> Error: unable to open display (null)
You need to ru
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
> On Thursday 15 June 2006 01:31, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > Are you using LVM?
>
> Sure. So it's because of this?
Yup. Remove the cdrom and then:
# lvchange -a y
--
Norberto Bensa
Cel: 011-5654-9539
Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
pgpISnWleCM4m.pgp
Description: PGP
A few minutes ago, I discovered that I can't log into my firewall
If I try SSH from inside, it gives me my login banner and immediately
disconnects, without prompting for a password. This suggested to me that
when trying to clean up the mess left by upgrading the shadow package
yesterday (and firs
On Wed, 2006-06-14 at 22:21 +, Mick wrote:
> On 14/06/06, Iain Buchanan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Thanks for the suggestion, unfortunately different encodings didn't make
> > much difference. However, I did notice this when I started firefox from
> > the command line:
> >
> > $ firefox
On Tue, 2006-06-13 at 22:25 -0600, Justin R Findlay wrote:
> LaTeX is awesome if you're not going to be diverging from the builtin
> document layout styles too much. If you are then you're likely going to
> be editing raw TeX to get things done,
I don't agree. "The LaTeX Companion"[1] documents
As Mr. Norberto Bensa wrote: "---" means it's enabled (another part of your
kernel
wants it built-in)
Additionally the help about this feature reads:
│ Symbol: AGP [=n]
│ Prompt: /dev/agpgart (AGP Support)
│ Defined at drivers/char/agp/Kconfig:1
│ Depends on: (ALPHA || IA64 || PPC ||
Hi,
in my laptop I use linux and windows. Sometimes when I'm using
windows I need to access data from my linux ext3 partition. So I tried
to use Explore2fs application. It detects my two ext3 (hda3 and hda4)
partitions, but when I click to explore the hda3 partition (root
partition) I got the f
Rennie deGraaf wrote:
> A few minutes ago, I discovered that I can't log into my firewall
>
> If I try SSH from inside, it gives me my login banner and immediately
> disconnects, without prompting for a password. This suggested to me that
> when trying to clean up the mess left by upgrading the sh
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