Hi,
many distributions have something like a 'switch' command such that an
ordinary user can switch the version of his/her default gcc compiler.
Is there something similar in GenToo?
Many thanks for a hint,
Helmut.
Am 24.02.2011 01:48, schrieb Alex Schuster:
Looks like normal behaviour to me. @system should be a small set, but
when some packages in @system have kde USE flags, they will pull in KDE
stuff.
One can make an easy test to see how that works:
USE="-kde" emerge -e @system -vp
Total: 181 package
In linux.gentoo.user, you wrote:
> Hi,
>
> many distributions have something like a 'switch' command such that an
> ordinary user can switch the version of his/her default gcc compiler.
>
> Is there something similar in GenToo?
>
> Many thanks for a hint,
$ gcc-config -h
--
Regards,
Gregory.
In linux.gentoo.user, you wrote:
> Hi,
>
> many distributions have something like a 'switch' command such that an
> ordinary user can switch the version of his/her default gcc compiler.
>
> Is there something similar in GenToo?
>
> Many thanks for a hint,
Forgive previous post. Didn't read it pro
Sebastian Beßler wrote:
One can make an easy test to see how that works:
USE="-kde" emerge -e @system -vp
Total: 181 packages
emerge -e @system -v
Total: 436 packages,
The kde-useflag pulls in a waste of packages
In my system-set are 50 packages:
emerge @system -vp
Total: 50 packages
Greet
Walter Dnes wrote:
On Wed, Feb 23, 2011 at 09:57:00AM -0600, Dale wrote
I tried a pretend emerge of khelpcenter. I had to unmask dbus and
allow a bunch of use flags before it would run. Here's what I ended up
with...
USE="accessibility kde dbus qt3support ssl handbook exceptions" emerge -p
Am 24.02.2011 13:32, schrieb Dale:
My world file is fine. I went through it a while back and it is fairly
small. It's the system set that is larger than normal.
Your system set has 50 entries, that seems to be absolutly normal.
The high count of entries in emerge -e @system comes from USE-fla
Sebastian Beßler wrote:
Am 24.02.2011 13:32, schrieb Dale:
My world file is fine. I went through it a while back and it is fairly
small. It's the system set that is larger than normal.
Your system set has 50 entries, that seems to be absolutly normal.
The high count of entries in emerge -e @
On 02/23/2011 03:42 AM, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
> On Tuesday 22 February 2011 14:51:31 Mick wrote:
>> On 22 February 2011 14:19, wrote:
>>> - Original Message -
>>> From: Mick
>>>
There was a change in the default ssh encryption algorithm. You may
want to check if that is causing
Am 24.02.2011 14:03, schrieb Dale:
If I do this:
USE="-*" emerge -pv system
I get this:
Total: 50 packages (50 reinstalls)
What a difference USE flags makes huh?
You forgot to add the e, without it you reinstall only the 50 packages
in @system, because the dependencies are all there at th
In linux.gentoo.user, you wrote:
> Sebastian Beßler wrote:
>> Am 24.02.2011 13:32, schrieb Dale:
>>
>>> My world file is fine. I went through it a while back and it is fairly
>>> small. It's the system set that is larger than normal.
>>
>> Your system set has 50 entries, that seems to be absolutly
On 24 February 2011 13:17, dhk wrote:
> On 02/23/2011 03:42 AM, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
>> On Tuesday 22 February 2011 14:51:31 Mick wrote:
>>> On 22 February 2011 14:19, wrote:
- Original Message -
From: Mick
> There was a change in the default ssh encryption algorithm
Sebastian Beßler wrote:
Am 24.02.2011 14:03, schrieb Dale:
If I do this:
USE="-*" emerge -pv system
I get this:
Total: 50 packages (50 reinstalls)
What a difference USE flags makes huh?
You forgot to add the e, without it you reinstall only the 50 packages
in @system, because the depende
Elaine C. Sharpe wrote:
I use fluxbox and sometimes wmaker. Probably a lot of people are put
off by the default configs, but both offer extremely powerful and
versatile customization tools. Add your fave terminal emulator (I
recommend terminator for it's killer feature set) and conky for system
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 07:03:06 -0600, Dale wrote:
> I just wonder if the devs have noticed how much this has grown when
> packages with X flags are included in the system set?. Would Gnome do
> the same? What about other GUI's?
What does it matter? They are only dependencies of @system, but the
Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 07:03:06 -0600, Dale wrote:
I just wonder if the devs have noticed how much this has grown when
packages with X flags are included in the system set?. Would Gnome do
the same? What about other GUI's?
What does it matter? They are only depend
On 02/23/2011 02:51 PM, Mick wrote:
On Wednesday 23 February 2011 22:45:18 Mick wrote:
On Wednesday 23 February 2011 18:54:12 walt wrote:
On 02/23/2011 08:28 AM, Mick wrote:
Hi All,
I noticed that since I installed xorg-server-1.9.4 my screen will not
go into standby anymore ...
According to
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 09:21:54 -0600, Dale wrote:
> I was always under the impression that @system was supposed to be a
> limited set of packages to build, including dependencies. For me, if I
> have a issue, I usually start with emerge -e system to see if it
> helps. Since there is some KDE stuf
Mick wrote:
On Wednesday 23 February 2011 19:21:34 Dale wrote:
When I upgraded to KDE4, I had to start using xset to handle turning my
monitor off. I put it in the startup section and it seems to work OK.
This is strange - I added Option "DPMS" "on" under the Monitor section
Hello,
Well running a routine --depclean somehow
I lost the only copy of gcc on the system
CFLAGS="-march=k8 -msse3 -O2 -pipe"
CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu"
CXXFLAGS="${CFLAGS}"
I have a a similar system set like this:
CFLAGS="-march=k8 -O2 -pipe"
CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu"
CXXFLAGS="${CFLAG
James writes:
> Harry Putnam newsguy.com> writes:
>
>
>
>> But still, when I'm trying to measure how much data is moving
>
> emerge bwmon,
>
> It measures across the ethernet ports, so adjust your test,
> according to what you want to measure, crossing the ethernet
> port on the target system.
Am 24.02.2011 16:21, schrieb Dale:
I was always under the impression that @system was supposed to be a
limited set of packages to build, including dependencies. For me, if I
have a issue, I usually start with emerge -e system to see if it helps.
Since there is some KDE stuff in there, that makes
Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 09:21:54 -0600, Dale wrote:
I was always under the impression that @system was supposed to be a
limited set of packages to build, including dependencies. For me, if I
have a issue, I usually start with emerge -e system to see if it
helps. Since ther
On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 7:21 AM, Dale wrote:
> Neil Bothwick wrote:
>>
>> On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 07:03:06 -0600, Dale wrote:
>>
>>
>>>
>>> I just wonder if the devs have noticed how much this has grown when
>>> packages with X flags are included in the system set?. Would Gnome do
>>> the same? What
James wrote:
Hello,
Well running a routine --depclean somehow
I lost the only copy of gcc on the system
CFLAGS="-march=k8 -msse3 -O2 -pipe"
CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu"
CXXFLAGS="${CFLAGS}"
I have a a similar system set like this:
CFLAGS="-march=k8 -O2 -pipe"
CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu"
CX
On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 9:41 AM, Mark Knecht wrote:
>
> I posted something a couple of years ago about using -java in
> make.conf because I found with +java I got almost twice as many
> packages in @system. (Except it wasn't @system at the time) I started
> putting java flags in package.use and
On 02/24/2011 08:53 AM, Mick wrote:
> On 24 February 2011 13:17, dhk wrote:
>> On 02/23/2011 03:42 AM, Joost Roeleveld wrote:
>>> On Tuesday 22 February 2011 14:51:31 Mick wrote:
On 22 February 2011 14:19, wrote:
> - Original Message -
> From: Mick
>
>> There was a c
Am 24.02.2011 17:54, schrieb James:
> Hello,
>
> Well running a routine --depclean somehow
> I lost the only copy of gcc on the system
>
[...]
>
>
> Since there is no gcc-bin to emerge (ha ha)
> I guess I'll have to copy over the binary of
> orsys-devel/gcc-4.4.4-r2 from another system.
>
Hi,
does anyone have seq24 successfully running on an AMD64 system?
Is there any othe loop sequencer out there, which I could try?
Thank you very much in advance!
Best regards,
mcc
Dale gmail.com> writes:
> > I lost the only copy of gcc on the system
> I would be glad to email you the binary from mine if it would help.
Dale,
I have several system to copy from (thanks anyway).
Is that all I have to do, just copy over the binary?
then rebuild gcc via the local ebu
Florian Philipp binarywings.net> writes:
> This should get you going:
>
http://www.gossamer-threads.com/lists/gentoo/user/168951?do=post_view_threaded#168951
ok, after reading I tried this:
emerge --usepkg gcc
which did not work.
Can you be more specific on the syntax?
It looks like t
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 11:34:09 -0600, Dale wrote:
> > Actually, it is, because you told it to be. To me, KDE is not a system
> > package, because I run different USE flags to you. Gentoo gave you the
> > gun but you pointed it at your foot :)
> I didn't tell portage to include KDE, qt, and a boatlo
Florian Philipp binarywings.net> writes:
> > Since there is no gcc-bin to emerge (ha ha)
> > I guess I'll have to copy over the binary of
> > orsys-devel/gcc-4.4.4-r2 from another system.
> > GUIDANCE on that is most welcome.
> [...]
OK, if this the first step, then I'm confused.
/usr/bin ha
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 16:54:36 + (UTC), James wrote:
> Since there is no gcc-bin to emerge (ha ha)
> I guess I'll have to copy over the binary of
> orsys-devel/gcc-4.4.4-r2 from another system.
> GUIDANCE on that is most welcome.
quickpkg gcc on the other system, copy the gcc-*.tbz2 package f
james wrote:
Dale gmail.com> writes:
I lost the only copy of gcc on the system
I would be glad to email you the binary from mine if it would help.
Dale,
I have several system to copy from (thanks anyway).
Is that all I have to do, just copy over the binary?
then
Neil Bothwick digimed.co.uk> writes:
> > GUIDANCE on that is most welcome.
> quickpkg gcc on the other system,
> copy the gcc-*.tbz2 package from
> $PKGDIR on that to the broken system,
OK I ran 'quickpkg gcc' got this:
ls /usr/portage/packages/sys-devel
gcc-4.1.2.tbz2 gcc-4.1.2.tbz2.28680
On 02/24/2011 03:01 PM, Matthew Marlowe wrote:
> On Thursday, February 24, 2011 10:09:22 am dhk wrote:
I still haven't gotten this to work. Am I the only one using this? The
"ssh -i .ssh/id_dsa.pub host" didn't work. I get a message "Read from
socket failed: Connection reset
On Thursday 24 February 2011 16:23:31 Dale wrote:
> Mick wrote:
> > On Wednesday 23 February 2011 19:21:34 Dale wrote:
> >> When I upgraded to KDE4, I had to start using xset to handle turning my
> >> monitor off. I put it in the startup section and it seems to work OK.
> >
> > This is strange -
Mick wrote:
On Thursday 24 February 2011 16:23:31 Dale wrote:
I think there is a thread where I asked the same thing. When I first
upgraded to KDE4, my monitor would not turn off unless I turned it off
myself. I set up a script that runs when I login to cut off the
monitor. I have another
On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 6:15 AM, Helmut Jarausch
wrote:
> Hi,
>
> many distributions have something like a 'switch' command such that an
> ordinary user can switch the version of his/her default gcc compiler.
>
> Is there something similar in GenToo?
>
> Many thanks for a hint,
> Helmut.
>
>
You
On Thu, 24 Feb 2011 21:29:50 + (UTC), James wrote:
> > quickpkg gcc on the other system,
> > copy the gcc-*.tbz2 package from
> > $PKGDIR on that to the broken system,
>
> OK I ran 'quickpkg gcc' got this:
>
> ls /usr/portage/packages/sys-devel
> gcc-4.1.2.tbz2 gcc-4.1.2.tbz2.28680 gcc-
On Thursday 24 February 2011 18:09:22 dhk wrote:
> On 02/24/2011 08:53 AM, Mick wrote:
> > Have you tried using ssh user@host to login with?
>
> At first all I did was an update: emerge -uDN world . They when it
> didn't work I removed all public and private keys and restarted sshd.
> That didn
On Thursday 24 February 2011 21:51:56 dhk wrote:
> Thanks, but I've tried that. ssh'ing to the hostname and loopback
> address work. However, when I go out to the WAN it doesn't. So I can't
> ssh user@123.123.123.123 even though I have port 22 open on the switch
> for my ip.
Just to state the
James tampabay.rr.com> writes:
> > copy the gcc-*.tbz2 package from
> > $PKGDIR on that to the broken system,
> > then emerge -1k gcc.
emergeing gcc now (thanks Neil!)
One last question:
so I've learned the hard way
of the value of quickpkg.
Besides gcc, what is a good list
of critical soft
James wrote:
James tampabay.rr.com> writes:
copy the gcc-*.tbz2 package from
$PKGDIR on that to the broken system,
then emerge -1k gcc.
emergeing gcc now (thanks Neil!)
One last question:
so I've learned the hard way
of the value of quickpkg.
Besides gcc, what is
On Thu, Feb 24, 2011 at 11:34:09AM -0600, Dale wrote
> I didn't tell portage to include KDE, qt, and a boatload of other stuff
> to be part of @system. Did I enable the kde USE flag, yea. That should
> be part of the world stuff not the system stuff. If I disable kde, qt
> and all the others
On 02/24/2011 06:30 PM, Mick wrote:
> On Thursday 24 February 2011 21:51:56 dhk wrote:
>
>> Thanks, but I've tried that. ssh'ing to the hostname and loopback
>> address work. However, when I go out to the WAN it doesn't. So I can't
>> ssh user@123.123.123.123 even though I have port 22 open on
Dale gmail.com> writes:
> > Besides gcc, what is a good list
> > of critical software to use guickpkg
> > as to keep backup binaries?
> FEATURES="buildpkg sandbox fixpackages parallel-fetch --keep-going"
I saw this (FEATURES="buildpkg") googling around.
1. What is a good list of software to
Sometimes I think I'm the only gnome fan in this wild jungle of kde users,
pardon my paranoia.
Anyway, I went through the same problem with totem on my ~x86 and ~amd64
machines a few months ago, and now I've just hit it again on my last amd64
(gentoo-stable) machine because gnome-2.32.x just made
James wrote:
Dale gmail.com> writes:
Besides gcc, what is a good list
of critical software to use guickpkg
as to keep backup binaries?
FEATURES="buildpkg sandbox fixpackages parallel-fetch --keep-going"
I saw this (FEATURES="buildpkg") googling around.
1. What is a
On 25/2/2011, at 1:08am, dhk wrote:
>
> I don't have the nc comand. What package is it in?
net-analyzer/netcat
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