On Friday 26 Aug 2016 16:13:53 Mike Gilbert wrote:
> On Fri, Aug 26, 2016 at 4:32 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > In my search for a suitable boot method, I'm trying Mike G's
> > systemd-boot
> > ebuild. I've installed it with no problem, and now I reach the heart-in-
> > mouth stage of actually rep
On Sun, 28 Aug 2016 10:43:17 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> I'd still like to know where the directory /usr/lib64/systemd/boot/efi
> came from though.
Surely it's from systemd-boot, it is installed by systemd here. What does
qfile tell you?
$ qfile /usr/lib/systemd/boot/efi
--
Neil Bothwick
On Sunday 28 Aug 2016 10:55:56 Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Sun, 28 Aug 2016 10:43:17 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > I'd still like to know where the directory /usr/lib64/systemd/boot/efi
> > came from though.
>
> Surely it's from systemd-boot, it is installed by systemd here. What does
> qfile tel
On Sun, Aug 28, 2016 at 6:55 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday 28 Aug 2016 10:55:56 Neil Bothwick wrote:
>> On Sun, 28 Aug 2016 10:43:17 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
>> > I'd still like to know where the directory /usr/lib64/systemd/boot/efi
>> > came from though.
>>
>> Surely it's from system
On Sunday 28 Aug 2016 10:26:15 Mike Gilbert wrote:
> On Sun, Aug 28, 2016 at 6:55 AM, Peter Humphrey
wrote:
--->8
> > ... part of the output of "bootctl status":
> >
> > Boot Loader Binaries:
> > ESP:
> > /dev/disk/by-partuuid/f3fa7b95-0a65-4716-924a-ae3f30811de5
> >
>From the dev mailing list:
# Pacho Ramos (21 Aug 2016)
# Dead for a long time in favour of hopm, bug #473754.
# Removal in a month.
net-misc/bopm
On Sun, Aug 28, 2016 at 2:40 AM, Daniel Campbell wrote:
> On 08/25/2016 07:29 PM, Raymond Jennings wrote:
> > I still use bopm, and it built fine l
I have a USB stick with a crucial file on it (and only an old backup
elsewhere). It's formatted NTFS because I wanted to be able to open
the file on various Gentoo systems and my research indicated that NTFS
was the best solution.
I decided to copy a 10GB file from a USB hard disk directly to the
On Sun, 28 Aug 2016 11:49:44 -0700, Grant wrote:
> I have a USB stick with a crucial file on it (and only an old backup
> elsewhere). It's formatted NTFS because I wanted to be able to open
> the file on various Gentoo systems and my research indicated that NTFS
> was the best solution.
If it's
On Sunday 28 Aug 2016 11:49:44 Grant wrote:
> I have a USB stick with a crucial file on it (and only an old backup
> elsewhere). It's formatted NTFS because I wanted to be able to open
> the file on various Gentoo systems and my research indicated that NTFS
> was the best solution.
>
> I decided
>> I have a USB stick with a crucial file on it (and only an old backup
>> elsewhere). It's formatted NTFS because I wanted to be able to open
>> the file on various Gentoo systems and my research indicated that NTFS
>> was the best solution.
>>
>> I decided to copy a 10GB file from a USB hard dis
On August 29, 2016 3:24:18 AM GMT+02:00, Grant wrote:
>>> I have a USB stick with a crucial file on it (and only an old backup
>>> elsewhere). It's formatted NTFS because I wanted to be able to open
>>> the file on various Gentoo systems and my research indicated that
>NTFS
>>> was the best solut
Other distros like Ubuntu support the installation of multiple versions of
LLVM/Clang side by side. One of the things Clang is really good at is
support for the most recently approved upcoming features of the C++17
standard. The best support for testing such features is with the latest
sys-devel/
This also makes it difficult to use GHC's LLVM backend, since its
compatible versions usually lag behind the current one.
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