On 10/3/2017, 1:27:45 AM, victor romanchuk wrote:
> there are two files to change/check before migration
>
> * /etc/inittab :: console terminal (XEN PV domUs do use hvc console and KVM
> VM employ normal linux
> console)
>
> -c1:12345:/respawn:/sbin/agetty 38400 hvc0 linux
> +c1:1
On 10/2/2017, 11:52:21 PM, R0b0t1 wrote:
> As long as your kernel has the appropriate drivers (i.e. you didn't
> include only the virtualized Xen drivers and left most of the default
> options intact) it should boot under QEMU/KVM or even on a bare metal
> system.
Hmmm, something else I just reme
When I'm thinking about installing a package, I can say
USE='foo' emerge -p some-cat/some-package
to see what would happen, without changing any /etc files. Is there a
similar way to specify a keyword override, without changing
/etc/portage/package.accept_keywords? Something along the lines of
On Tue, 3 Oct 2017 09:03:06 -0700, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> When I'm thinking about installing a package, I can say
>
> USE='foo' emerge -p some-cat/some-package
>
> to see what would happen, without changing any /etc files. Is there a
> similar way to specify a keyword override, without changing
Hello,
On my Linode VM in /etc/portage/package.use I have:
net-misc/iputils -caps -filecaps
I have no recollection of setting these flags, but `genlop -iputils ` gives an
installation date 2 days after I signed up with Linode, which tends to suggest
I installed the package. Or perhaps it was
On 2017-10-03 17:51, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > When I'm thinking about installing a package, I can say
> >
> > USE='foo' emerge -p some-cat/some-package
> >
> > to see what would happen, without changing any /etc files. Is there a
> > similar way to specify a keyword override, without changing
>
On 17-10-03 at 19:08, Stroller wrote:
> Hello,
>
> On my Linode VM in /etc/portage/package.use I have:
>
> net-misc/iputils -caps -filecaps
>
> I have no recollection of setting these flags, but `genlop -iputils `
> gives an installation date 2 days after I signed up with Linode, which
> tends
On 10/03/2017 02:28 PM, Tanstaafl wrote:
> On 10/3/2017, 1:27:45 AM, victor romanchuk wrote:
>> there are two files to change/check before migration
>>
>> * /etc/inittab :: console terminal (XEN PV domUs do use hvc console and
>> KVM VM employ normal linux
>> console)
>>
>> -c1:12345:/r
> On 3 Oct 2017, at 20:17, Simon Thelen wrote:
>
> It is almost always better to enable both of these where possible since
> it helps decrease the attack surface for the programs in question.
Thanks, I'll do that.
Stroller.
On Tue, 3 Oct 2017 11:13:31 -0700, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> > > When I'm thinking about installing a package, I can say
> > >
> > > USE='foo' emerge -p some-cat/some-package
> > >
> > > to see what would happen, without changing any /etc files. Is
> > > there a similar way to specify a keyword ov
On 2017-10-03 21:14, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > > > ACCEPT_KEYWORDS='<=some-cat/some-package- ~amd64' \
> > > > USE='foo' emerge -p some-cat/some-package
> > >
> > > ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~amd64" emerge somepkg
>
> You included the package atom on the env var, al la
> /etc/portage/package.* syn
On Tue, 3 Oct 2017 15:00:13 -0700, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> > > > > ACCEPT_KEYWORDS='<=some-cat/some-package- ~amd64' \
> > > > > USE='foo' emerge -p some-cat/some-package
> > > >
> > > > ACCEPT_KEYWORDS="~amd64" emerge somepkg
> >
> > You included the package atom on the env var, al l
On Tue, Oct 3, 2017 at 6:38 AM, Tanstaafl wrote:
> On 10/2/2017, 11:52:21 PM, R0b0t1 wrote:
>> As long as your kernel has the appropriate drivers (i.e. you didn't
>> include only the virtualized Xen drivers and left most of the default
>> options intact) it should boot under QEMU/KVM or even on a
Hi,
from my qlop -l output:
Tue Oct 3 05:16:48 2017 >>> dev-perl/CGI-Fast-2.120.0
Tue Oct 3 05:17:09 2017 >>> net-dns/dnsmasq-2.78
Tue Oct 3 05:18:25 2017 >>> app-portage/eix-0.33.0
Tue Oct 3 05:26:47 2017 >>> sys-apps/openrc-0.32
Tue Oct 3 05:27:54 2017 >>> media-radio/gpredict-1.3-r2
I
emerge --sync && emerge eix && eix-update
On Tue, Oct 3, 2017, 6:55 PM wrote:
> Hi,
>
> from my qlop -l output:
> Tue Oct 3 05:16:48 2017 >>> dev-perl/CGI-Fast-2.120.0
> Tue Oct 3 05:17:09 2017 >>> net-dns/dnsmasq-2.78
>
> Tue Oct 3 05:18:25 2017 >>> app-portage/eix-0.33.0
>
> Tue Oct 3 05:2
On 10/04 01:58, Ian Bloss wrote:
> emerge --sync && emerge eix && eix-update
>
> On Tue, Oct 3, 2017, 6:55 PM wrote:
>
> > Hi,
> >
> > from my qlop -l output:
> > Tue Oct 3 05:16:48 2017 >>> dev-perl/CGI-Fast-2.120.0
> > Tue Oct 3 05:17:09 2017 >>> net-dns/dnsmasq-2.78
> >
> > Tue Oct 3 05:18
On 10/04 02:26, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
> On 10/04 01:58, Ian Bloss wrote:
> > emerge --sync && emerge eix && eix-update
> >
> > On Tue, Oct 3, 2017, 6:55 PM wrote:
> >
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > from my qlop -l output:
> > > Tue Oct 3 05:16:48 2017 >>> dev-perl/CGI-Fast-2.120.0
> > > Tue Oct 3 05:1
* tu...@posteo.de [2017-10-04 05:04]:
> On 10/04 02:26, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
> > On 10/04 01:58, Ian Bloss wrote:
> > > [...]
> > > On Tue, Oct 3, 2017, 6:55 PM wrote:
> > > > [...]
> > > >
> > > > I tried eix-sync this morning and got:
> > > >
> > > > /root>eix-sync
> > > > /usr/bin/eix-sync:
I have some doubts about massive "hosts" files for adblocking. I
downloaded one that listed 13,148 sites. I fed them through a script
that called "host" for each entry, and saved the output to a text file.
The result was 1,059 addresses. Note that some adservers have multiple
IP address entrie
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