On 29/07/20 00:18, james wrote:
> It's the bandwidth provider's policy. Static IPs (4 or 6) requires a
> monthly fee. If you know a way around this, with full privileges one
> gets with static IP addresses, I'm all ears.?
? I can understand a fee for a static IP4 - they've run out, after
a
On 29/07/20 00:11, james wrote:
> On 7/28/20 12:10 PM, Wols Lists wrote:
>> On 28/07/20 16:01, james wrote:
>>> (2) DNS resolvers, (?) mail-servers for a robust mail system that "I"
>>> admin, and (1) internet facing web server and (1) internal only facing
>>> or limited outward facing Web server f
Hi,
I'm on the way to rebuild all packages using Python to be built with
Python3.9, as well
I have created the corresponding ebuilds in a local overlay.
But many times, emerge cannot proceed because one of the dependencies
hasn't an ebuild
for Python3.9, yet.
Emerge tries to disable python3
On 2020-07-29, Wols Lists wrote:
> ? I can understand a fee for a static IP4 - they've run out,
> after all, and people are fighting over them ...
>
> Don't ISPs get a 2^64 allocation of IP6 *network* addresses? They
> should just allocate one to your router and that's that! Still, I
> wouldn
On Wednesday, 29 July 2020 13:59:11 BST Grant Edwards wrote:
> Pricing isn't based on cost. Pricing is based on what people are
> willing to pay. People are willing to pay extra for a static IPv6
> address, therefore static IPv6 addresses cost extra.
Aren't all IPv6 addresses static? Mine certa
On 29/07/2020 16:41, Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Wednesday, 29 July 2020 13:59:11 BST Grant Edwards wrote:
Pricing isn't based on cost. Pricing is based on what people are
willing to pay. People are willing to pay extra for a static IPv6
address, therefore static IPv6 addresses cost extra.
Are
On Wednesday, 29 July 2020 16:55:27 BST antlists wrote:
> I think there's static, and there's effectively static.
>
> If your router is running 24/7, then the IP won't change even if it's
> DHCP. But your router only needs to be switched off or otherwise off the
> network for the TTL (time to liv
I've removed every other pkg which might require Python-2.7,
but am stuck with this :
root:605 ~> emerge -cpv python:2.7
Calculating dependencies... done!
dev-lang/python-2.7.18-r1 pulled in by:
dev-lang/spidermonkey-60.5.2_p0-r4 requires
>=dev-lang/python-2.7.5-r2:2.7[ncurses,sqlite,s
29.07.2020 20:11, Philip Webb пишет:
> I've removed every other pkg which might require Python-2.7,
> but am stuck with this :
>
> root:605 ~> emerge -cpv python:2.7
>
> Calculating dependencies... done!
> dev-lang/python-2.7.18-r1 pulled in by:
> dev-lang/spidermonkey-60.5.2_p0-r4 requ
[2020-07-29 13:11] Philip Webb
Hi,
> I've removed every other pkg which might require Python-2.7,
> but am stuck with this :
>
> root:605 ~> emerge -cpv python:2.7
>
> Calculating dependencies... done!
> dev-lang/python-2.7.18-r1 pulled in by:
> dev-lang/spidermonkey-60.5.2_p0-r4 require
200729 i.Dark_Templar wrote:
> 29.07.2020 20:11, Philip Webb пишет:
>> I've removed every other pkg which might require Python-2.7,
>> but am stuck with this :
>>
>> root:605 ~> emerge -cpv python:2.7
>> Calculating dependencies... done!
>> dev-lang/python-2.7.18-r1 pulled in by:
>> dev-
On 2020-07-29, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Wednesday, 29 July 2020 13:59:11 BST Grant Edwards wrote:
>
>> Pricing isn't based on cost. Pricing is based on what people are
>> willing to pay. People are willing to pay extra for a static IPv6
>> address, therefore static IPv6 addresses cost extra.
>
On 7/29/20 5:20 AM, Wols Lists wrote:
On 29/07/20 00:11, james wrote:
On 7/28/20 12:10 PM, Wols Lists wrote:
On 28/07/20 16:01, james wrote:
(2) DNS resolvers, (?) mail-servers for a robust mail system that "I"
admin, and (1) internet facing web server and (1) internal only facing
or limited o
On 7/29/20 1:21 PM, Simon Thelen wrote:
[2020-07-29 13:11] Philip Webb
Hi,
I've removed every other pkg which might require Python-2.7,
but am stuck with this :
root:605 ~> emerge -cpv python:2.7
Calculating dependencies... done!
dev-lang/python-2.7.18-r1 pulled in by:
dev-lang/
>
> > So should I run something like: date ; time > 100%CPU for a minute> ; date ?
>
> No, date will pull from your RTC, which is usually kept up to date with an
> asynchronous
> counter.
>
> First check GNU top(1) and look in the %Cpu line for "st." That is % CPU
> time stolen. If it is
> nonzero
15 matches
Mail list logo