Hi,
I looked at this page:
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Local_Mirror
"Many users run Gentoo on several machines and need to sync the Gentoo
repository on all of them. Using public mirrors is simply a waste of bandwidth
at both ends. Syncing only one machine against a public mirror and all othe
Thank you for the explanation. I wonder what the local mirror page means when
it talks about saving bandwidth. What *does* it serve if not the distfiles?
And when /etc/portage/repos.conf points to my local server, why would portage
disregard that?
The rsync server on the mirror host points
What I'm hoping for, though, is a configuration flag that causes any of:
- inhibits a theoretical traversal of repos.conf databases (e.g. also
/usr/share/porrage/...)
- inhibits trying to upgrade beyond what's already installed in the mirror
server
> Gesendet: Freitag, 26. April 2019 um 07:32 Uh
Thanks to all who reponded:
- Rich Freeman suggests:
- having apache serve the local distfiles.
How? Just make them available in the apache root and give portage the
URL somewhere?
- use "infra scripts", but I think that's for running an up-to-date
general-purpose mirror
He
> Gesendet: Montag, 29. April 2019 um 10:47 Uhr
> Von: "Peter Humphrey"
> An: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Betreff: Re: Aw: Re: [gentoo-user] local mirrors (summary, leading to more
> questions)
>
> On Sunday, 28 April 2019 21:37:19 BST n952...@web.de wrote:
>
> > - Peter Humphrey suggests:
>
But that seems strange - why would I need both GENTOO_MIRRORS and http_proxy?
GENTOO_MIRRORS="http://myserver";
http_proxy="http://myserver:3142
Does the http_proxy imply that I'd need a proxy app, like squid. Between my
client and server, there won't be any appreciable traffic.
> Gesendet: M
Hi,
Can someone explain the difference between keywords (as in
package.accept_keywords) and use variables (as in package.use/)?
Or point me to concise documentation that makes the difference clear?
Okay, thanks. I'll take that in and try to digest it, try to find examples
what that means.
> Gesendet: Montag, 20. Mai 2019 um 19:58 Uhr
> Von: "Daniel Frey"
> An: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Betreff: Re: [gentoo-user] keywords vs use variables
>
> On 5/20/19 10:54 AM, n952...@web.de wrote
That's good, thank you both.
> Gesendet: Dienstag, 21. Mai 2019 um 01:29 Uhr
> Von: "Nikos Chantziaras"
> An: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Betreff: [gentoo-user] Re: keywords vs use variables
>
> On 20/05/2019 20:54, n952...@web.de wrote:
> > Can someone explain the difference between keywords
It's getting late tonight to try this - before I do so tomorrow, does anyone
have any thoughts about the following plan?
I want one machine facing the internet that's my local mirror and if
a client needs something that's not on the mirror, the emerge will fail and
I'll get it onto the mirror manu
Hi,
I'm currently at 4.14.65-gentoo and I understand my cheap hp laptop's amdgpu
could finally get better support if I upgrade to 4.16 or 4.17.1.
Can I just do that, or would it be better (or even possible) to go in smaller
increments?
Also, something's always complaining to me about my profile
And, what are the consequences that I'm suffering, that I haven't done that
before, for over a year?
> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 29. Mai 2019 um 23:55 Uhr
> Von: n952...@web.de
> An: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Betreff: updating /etc/package.accept_keywords
>
> I have many files like ._cfg_packa
I have many files like ._cfg_package.accept_keywords.
Is the right way to handle this to do something like:
sort -u ._cfg_package.accept_keywords >| package.accept_keywords
!!! Multiple package instances within a single package slot have been pulled
!!! into the dependency graph, resulting in a slot conflict:
sys-apps/portage:0
How should I go about handling this?
Slot are explained somewhere as allowing multiple packages to have different
versions of the same pro
> Gesendet: Donnerstag, 30. Mai 2019 um 00:20 Uhr
> Von: "Dale"
> I've done upgrades that skip quite a ways using make oldconfig. I've
> never had any issues. If it were me, I'd just make the jump but make
> sure to keep the old kernel around just in case something doesn't work.
> At least that
The next section of the response to my attempt to update portage is a long list
of packages, each terminated with a "(masked by: something or other)".
What does that tell me. If it's masked, it shouldn't be available, right?
But, I've got it:
- virtual/perl-parent-0.234.0-r1::gentoo (masked b
Okay, gladly. In fact, I ran it 3 times, one after another, because I wasn't
even sure if there were fatal problems or not ... trying to attach these text
files...
But I'm going to bed then. Good night.
> Gesendet: Donnerstag, 30. Mai 2019 um 00:38 Uhr
> Von: "Dale"
> An: gentoo-user@lists.
Oh, I wish I'd use .txt as an extension. Here's one in the raw:
10~>sudo emerge --oneshot portage
Password:
!!! Your current profile is deprecated and not supported anymore.
!!! Use eselect profile to update your profile.
!!! Please upgrade to the following profile if possible:
defa
Thanks for the good link
> Gesendet: Donnerstag, 30. Mai 2019 um 00:52 Uhr
> Von: "Neil Bothwick"
> An: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Betreff: Re: [gentoo-user] Updating portage, continued
>
> On Thu, 30 May 2019 00:37:14 +0200, n952...@web.de wrote:
>
> > The next section of the response to my
that's a good libk, too
> Gesendet: Donnerstag, 30. Mai 2019 um 03:04 Uhr
> Von: "Adam Carter"
> An: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Betreff: Re: Re: [gentoo-user] upgrading (profiles, too)
>
> On Thu, May 30, 2019 at 8:41 AM wrote:
>
> > > Gesendet: Donnerstag, 30. Mai 2019 um 00:20 Uhr
> > > Vo
Next comes this:
"The following keyword changes are necessary to proceed:
(see "package.accept_keywords" in the portage(5) man page for more details)
# required by sys-devel/crossdev-20171230::gentoo
# required by @selected
# required by @world (argument)
=sys-apps/portage-2.3.67 ~amd64"
If I'm
> Gesendet: Freitag, 31. Mai 2019 um 00:02 Uhr
> Von: "Dale"
> An: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Betreff: Re: Aw: Re: [gentoo-user] upgrading (profiles, too)
>
> Mick wrote:
> > On Thursday, 30 May 2019 02:18:01 BST Dale wrote:
to do.
>
> If I recall correctly, I did a merge -e world when I sw
I'm sorry, I'm not getting this yet. What if I just don't update these
configuration files?
dispatch-conf tells me, for /etc/portage/package.accept_keywords:
--- /etc/portage/package.use/zz-autounmask 2018-03-12 21:56:49.172491972
+0100
+++ /etc/portage/package.use/._cfg0015_zz-autounmas
Fundamentally, autounmask seems like something I don't want to do, at all.
What happens if I just remove zz-autounmask? What do I have to emerge to find
out?
I currently have:
$ cat /etc/portage/package.use/zz-autounmask
>=dev-lang/python-2.7.14-r1:2.7 sqlite
>=sys-libs/zlib-1.2.11-r1 minizi
Okay, I think I got it. I saw that rrdtool was installed, so assumed
everything was okay. But, what I didn't realize is that - back then - I guess
I tried to install montorix and didn't notice, in the jungle of messages, that
the emerge was not successful.
Apparently, rddtool got installed wi
Henry V, Act III, 1598
> Gesendet: Dienstag, 04. Juni 2019 um 16:59 Uhr
> Von: "Grant Edwards"
> An: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Betreff: [gentoo-user] Re: Updating portage, continued
>
> On 2019-06-03, n952...@web.de wrote:
>
> > Fundamentally, autounmask seems like something I don't want to
Or, perhaps, that's where slots come in?
If I try to install package A, which doesn't want whatever's in
> > > +>=net-analyzer/rrdtool-1.6.0-r1 perl graph
then, it'll use a new slot?
I see that I have ebuilds for rrdtool-1.6.0 and rrdtool-1.7.0,1.7.1. and 1.7.2.
The one that runs when I ente
The handbook is great information, but unfortunately, it uses concepts -
specific gentoo concepts - that many readers doesn't know. They are then often
cross-referenced to other pages, which likewise define things based on expected
internal understanding of the mechanisms, goals, and potential
Great additional information. Thank you.
> Gesendet: Mittwoch, 05. Juni 2019 um 00:10 Uhr
> Von: "Mick"
> An: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
> Betreff: Re: Aw: Re: Re: [gentoo-user] Updating portage, continued
>
> On Tuesday, 4 June 2019 21:21:24 BST n952...@web.de wrote:
> > Or, perhaps, that's
On 06/06/19 06:00, n952...@web.de wrote:
The handbook is great information, but unfortunately, it uses concepts -
specific gentoo concepts - that many readers doesn't know. They are then often
cross-referenced to other pages, which likewise define things based on expected
internal understand
On 06/10/19 22:42, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Mon, Jun 10, 2019 at 5:39 PM n952162 wrote:
On 06/06/19 06:00,n952...@web.de wrote:
In trying to update portage (before I update my system), I have this:
!!! All ebuilds that could satisfy
">=dev-python/setuptools-34[python_targ
in less(1), how do you search for a pattern at the beginning (or ending)
of a word.
Elsewhere, you prepend (or append) the pattern with \< (\>) but that's
not working for me with gentoo.
Also, where the change is documented.
the decades-old \<.
On 07/18/19 20:55, Michael Orlitzky wrote:
On 7/18/19 6:40 PM, n952162 wrote:
in less(1), how do you search for a pattern at the beginning (or ending)
of a word.
Hit front slash "/" in less, and then type a perl-compatible regular
expression. Specificall
My eth0/enp2s0 network adapter is configured so:
$ cat /etc/conf.d/net
config_enp2s0="192.168.179.20/24"
but on boot, I get a bonjour address:
enp2s0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr 48:BA:4E:29:99:9E
inet addr:*169.254.71.117 * Bcast:169.254.255.255
Mask:255.255.0.0
static ip_address=192.168.0.10/24/
(haven't tried it yet, my system is busy right now).
So, what is /etc/conf.d/net for? What programs read it?
On 08/19/19 20:11, n952162 wrote:
My eth0/enp2s0 network adapter is configured so:
$ cat /etc/conf.d/net
config_enp2s0="192.168.179.2
You were right, thank you. When I put net.enp2s0 back in, it came up on
reboot this time - the interface, that is. I guess there was something
else wrong when I still had it in the defaul runlevel. My faith in
openrc is restored :-)
On 08/19/19 22:35, n952162 wrote:
On 08/19/19 20:04, J
I have two gentoo machines, my primary one and one I cloned off of that.
The original gentoo machine has lots of nice /var/log/syslog.1.gz, etc.
files.
The clone has one big /var/log/syslog file.
I now have logrotate installed in both machines. I see that the
original has cronie installed and
When I enter:
sudo emerge =sys-apps/portage-2.3.69
I get the response:
emerge: there are no ebuilds to satisfy "=sys-apps/portage-2.3.69".
but this version is listed on
packages.gentoo.org/packages/sys-apps/portage as being an available Version
https://gitweb.gentoo.org/repo/gentoo.git/
But ~amd64 means that it's unstable. I want to use a stable version of
portage.
That's why I went to 2.3.69
(Sorry, Mick, for the private msg - I always forget that thunderbird
replies directly, and that I have to re-enter the list every time)
On 10/27/19 14:48, Mick wrote:
On Sunday, 27 Octo
Right. But I can't --sync.
But beyond that, why does emerge say there are no ebuilds when there are?
On 10/27/19 14:32, Mick wrote:
On Sunday, 27 October 2019 13:21:04 GMT Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Sunday, 27 October 2019 15:11:56 GMT n952162 wrote:
When I enter:
sudo emerge =sys
On 10/27/19 14:21, Peter Humphrey wrote:
What does eix tell you after 'emerge --sync && eix-update'?
* To update portage, run 'emerge --oneshot portage' now.
/wiki/Project:Portage
Description: Portage is the package management and
distribution system for Gentoo
On 10/27/19 15:40, Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Sunday, 27 October 2019 16:03:45 GMT n952162 wrote:
On 10/27/19 14:21, Peter Humphrey wrote:
What does eix tell you after 'emerge -
64is now:
$ lf /usr/portage/profiles/default/linux/amd64/
17.0/ 17.1/ eapi package.use.mask parent
Is my system now killed?
On 10/27/19 15:10, Mick wrote:
On Sunday, 27 October 2019 16:02:53 GMT n952162 wrote:
But ~amd64 means that it's unstable. I want to use a stable versi
I'm getting 13k bps writing to a Toshiba 3T drive over a USB/Sata
connection. It' take 33 hours to transfer a 200meg file.
I mounted it async but then see that ext4 ignores the async option on
mounts.
What am I doing wrong?
Okay, thank you, I'll try that (in (33 - 24) hours ;-) )
On 11/02/19 16:40, Mick wrote:
On Saturday, 2 November 2019 15:15:31 GMT n952162 wrote:
I'm getting 13k bps writing to a Toshiba 3T drive over a USB/Sata
connection. It' take 33 hours to transfer a 200meg file.
I mount
I had a power-loss situation and when the system came up I went into the
grub rescue screen - my root file system was trashed. I fsck-ed that
and had a ton of prompts until I did the "all" answer. I guess it can
happen, every once in a while - even with a journaling filesystem - I guess.
I was
?
On 11/04/19 20:47, n952162 wrote:
I had a power-loss situation and when the system came up I went into the
grub rescue screen - my root file system was trashed. I fsck-ed that
and had a ton of prompts until I did the "all" answer. I guess it can
happen, every once in a while
rings in
them. Anybody have an idea how to get them back to their proper places?
On 11/04/19 20:47, n952162 wrote:
I had a power-loss situation and when the system came up I went into the
grub rescue screen - my root file system was trashed. I fsck-ed that
and had a ton of prompts until I d
fsck effectively discarded many of my virtualbox libraries but I
still have the ebuild and tarballs and everything. But I don't see
anything about repair in the emerge manpage.
I imagine that's a line in the Manifest file? Any hope of recreating that?
On 11/05/19 22:11, n952162 wrote:
* Missing digest for
'/usr/portage/app-emulation/virtualbox/virtualbox-5.1.32.ebuild'
On 11/05/19 22:08, n952162 wrote:
I found a copy of the ebuild on a different
e:
If the version you want isn’t in the tree anymore, you can use `ebuild
/path/to/it merge`
On mar. 5 nov. 21:41:39 2019, n952162 wrote:
Thank you for the suggestion.
I had version 5.1.32 installed - several components of that. When I run
the command you suggest, it prompts:
/The followi
ortage/app-emulation/virtualbox # /
I think I'm on EAPI 6.
On 11/05/19 22:08, n952162 wrote:
I found a copy of the ebuild on a different machine I have - it's a x86
not an amd64 architect, but maybe it's architecture-agnostic. I wonder
if I copy that to my amd64 machine (which ha
* Missing digest for
'/usr/portage/app-emulation/virtualbox/virtualbox-5.1.32.ebuild'
On 11/05/19 22:08, n952162 wrote:
I found a copy of the ebuild on a different machine I have - it's a
x86 not an amd64 architect, but maybe it's architecture-agnostic. I
wonder if I c
pcap also got it's libraries trashed ...
On 11/05/19 22:22, n952162 wrote:
I found the ebuild /file/ manifest command ... but got this:
//usr/portage/app-emulation/virtualbox # ebuild
/usr/portage/app-emulation/virtualbox/virtualbox-5.1.32.ebuild manifest //
//!!! getFetchMap(): 'app
!!! Ebuild on the crashed machine isn't taking it.
On 11/05/19 22:30, n952162 wrote:
I moved the virtualbox-6* ebuilds out of that directory and was able
to regenerate the Manifest!
The ebuild file merge worked quite well ... unfortunately, I ended up
here:
/usr/lib/gcc/x86_64-pc-linux-gnu/
even if the package was just emerged?
for (like a chef's knife
for a screwdriver) ;-)
--new-use isn't on my man page
On 11/10/19 11:31, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Sun, 10 Nov 2019 11:18:42 +0100, n952162 wrote:
even if the package was just emerged?
Yes, if you use "emerge pkg", because that's what you have told it t
Ah! Now I found it! Thank you.
On 11/10/19 12:25, Francesco Turco wrote:
On Sun, Nov 10, 2019, at 12:09, n952162 wrote:
--new-use isn't on my man page
It's spelled --newuse, or simply -N.
I re-installed gentoo from the minimal boot cd (amd64), re-emerged
everything from my old, saved world file, overnight, and its up and
running, more or less. Then, I wanted to see what was available and
discovered, there's no /usr/portage directory! What did I do wrong?
I've reinstalled gentoo from the gentoo repository and now my power
button doesn't do a shutdown anymore. What do I have to do to have it
issue a shutdown? This is an openrc system.
I have this, but it doesn't work:
$ cat /etc/acpi/events/powerbtn
event=button[ /]power.*
action=/sbin/poweroff
On 11/13/19 09:55, Mick wrote:
On Wednesday, 13 November 2019 06:48:11 GMT n952162 wrote:
I've reinstalled gentoo from the gentoo repository and now my power
button doesn't do a shutdown anymore. What do I have to do to have it
issue a shutdown? This is an openrc system.
I have th
'\0' '\n' |
grep DBUS_SESSION_BUS_ADDRESS
); qdbus org.kde.kded" | grep -q powerdevil
); then
# Get out as the power manager that is running will take
care of things.
exit
fi
whereupon I was finally able to understand it
On 11/16/19 13:50, Mick wrote:
It is not simply a matter of different names, but of different binaries. As
far as I understand it, the /sbin/init of sys-apps/sysvinit is used by openrc
unless you have modified your system to use openrc-init (a different binary to
/sbin/init) as explained here:
okay, I've got ...
acpid is, by default, not in the default openrc run list [:blush:]
Solution:
sudo rc-update add acpid
On 11/13/19 07:48, n952162 wrote:
I've reinstalled gentoo from the gentoo repository and now my power
button doesn't do a shutdown anymore. What do
There's a million ways a system can hang. Acpi is a mechanism for
shipping kernel events to user space. If user space isn't working, acpi
won't work. I think.
On 11/17/19 09:44, Dale wrote:
n952162 wrote:
okay, I've got ...
acpid is, by default, not in the def
And - although hitting the power button will clear up some situations,
if your hard disk is having trouble closing, shutdown() probably won't
be able to get around that and the shutdown will be like a power-loss
shutdown.
On 11/17/19 10:27, n952162 wrote:
There's a million ways a
lt by fsck, with substantial loss of organization and of data
(despite both being ext3/4 journaling filesystems - I just don't
understand that!) )
On 11/17/19 10:35, n952162 wrote:
And - although hitting the power button will clear up some situations,
if your hard disk is having trouble cl
I'm not seeing how doing an fsck from a live cd helps.
On 11/17/19 11:50, Mick wrote:
On Sunday, 17 November 2019 10:30:49 GMT Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Sun, 17 Nov 2019 11:21:18 +0100, n952162 wrote:
(in fact, that's exactly the situation that I've been confronted with
and have
On 11/17/19 11:30, Neil Bothwick wrote:
Please don't top-post on this list.
Magic SysReq would probably have helped in those situations. ext3/4 only
journal metadata by default, you can specify a mount option to also
journal data but it impacts performance.
I wonder how often NTFS loses
On 11/17/19 10:51, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Sun, 17 Nov 2019 10:27:48 +0100, n952162 wrote:
There's a million ways a system can hang. Acpi is a mechanism for
shipping kernel events to user space. If user space isn't working, acpi
won't work. I think.
But if it's just X
How do you fix a broken filesystem, other than letting fsck have its way
with it?
On 11/17/19 12:39, Dale wrote:
n952162 wrote:
I'm not seeing how doing an fsck from a live cd helps.
Generally speaking, something ends up being mounted rw and if it isn't
clean, that can cause issue
Ah, now I see. Yes, in that respect, that is, if you don't have a
chance to get /forcefsck written.
On 11/17/19 13:23, Dale wrote:
n952162 wrote:
How do you fix a broken filesystem, other than letting fsck have its way
with it?
The point is, don't touch it until you do. If
On 11/17/19 16:06, Mick wrote:
You keep top-posting and inverting the logical Q/A flow of this thread ...
On Sunday, 17 November 2019 12:53:51 GMT n952162 wrote:
Ah, now I see. Yes, in that respect, that is, if you don't have a
chance to get /forcefsck written.
Running fsck manually
Hello,
do I understand this correctly? In order to run qemu-nbd, you emerge
app-emulation/qemu
but that isn't all, you've also got to emerge sys-block/nbd?
Why doesn't qemu have a dependency on nbd? I don't find any relevant
USE flags.
:28:26PM +0100, n952162 wrote
do I understand this correctly? In order to run qemu-nbd, you emerge
app-emulation/qemu
but that isn't all, you've also got to emerge sys-block/nbd?
nbd is a "Network Block Device" driver along the lines of NFS, but it
doesn't h
do this:
sudo modprobe nbd
qemu-nbd -c /dev/nbd0 drive.vdi
On 12/05/19 07:34, n952162 wrote:
But qemu includes qemu-nbd, and it seems that qemu-nbd requires nbd.ko,
which is presumably provided by sys-block/nbd.
In other words, qemu provides a facility which seems to only work with
nbd
The documentation emerged with sys-block/nbd includes this:
/usr/share/doc/nbd-3.19/README.md.bz2:
# modprobe nbd
but there's no module emerged by nbd-3.19.ebuild. There doesn't seem to
be any relevant USE flags to cause it to be generated.
How can I get nbd.ko?
On 12/05/19 08:17, Arve Barsnes wrote:
On Thu, 5 Dec 2019 at 08:11, n952162 wrote:
Or maybe the assumption is wrong - after emerging nbd, I still get this when I
try to modprobe nbd, which is required for running qemu-nbd:
modprobe: FATAL: Module ndb not found in directory /lib/modules
, n952162 wrote:
The documentation emerged with sys-block/nbd includes this:
/usr/share/doc/nbd-3.19/README.md.bz2:
# modprobe nbd
but there's no module emerged by nbd-3.19.ebuild. There doesn't seem to
be any relevant USE flags to cause it to be generated.
How can I get nbd.ko?
where do I start?
On 12/05/19 09:56, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Thu, 5 Dec 2019 08:33:08 +0100, n952162 wrote:
Okay, I see from /proc/config.gz that NBD probably needs to be
configured with the kernel
# CONFIG_BLK_DEV_NBD is not set
Bummer. At work, I could just do a apt-get install qemu-nbd
Very informative explanation.
On 12/05/19 20:01, Grant Taylor wrote:
On 12/4/19 11:03 PM, Walter Dnes wrote:
nbd is a "Network Block Device" driver along the lines of NFS, but it
doesn't handle concurrency. https://nbd.sourceforge.io/
I think I'd liken NBD to iSCSI more so than NFS. Primari
On 12/05/19 20:01, Grant Taylor wrote:
On 12/5/19 12:33 AM, n952162 wrote:
The emerge should have checked for this and failed.
I don't think it should fail. I've routinely seen emerge check for
various kernel / network / other parameters and issue warnings about
things not being th
I rebuilt my kernel and now have the Network Block Device, but now my
system doesn't power off anymore, using shutdown -h now, and doesn't
reboot with reboot (orshutdown -r now).
Anybody have any idea what could have become misconfigured?
On 12/07/19 13:17, Mick wrote:
On Friday, 6 December 2019 11:38:09 GMT n952162 wrote:
I rebuilt my kernel and now have the Network Block Device, but now my
system doesn't power off anymore, using shutdown -h now, and doesn't
reboot with reboot (orshutdown -r now).
I'm not su
On 12/06/19 12:38, n952162 wrote:
I rebuilt my kernel and now have the Network Block Device, but now my
system doesn't power off anymore, using shutdown -h now, and doesn't
reboot with reboot (orshutdown -r now).
Anybody have any idea what could have become misconfigured?
I
On 12/11/19 17:47, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Wed, 11 Dec 2019 14:55:48 +0100, n952162 wrote:
I've made a new recognition about this issue. If I move
/lib/modules/4.19.72-gentoo to a saved/ subdirectory, and otherwise have
NO modules directory, I don't have this problem. When
But that begs the question of why my initrd is correct but my
/lib/modules/4.19.72-gentoo isn't ...
I'll look into it tomorrow...
On 12/11/19 22:56, n952162 wrote:
On 12/11/19 17:47, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Wed, 11 Dec 2019 14:55:48 +0100, n952162 wrote:
I've made a
I rebuilt my kernel, taking AMDGPU out and using "ATI Radeon" instead.
Now X works for me, and even my power-off issue is gone.
I don't think it has anything to do with firefox, really, or
performance, but rather a problem with the driver and hardware coordination.
According to the gentoo AMDGP
I rebuilt my kernel, taking AMDGPU out and using "ATI Radeon" instead.
Now X works for me, and even my power-off issue is gone.
I don't think it has anything to do with firefox, really, or
performance, but rather a problem with the driver and hardware coordination.
According to the gentoo AMDGP
After starting apache2 and cups, when I select the add-a-printer
selection item, a blank screen is displayed. Does anybody know why?
I tried using imagemagick's display, and it gave me:
display: delegate library support not built-in '' (X11)
There's no X on the media-gfx/imagemagick web page.
On a guess, I created a use file for imagemagick with X and now I get:
display: no decode delegate for this image format `JPG'
Am I
On 2019.12.16 12:10, n952162 wrote:
I tried using imagemagick's display, and it gave me:
display: delegate library support not built-in '' (X11)
There's no X on the media-gfx/imagemagick web page.
On a guess, I created a use file for imagemagick with X and now I get:
display:
On 12/16/19 20:52, Rich Freeman wrote:
On Mon, Dec 16, 2019 at 2:25 PM n952162 wrote:
It's strange ... on coming home, I see that my machine here can display
all the usual filetypes and has *no* use flags:
media-gfx/imagemagick-7.0.8.11
I'm still curious what that "USE fl
how does the bond0 i/f get set up?
And why do I have it?
I have this line in /etc/conf.d/net:
config_wlp3s0="dhcp"
given:
$ifconfig wlp3s0
wlp3s0 Link encap:Ethernet HWaddr xx:xx:xx:xx:xx:xx
inet addr:192.168.178.42 Bcast:192.168.178.255
Mask:255.255.255.0
UP BROADCAST RUNNING MULTICAST MTU:1500 Metric:1
RX packets
On 2019-12-16 16:48, n952162 wrote:
After starting apache2 and cups, when I select the add-a-printer
selection item, a blank screen is displayed. Does anybody know why?
Because I don't have javascript enabled ...
Interestingly enough, I was able get a lot farther with w3m.
re my root filesystem got crashed by a negligent ext4
recovery, the system came up multi-homed, with a static and a
dhcp-derived address.
Coming from 4.9.? to 4.19.72.
Could it be that something changed?
On 12/19/19 08:46, n952162 wrote:
I have this line in /etc/conf.d/net:
config_wlp3s0=&qu
In app-emulation/virtualbox-guest-additions5.1.32, there's a program
called /usr/bin/VBoxClient that is not to be found in 5.2.32. I don't
find any mention of the change in the internet or the release notes for
5.2.32. Anybody have any idea what the story is?
Does anybody use clipboard sharing?
filesystem crash.
On 12/22/19 19:19, Tamer Higazi wrote:
sorry.
I am totally stupid. I got you now.
Check if the networkmanager of systemd or "DEFINETLY" openrc is used.
More I cannot tell you
best, Tamer
On 2019-12-21 18:15, n952162 wrote:
Okay, I have an update on this.
xauth(1) says:
/if [the X server] does not support the SECURITY extension, the
[generate] command fails./
The xauth command is used to generate the .Xauthority file, which is
required for X11Forwarding.
But the Security Extension is not enabled by default:
- - xcsecurity : Build Securit
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