CCing bug-guix
On Tue, Apr 21, 2020 at 09:41:47AM +0930, Michael Zucchi wrote:
>
> On 20/4/20 11:50 pm, zimoun wrote:
> > Dear,
> >
> > On Mon, 20 Apr 2020 at 11:56, Michael Zucchi wrote:
> >
> > [...]
> >
> > > I ran guix environment guix --pure.
> > Which version (commit) of Guix do you use
Greetings. I am stuck ---
I successfully put guix-system-install-1.0.1.x86_64-linux.iso on a mem stick
and booted.
GUI installer hung up on connecting to wifi network (successfully found
interface and scanned, showing target wifi name) on message "connection in
progress Connecting to ... ple
On 20/4/20 11:50 pm, zimoun wrote:
Dear,
On Mon, 20 Apr 2020 at 11:56, Michael Zucchi wrote:
[...]
I ran guix environment guix --pure.
Which version (commit) of Guix do you use?
Could you provide the output of "guix describe"?
Then I ran configure but it failed saying that guile 3.0 co
"Raghav Gururajan" writes:
> Now, the setup work and the file-system 'repo' gets auto-mounted at ~/repo.
> But I am facing two issues:
>
> [1] ~/repo becomes 'root protected' and stays like that.
> [2] Despite declaring `(needed-for-boot? #f)`, system does not boot when the
> memory card is abse
Raghav Gururajan writes:
> Ah I see. Btw, guix does not use udisks to mount file-systems right?
>
> Like mounting root file-system at "/", guix just uses mount command correct?
Correct.
> Oh. I have to read about types of services then. As a guess, is it the
> difference between service runnin
Dear,
On Mon, 20 Apr 2020 at 11:56, Michael Zucchi wrote:
[...]
> I ran guix environment guix --pure.
Which version (commit) of Guix do you use?
Could you provide the output of "guix describe"?
> Then I ran configure but it failed saying that guile 3.0 could not be
> found. After some pokin
> To clarify, you can configure udisks to mount your drives somewhere else
> like your home directory.
Ah I see. Btw, guix does not use udisks to mount file-systems right?
Like mounting root file-system at "/", guix just uses mount command correct?
> Udiskie is a user service, so I don't think
Pierre Neidhardt writes:
> Marius Bakke writes:
>
>> You could try to build the application you want to test without
>> Pulseaudio support, and run it after killing the pulseaudio daemon.
>
> But how do you kill the pulseaudio daemon? It gets restarted instantly.
The documentation suggests t
I posted about this months ago but I think I got no answers or just gave
up. However a reddit discussion and boredom prompted me to revisit it
and I think I have something that might be useful to someone. I'm sorry
I probably wont put much more time into this for the moment but I can
try a
"Raghav Gururajan" writes:
> Okay, no problem. I can just do git operations by 'cd'ing to /media/foo/bar,
> which is mounted by udisks/udiskie.
To clarify, you can configure udisks to mount your drives somewhere else
like your home directory.
> Now, I am would like to modify udisks-service-typ
Thanks for the trick, didn't know about pasuspender! :)
It seems to work with audacity, however the "default" is mute.
Audacity lets me choose the audio device, but programs that do not will
use "default" and have no sound.
Any idea around this?
--
Pierre Neidhardt
https://ambrevar.xyz/
signa
Hi Pierre!
> I think the best way to do this is to use Guix to set the right Udev
> rules for Udisks:
>
> https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Udisks
I thought I could use the same concept of mounting /home or /boot or /store
etc., from another disk. But all these are immediately after root di
sirgazil writes:
> But the scanner works like this only recently. Before, I had to follow these
> instructions: https://debbugs.gnu.org/cgi/bugreport.cgi?bug=38064#11
As far as I understand, we now have a sane-service-type as part of the
%desktop-services, so this should work out of the box.
>
Hi Pierre!
> If you are using GNOME or some high-level desktop environment, the SD
> card should be automatically mounted when you insert it.
>
> For less sophisticated desktop environments, you can starts tools like
> udisksie on login, then pendrives, SD cards and the like will be
> automatical
If you are using GNOME or some high-level desktop environment, the SD
card should be automatically mounted when you insert it.
For less sophisticated desktop environments, you can starts tools like
udisksie on login, then pendrives, SD cards and the like will be
automatically mounted to /media/$US
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