I just had this problem. It looks like setperiodsize() is more like a
request than a command---the value you pass in is the requested value,
but the value returned in what the system is actually using. I assume
this is the fault of the underlying ALSA API. I did this to figure out
what the valid
I just upgraded to Natty... and my root is on a pdc RAID. After
rebooting, all I got was the initramfs BusyBox prompt with nary an error
message or a single hint what was wrong. However, a quick glance in
/dev/mapper revealed the problem. I managed to chroot in from an older
version, add Phillip
I was having the same problem. The grub command save_env gives no error
messages, but it doesn't actually make any changes to the environment
block (/boot/grub/grubenv) as it should. I download the source package
(grub-pc-1.98-1ubuntu7) and poked around a bit.
>From disk/raid.c:
grub_raid_write
** Attachment added: "complete (very long) output of rhythmbox --debug"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/52660880/rhythmbox-debug-output.txt.bz2
** Description changed:
Binary package hint: rhythmbox
I am using a 2GB 2nd generation ipod shuffle (lsusb reports as
"05ac:1301 Apple, Inc. i
** Attachment added: "complete output of rhythmbox --debug"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/52660590/rhythmbox.txt
** Attachment added: "Dependencies.txt"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/52659561/Dependencies.txt
** Attachment added: "GConfNonDefault.txt"
http://launchpadlibrarian.net/52659
Public bug reported:
Binary package hint: rhythmbox
I am using a 2GB 2nd generation ipod shuffle (lsusb reports as
"05ac:1301 Apple, Inc. iPod Shuffle 2.Gen") that was recently
initialized with iTunes on Windows.
Steps to reproduce:
1. connect ipod
2. start rhythmbox
3. add a song to ipod
4. ri