On 23.12.2011 14:27 , Marc wrote:
There is a typo error in vdr.c but that's all.
For gentoo users, I attached the patches I use. I relocated some hunk of
config.c and config.h and renamed USE_LIVEBUFFER to LIVEBUFFER in Makefile.
Patch the ebuild and put the other patch in
/etc/portage/patches/
On 01/01/2012 18:41, René wrote:
On 23.12.2011 14:27 , Marc wrote:
There is a typo error in vdr.c but that's all.
For gentoo users, I attached the patches I use. I relocated some hunk of
config.c and config.h and renamed USE_LIVEBUFFER to LIVEBUFFER in
Makefile.
Patch the ebuild and put the
On 01.01.2012 20:23 , Marc wrote:
Hi René,
You can watch the output of the patch
(/var/tmp/portage/media-video/vdr-1.7.21-r2/temp/0001-opt-96-livebuffer12-rmm.dpatch-rebased-onto-1.7.21.patch.out)
and see where it fails.
vdr 1.7.22 is out now on vdr-devel overlay. I'll post an updated patch
for
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 11:44 AM, René wrote:
> the official gentoo overlay? Even better if it could be added as a basic
> feature of vdr (that could be turned on/off from the settings :-) Klaus?
> Please, please, please :-)
There was talk of this some time ago, though I don't think anything
s
On 01.01.2012 22:13 , VDR User wrote:
There was talk of this some time ago, though I don't think anything
solid came of it. I personally am not interested in it unless ram came
be used for the buffer storage. Having a harddrive (or even worse, an
ssd) in a constant write state 24/7 is not somethi
On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 1:31 PM, René wrote:
>> There was talk of this some time ago, though I don't think anything
>> solid came of it. I personally am not interested in it unless ram came
>> be used for the buffer storage. Having a harddrive (or even worse, an
>> ssd) in a constant write state 24
On 2 January 2012 10:19, VDR User wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 1, 2012 at 1:31 PM, René wrote:
>>> There was talk of this some time ago, though I don't think anything
>>> solid came of it. I personally am not interested in it unless ram came
>>> be used for the buffer storage. Having a harddrive (or even
On 02.01.2012 5:12 , Torgeir Veimo wrote:
RAM is cheap enough now days that having plenty of it isn't a problem
for most people. For example, 4GB will cost you less than a few hours
at the pub with friends. :)
The OP probably meant to have the option to use RAM directly without
fiddling with a