On Thu, 2011-06-02 at 16:09 +0200, Eric Tanguy wrote:
> Le 02/06/2011 15:30, Eric Tanguy a écrit :
> > Le 02/06/2011 13:12, Michael Schwendt a écrit :
> >> On Thu, 02 Jun 2011 11:43:19 +0200, ET wrote:
> >>
> >>> I tried uninstall and reinstall PackageKit-command-not-found with the
> >>> same result.
> >>> Maybe a x86_64 problem ?
> >> No. Don't just reinstall a package if it isn't broken.
> >> Try to examine the problem a bit. Everything's there for
> >> you to look at.
> >>
> >> $ rpm -ql PackageKit-command-not-found
> >> /etc/PackageKit/CommandNotFound.conf
> >> /etc/profile.d/PackageKit.sh
> >> /usr/libexec/pk-command-not-found
> >>
> >> Look at /etc/profile.d/PackageKit.sh and try to find out
> >> whether it is run and where it terminates.
> > I did nothing special and now it works ...
> > I don't understand!
> > Thanks
> > Eric
> >
> In fact it's not stable.
> Sometimes
> $ ftp
> bash: ftp: commande inconnue...
> Voulez-vous installer le paquet « ftp » qui fournit la commande 
> « ftp » ? [N/y]
> 
> And sometimes
> $ ftp
> bash: ftp: commande inconnue...
> 
> How to find where the problem could come from ?

This could well be simply a matter of adjusting the timeout, i.e. the
behaviour depends on the current speed of your network.

(Personally I think this level of "helpfulness" is totally out of place
in a Shell, so I fixed it by uninstalling PackageKit-command-not-found).

poc

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