Re: Hoping to donate/sell a Talos II motherboard

2023-03-01 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Wednesday, March 1, 2023, wrote: > March 1, 2023 5:11 AM, "Toshaan Bharvani | VanTosh" wrote: >> Yes, please, I am interested. >> I would use it for PowerEL, LibreBMC and LibreSOC. >> All open source projects. >> Is this just a board or also a CPU? > > It is just the motherboard. :) so

Re: Hoping to donate/sell a Talos II motherboard

2023-02-28 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tuesday, February 28, 2023, wrote: > Hello you fabulous developers! > > My friend has a spare Talos II motherboard that is currently sitting in his house > in Indiana USA collecting dust. > > https://www.raptorcs.com/TALOSII/ > > I have convinced him to donate/sell it to an open source project

Re: Re: Concerns about Security of packages in Debain OS and the Operating system itself.

2022-04-19 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
> Do you have a publication of that analysis? I was thinking the same > about the organization of Debian for some time but never did analysis > or compared it to other distros. i found it here http://lkcl.net/reports/wot/ it's dated 2017 (not a bad guess, 4 years). please bear in mind, the

audacity has become spyware

2021-07-05 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
https://yro.slashdot.org/story/21/07/05/2155212/open-source-audio-editor-audacity-has-become-spyware --- crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-22 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Friday, August 23, 2019, Karsten Merker wrote: > > and decide for themselves who is displaying "violent hatred" on > mailing lists and come to their own judgement about your > allegations: You've now violated the Debian Conduct twice in under an hour. https://www.debian.org/code_of_conduct

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-22 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Aug 22, 2019 at 7:58 PM Karsten Merker wrote: > On Fri, Aug 23, 2019 at 01:49:57AM +0800, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: > > > The last time that we spoke, Theo, some time around 2003 you informed me > > that you were doing so very deliberately "to sho

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-22 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thursday, August 22, 2019, Theodore Y. Ts'o wrote: > On Wed, Aug 21, 2019 at 10:03:01AM +0100, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton > wrote: > > > > so i hope that list gives a bit more context as to how serious the > > consequences of dropping 32 bit support really is.

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-21 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
i remembered a couple more: * the freescale iMX6 has a 19-year supply / long-term support (with about another 10 years to go). it's used in the bunnie huang "Novena Laptop" and can take up to 4GB of RAM. processor core: *32-bit* ARM Cortex A9, in 1, 2 and 4-core SMP arrangements. * the Zync

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-20 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Aug 20, 2019 at 3:31 PM Sam Hartman wrote: > > >>>>> "\Luke" == Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton writes: > Hi. > First, thanks for working with you. > I'm seeing a lot more depth into where you're coming from, and it is > greatly appreciated.

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-20 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Aug 20, 2019 at 2:52 PM Sam Hartman wrote: > I think my concern about your approach is that you're trying to change > how the entire world thinks. that would be... how can i put it... an "incorrect" interpretation. i think globally - i always have. i didn't start the NT Domains

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-20 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Aug 20, 2019 at 1:17 PM Sam Hartman wrote: > I'd ask you to reconsider your argument style. that's very reasonable, and appreciated the way that you put it. > I'm particularly frustrated that you spent your entire reply moralizing > and ignored the technical points I made. ah: i

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-19 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Mon, Aug 19, 2019 at 7:29 PM Sam Hartman wrote: > Your entire argument is built on the premise that it is actually > desirable for these applications (compilers, linkers, etc) to work in > 32-bit address spaces. that's right [and in another message in the thread it was mentioned that builds

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-14 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Wed, Aug 14, 2019 at 5:13 PM Aurelien Jarno wrote: > > a proper fix would also have the advantage of keeping linkers for > > *other* platforms (even 64 bit ones) out of swap-thrashing, saving > > power consumption for build hardware and costing a lot less on SSD and > > HDD regular

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-09 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
--- crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68 On Thu, Aug 8, 2019 at 9:39 PM Aurelien Jarno wrote: > We are at a point were we should probably look for a real solution > instead of relying on tricks. *sigh* i _have_ been pointing out for several years now that

Re: Bypassing the 2/3/4GB virtual memory space on 32-bit ports

2019-08-09 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
--- crowd-funded eco-conscious hardware: https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68 On Fri, Aug 9, 2019 at 1:49 PM Ivo De Decker wrote: > > Hi Aurelien, > > On 8/8/19 10:38 PM, Aurelien Jarno wrote: > > > 32-bit processes are able to address at maximum 4GB of memory (2^32), > > and often less (2 or 3GB)

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-26 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Mon, Jan 7, 2019 at 11:30 PM Mike Hommey wrote: > > it would be extremely useful to confirm that 32-bit builds can in fact > > be completed, simply by adding "-Wl no-keep-memory" to any 32-bit > > builds that are failing at the linker phase due to lack of memory. > > Note that Firefox is

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-09 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
https://sourceware.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=22831 sorry using phone to type, mike, comment 25 shows some important options to ld gold would it be possible to retry with those? 32 bit. Disabling mmap looks really important as clearly a 4gb+ binary is guaranteed going to fail to fit into 32bit

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-08 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Jan 8, 2019 at 7:26 AM Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: > > On Tue, Jan 8, 2019 at 7:01 AM Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton > wrote: > trying this: > > $ python evil_linker_torture.py 3000 400 200 50 > > running with "make -j4" is going to take a few

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-07 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Jan 8, 2019 at 7:01 AM Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: > i'm going to see if i can get above the 4GB mark by modifying the > Makefile to do 3,000 shared libraries instead of 3,000 static object > files. fail. shared libraries link extremely quickly. reverted to stati

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-07 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
$ python evil_linker_torture.py 3000 100 100 50 ok so that managed to get up to 1.8GB resident memory, paused for a bit, then doubled it to 3.6GB, and a few seconds later successfully outputted a binary. i'm going to see if i can get above the 4GB mark by modifying the Makefile to do 3,000

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-07 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Jan 8, 2019 at 6:27 AM Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: > i'm just running the above, will hit "send" now in case i can't hit > ctrl-c in time on the linker phase... goodbye world... :) $ python evil_linker_torture.py 2000 50 100 200 $ make -j8 oh,

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-07 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
$ python evil_linker_torture.py 2000 50 100 200 ok so it's pretty basic, and arguments of "2000 50 10 100" resulted in around a 10-15 second linker phase, which top showed to be getting up to around the 2-3GB resident memory range. "2000 50 100 200" should start to make even a system

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-07 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tuesday, January 8, 2019, Mike Hommey wrote: > On Mon, Jan 07, 2019 at 11:46:41PM +0000, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton > wrote: > > > At some point apps are going to become so insanely large that not even > > disabling debug info will help. > > That's less

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-07 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tuesday, January 8, 2019, Mike Hommey wrote: > . > > Note that Firefox is built with --no-keep-memory > --reduce-memory-overheads, and that was still not enough for 32-bts > builds. GNU gold instead of BFD ld was also given a shot. That didn't > work either. Presently, to make things link at

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-07 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
(hi edmund, i'm reinstating debian-devel on the cc list as this is not a debian-arm problem, it's *everyone's* problem) On Mon, Jan 7, 2019 at 12:40 PM Edmund Grimley Evans wrote: > > i spoke with dr stallman a couple of weeks ago and confirmed that in > > the original version of ld that he

Re: Rebuilding the entire Debian archive twice on arm64 hardware for fun and proft

2019-01-07 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Sun, Jan 6, 2019 at 11:46 PM Steve McIntyre wrote: > > [ Please note the cross-post and respect the Reply-To... ] > > Hi folks, > > This has taken a while in coming, for which I apologise. There's a lot > of work involved in rebuilding the whole Debian archive, and many many > hours spent

Re: Upcoming Qt switch to OpenGL ES on arm64

2018-11-26 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Fri, Nov 23, 2018 at 12:18 AM Lisandro Damián Nicanor Pérez Meyer wrote: > So: what's the best outcome for our *current* users? Again, pick only one. here's a perspective that may not have been considered: how much influence and effect on purchasing decisions would the choice made have? we

EOMA68-A20 Crowd-funded Laptop and Micro-Desktop

2016-07-16 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
https://www.crowdsupply.com/eoma68/micro-desktop i've been working on a strategy to make it possible for people to have more control over the hardware that they own, and for it to cost less money for them to do so, long-term. i've had to become an open hardware developer in order to do that. i

libre version of iceweasel

2015-06-09 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
http://news.slashdot.org/story/15/06/09/1722236/mozilla-responds-to-firefox-user-backlash-over-pocket-integration after seeing this, i'm becoming increasingly alarmed at where firefox is going [the first signs were the way in which the announcement was made to focus on speed improvements when

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-22 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Wed, Feb 18, 2015 at 12:16 AM, Axel Wagner m...@merovius.de wrote: Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton l...@lkcl.net writes: what *does* concern me is that it takes such incredible (and amazing) efforts by people like adam for the average end-user or sysadmin to contemplate replacing {insert

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-18 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Wed, Feb 18, 2015 at 12:27 AM, Steve Langasek vor...@debian.org wrote: On Tue, Feb 17, 2015 at 11:52:21PM +, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: On Tue, Feb 17, 2015 at 10:52 PM, Josh Triplett j...@joshtriplett.org wrote: So, please go educate yourself on what libsystemd0 actually

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Feb 17, 2015 at 10:52 PM, Josh Triplett j...@joshtriplett.org wrote: So, please go educate yourself on what libsystemd0 actually does, i know what it does, and what it does - technically - is *not* the issue that i am concerned about. and if for some reason you still consider it a

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
ok, so there's been quite a discussion, both on slashdot, where amazingly the comments that filtered to the top were insightful and respectful, and also here on debian-devel and debian-users. as i normally use gmane to reply (and maintain and respect threads) but this discussion is not *on*

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Feb 17, 2015 at 7:03 PM, Andrew Shadura and...@shadura.me wrote: Hello, I'd like to apologise for my mail I sent about two hours ago. I have overreacted mainly because of the length of the email, CAPS INSIDE and also because it's a topic which is being discussed for more than a year

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Feb 17, 2015 at 6:25 PM, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton l...@lkcl.net wrote: which should help answer the question you asked: your work - fantastic as it is - was *impossible to find*. it doesn't even remotely come up on the radar of queries. *nobody knows what you've achieved

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Feb 17, 2015 at 5:20 PM, claude juif claude.j...@gmail.com wrote: 2015-02-17 17:55 GMT+01:00 Andrew Shadura and...@shadura.me: Hi Luke, On 17 February 2015 at 17:28, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton l...@lkcl.net wrote: 265 lines of text and counting snipped In short, this is TL;DR

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Feb 17, 2015 at 5:58 PM, Andrew Shadura and...@shadura.me wrote: Hi, On 17 February 2015 at 18:20, claude juif claude.j...@gmail.com wrote: Really rude answer. Really bad. I find it really rude to send emails of about 300 lines of text in total. Extremely rude. i did apologise in

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
adam, i apologise for not being in a position to reply in-thread: as mentioned previously i tried (via gmane) but the entire discussion is completely missing, and i forgot to ask people in the original post to cc me if they would like an ongoing threaded reply. i also notice that you removed

Re: how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-16 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Mon, Feb 16, 2015 at 11:42 AM, Christian Seiler christ...@iwakd.de wrote: Am 16.02.2015 um 02:54 schrieb Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton: http://lkcl.net/reports/removing_systemd_from_debian/ It's funny that when Wheezy (not Jessie!) came out, nobody complained that libsystemd-login0 (which

how to remove libsystemd0 from a live-running debian desktop system

2015-02-15 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
http://lkcl.net/reports/removing_systemd_from_debian/ i've documented the process by which it is possible to run some of the debian desktop window managers (TDE, fvwm, twm etc.) without the need for systemd or libsystemd0 or any components related to systemd whatsoever. the process is not

Re: arm64 update - help wanted

2014-05-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
suggestion, wookey: i'd love to help... but obviously with no hardware that's kinda hard: is there a clear set of instructions somewhere - a wiki page for example - on how to debootstrap an arm64 qemu so that even if it's dead slow it's still possible to help out?

Re: arm64 update - help wanted

2014-05-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, May 15, 2014 at 2:10 AM, Wookey woo...@wookware.org wrote: The debian-port arm64 rebootstrap is progressing nicely, and we just passed 4200 source packages built, with another few hundred pending. There are now 2 buildds running. awesome Thus I'd love it if anyone else could help go

Re: ARM port(s) BoF at DebConf

2012-07-20 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Fri, Jul 20, 2012 at 12:54 AM, Hideki Yamane henr...@debian.or.jp wrote: Hi, On Thu, 19 Jul 2012 18:35:44 +0100 Steve McIntyre st...@einval.com wrote: buildds === Both armel and armhf are doing well, covering ~96% of the archive. We don't have any ARM server hardware yet, so we're

Re: ARM port(s) BoF at DebConf

2012-07-19 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Jul 19, 2012 at 6:35 PM, Steve McIntyre st...@einval.com wrote: Both armel and armhf are doing well, covering ~96% of the archive. We don't have any ARM server hardware yet, so we're stuck using development boards as build machines. They work, but they're a PITA for hosting and

Re: ARM port(s) BoF at DebConf

2012-07-19 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Jul 19, 2012 at 9:15 PM, Adam D. Barratt a...@adam-barratt.org.uk wrote: On Thu, 2012-07-19 at 20:09 +0100, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: On Thu, Jul 19, 2012 at 6:35 PM, Steve McIntyre st...@einval.com wrote: Both armel and armhf are doing well, covering ~96% of the archive. We

B2G security model (debian package management recommended) - help and advice needed

2012-03-21 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
folks, hi, please take a deep breath before reading. i'm keenly aware of the view that many people hold of me in debian. that i'm even bringing something to your attention and asking for your help (not for me, personally) should therefore tell you a lot more than needs to actually be said. i'm

Re: linux-image-2.6.39 not booting due to older package (not in list of dependencies!)

2011-08-06 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Aug 2, 2011 at 2:05 PM, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton luke.leigh...@gmail.com wrote: now, i've discussed this on the bugtracker and there clearly isn't - and really shouldn't be - a listed debian dependency between linux-image-2.6.39 kernel and a userspace library.  however

Re: Does anyone care about LSB on arm?

2011-06-01 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, May 31, 2011 at 5:22 PM, Wookey woo...@wookware.org wrote: In my experience anyone distributing binaries actually picks a small set of distros and builds for those explicitly, rather than relying on the LSB. Does that mean that it's not actually useful in the real world? I guess in a

Re: Distributed Debian Distribution Development

2010-09-02 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Wed, Sep 1, 2010 at 6:47 PM, Yaroslav Halchenko deb...@onerussian.com wrote: Just - Wow... thanks! Hopefully digesting of this tasty post would not cause too much of farting ;-) :) seems might be worth adding (if I am not missing the point), then the concept of derivatives would then

Re: Distributed Debian Distribution Development

2010-09-02 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Sep 2, 2010 at 1:44 PM, Oscar Morante spacep...@gmail.com wrote: Have you seen this project [1]? It looks like they have been already thinking about the git+bittorrent idea. [1] http://code.google.com/p/gittorrent/ yes. it's effectively shelved. the name gittorrent was abandoned

Re: upcoming issues with python-hulahop, python-xpcom, xulrunner-1.9.2

2010-07-14 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Wed, Jul 14, 2010 at 8:52 AM, Mike Hommey m...@glandium.org wrote: On Tue, Jul 13, 2010 at 06:07:27PM +, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: hi folks, i don't know if you're aware of the ... issues shall we say ... surrounding xulrunner 1.9.2 but there's a few changes going on. python

upcoming issues with python-hulahop, python-xpcom, xulrunner-1.9.2

2010-07-13 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
hi folks, i don't know if you're aware of the ... issues shall we say ... surrounding xulrunner 1.9.2 but there's a few changes going on. python-xpcom is being *dropped* from xulrunner as a first class citizen and is being turned into a third-rate one. this isn't a problem right now because

Re: pid file security

2010-06-05 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Sat, Jun 5, 2010 at 2:26 AM, Russell Coker russ...@coker.com.au wrote: On Sat, 5 Jun 2010, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton luke.leigh...@gmail.com wrote: apologies for butting-in without being able to continue the thread, but i've just seen this: http://advogato.org/person/etbe/diary/779.html

Re: pid file security

2010-06-04 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
apologies for butting-in without being able to continue the thread, but i've just seen this: http://advogato.org/person/etbe/diary/779.html which links to this: http://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/2010/05/msg00067.html can i please gently remind people that depinit solved the security and

Re: Very newbe help/pointers required about building a distribution from scratch

2010-03-11 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 9:52 PM, Neil Williams codeh...@debian.org wrote: *Precisely* what changes do you need for that architecture - is it really a different architecture from armel? (Answers to debian-embedded please.) hi neil, firstly thank you for the informative post, esp. the history

Re: Very newbe help/pointers required about building a distribution from scratch

2010-03-10 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 8:18 PM, Lennart Sorensen lsore...@csclub.uwaterloo.ca wrote: On Wed, Mar 10, 2010 at 07:20:04PM +, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: yeah - i'd like to know how to do this, too. i installed buildd (and wannabuild) but there appears to be some manual steps

Accepted pyjamas 0.7~svn2052-1 (source all)

2009-10-17 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
Maintainer: Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton l...@lkcl.net Changed-By: Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton l...@lkcl.net Description: pyjamas- Python web widget toolkit and Python-to-Javascript compiler pyjamas-canvas - Pyjamas Python port of GWTCanvas SVG Library pyjamas-desktop - Python web widget

#501774 - where should the library source go?

2008-11-23 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
folks, hi, with respect to RFP #501744 pyjamas package, i thought it best to explain the code's layout and also ask some advice on where files should be installed. pyjamas is general-purpose compiler technology, not just a random dumb tool with a single fixed - and unexpandable - purpose. the

Re: #501774 - where should the library source go?

2008-11-23 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Sun, Nov 23, 2008 at 10:03 PM, Thomas Viehmann [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Hi Luke, hiya thomas. Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: * build.py would be... ohh... perhaps something like... autoconf. Not more like make? *hand-waving* :) I never called pyjs directly. me only

Re: Bug#408467: exim4-config: exim4 'virtual domains' config fits neatly in without interfering with config: please add!

2007-01-26 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Fri, Jan 26, 2007 at 10:52:57AM +0100, Marc Haber wrote: tags #408467 wontfix thanks On Fri, Jan 26, 2007 at 12:50:26AM +, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: i've been looking for this for _four years_ for exim, and you _have_ to add it in - /etc/aliases is pathetic and annoying

Re: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=265920

2006-01-11 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 02:04:45PM +0100, Adeodato Sim?? wrote: * Matthew Garrett [Tue, 10 Jan 2006 02:50:56 +]: Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: i've thought for a long time about how to reply to your message. Let's quickly outline what's happened here: 1

Re: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=265920

2006-01-11 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Jan 10, 2006 at 09:29:12AM +0100, Dirk Mueller wrote: Relax, nobody is being pissed. You just have to realize that if you tell person A about a problem, person B doesn't magically get notified about it. This is not different than in other situations in real life. heya dirk,

Re: http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=265920

2006-01-09 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
, calm. i am at oe with the universe. i am bleeeded in. On Wed, Dec 07, 2005 at 04:06:54AM +0100, Dirk Mueller wrote: On Tuesday 06 December 2005 02:52, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: was the issue mentioned in this report ever resolved? I'm not sure why I have to state

Re: libselinux1 - required

2005-06-09 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Wed, Jun 08, 2005 at 10:44:30PM +1200, Nigel Jones wrote: It's been implied that people will be basicly *forced* to use selinux, wrong. completely wrong. in the debian kernel builds (as arranged i believe by manoj), the default option for the selinux kernel module is selinux=0. that

heeeeeaaaave! debian releases: the solution to windows viruses!

2005-06-09 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
uhhn... is it just me, or has the world's internet traffic just taken a major performance degradation over the past few days? roll up roll up, get yorr anti-virus sofwarz here - right from a debian mirror. all you have to do is get the debian developers to do _another_ major release. noo more

http://www.golden-gryphon.com/software/security/selinux.xhtml

2005-06-09 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
manoj, hi, i am delighted to see the above web page re: selinux. i notice you mention that there is an effort underway to make a uml-selinux. perhaps i should mention that it is utterly trivial to set up a xen system with a guest domain running pretty much any kind of kernel - including selinux

Re: http://www.golden-gryphon.com/software/security/selinux.xhtml

2005-06-09 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Jun 09, 2005 at 11:42:00PM +0100, antoine wrote: On Thu, 2005-06-09 at 20:20 +0100, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: manoj, hi, i am delighted to see the above web page re: selinux. Err? never seen it before :) i notice you mention that there is an effort underway

Re: libselinux1 - required

2005-06-08 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Tue, Jun 07, 2005 at 09:56:17PM -0400, Stephen Frost wrote: * Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: last time i spoke to him [name forgotten] the maintainer of coreutils would not accept the coreutils patches - already completed and demonstrated as working

Re: libselinux1 - required

2005-06-07 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Mon, Jun 06, 2005 at 08:24:31PM -0400, Stephen Frost wrote: * Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton ([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote: any progress on making libselinux1 a Required package? the possibility of having debian/selinux is totally dependent on this one thing happening. no libselinux1

libselinux1 - required

2005-06-06 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
hi, any progress on making libselinux1 a Required package? the possibility of having debian/selinux is totally dependent on this one thing happening. no libselinux1=Required, no debian/selinux [all dependent packages e.g. coreutils will be policy violations]. l. -- -- a

debian kernel 2.6.9 with selinux enabled!

2004-12-01 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
manoj, thank you. thank you thank you *smooch*. l.

Re: Updated SELinux Release

2004-11-05 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Nov 04, 2004 at 11:06:06PM -0500, Colin Walters wrote: On Thu, 2004-11-04 at 13:15 +, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: default: no. Why not on by default, i would agree with stephen that it should be compiled in, default options selinux=no. that gives people

Re: Updated SELinux Release

2004-11-05 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Fri, Nov 05, 2004 at 10:11:01AM -0500, Colin Walters wrote: On Fri, 2004-11-05 at 10:28 +, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: On Thu, Nov 04, 2004 at 11:06:06PM -0500, Colin Walters wrote: On Thu, 2004-11-04 at 13:15 +, Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton wrote: default

Re: Updated SELinux Release

2004-11-04 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
On Thu, Nov 04, 2004 at 01:02:35AM -0600, Manoj Srivastava wrote: On Wed, 03 Nov 2004 21:15:38 -0500, Colin Walters [EMAIL PROTECTED] said: On Wed, 2004-11-03 at 19:21 +, Dhruv Gami wrote: Personally, i would prefer to have those two tarballs available. I know most people using

[sds@epoch.ncsc.mil: Re: Updated SELinux Release]

2004-11-04 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
- Forwarded message from Stephen Smalley [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Envelope-to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Delivery-date: Thu, 04 Nov 2004 16:37:30 + X-Sieve: CMU Sieve 2.2 Subject: Re: Updated SELinux Release From: Stephen Smalley [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: Manoj Srivastava [EMAIL PROTECTED] Cc: [EMAIL

SourceForge.net PR-Web Upgrade Notice.

2004-10-26 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
i'm forwarding this to debian devel for people's attention because it would appear that debian has lost a quite large opportunity - by not having selinux available. l. - Forwarded message from SourceForge.net Team [EMAIL PROTECTED] - Hello, You are receiving this email because you are

Re: Bug#193838: libgcc1: installation of libgcc1:3.3-2 causes failure of massive number of programs

2003-05-19 Thread Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
anybody see this behaviour on an update?] Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton writes: On Mon, May 19, 2003 at 04:52:51PM +0200, Matthias Klose wrote: Never seen this upgrade behaviour. Was libgcc1 installed before libstdc++5? If not, please could you explictely install libgcc1