I had a similar problem when I did a potato install and
upgraded to unstable. I got around it by commenting out any
axnet drivers in the /etc/pcmcia/* .
On Sat, Sep 08, 2001 at 09:50:27AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I Recently installed Debian on a laptop with a flaky cd-rom and no
Hi,
I downloaded netdrivers-3.0.1.src.rpm from ftp://ftp.scyld.com/pub/network/
I put the driver-sources in /usr/src/modules/netdrivers and tried to
compile them just typing 'make'.
I get the following compiling errors:
/usr/src/linux/include/asm/spinlock.h:26: conflicting types for
On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 09:06:41PM -0400, Tom Allison wrote:
OK, I probably did some bad things here.
But this is what I've done...
1) dselect - purge - irda-common, irda-utils
2) rm /dev/ir* (removed all these various irda related device references)
3) dselect - install - irda-common,
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
If you are only interested in sir, you might try the following procedure:
insmod irda
insmod irtty
insmod ircomm
insmod ircomm-tty
irattach /dev/yourtty -s
and then it should work... at least that one has never failed for me.
I
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 10:30:18AM +0200, Michael Thaler wrote:
Sorry, I forgot the infos about my system. I am using debian unstable
with kernel 2.4.8
--
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On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 11:13:33PM -0700, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry wrote:
There are several packages in Debian currently which attempt to figure out
which network you are own and configure your ethernet device accordingly. I
know intuitively and I think thje other is discover. There is at least
Johan Romin wrote:
Hi there!
First off, I've never tried the irda package that comes whith debian. I always get
the source tarball, and it has always worked for me..
Have you tried to load the irda modules by hand? instead of hoping that irattach
will do it for you?
The error you see in
NOKUBI Takatsugu wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
If you are only interested in sir, you might try the following procedure:
insmod irda
insmod irtty
insmod ircomm
insmod ircomm-tty
irattach /dev/yourtty -s
and then it should work... at least that one has never
Any idea what this could actually mean (and what to do to get rid of
it)???
probable hardware bug: clock timer configuration lost - probably a VIA686a
CPU: Intel Pentium III
Kernel: 2.2.19
Os: Debian/GNU linux stable
thanks
bye
micha
Linux is user friendly, it's just a bit picky
Chris Halls wrote:
Are you tring to get fast infrared? If so, you will need to uncomment the
lines in /etc/modutils/irda:
/etc/modultils/irda -
# To use the NSC driver on a Thinkpad laptop: uncomment the following:
options nsc-ircc dongle_id=0x09
alias irda0 nsc-ircc
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 01:52:43PM +1000, CaT wrote:
If you want a 2.4.x kernel then hit ftp.xx.kernel.org (where xx is
your country code (or the one closest to you via the innanet) and roll
your own.
I'm not sure but I don't -think- there is a 2.4.x kernel package for
debian yet (unless
On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 10:03:17PM -0400, Scott Bigham wrote:
This is, I humbly submit, at least partially on-topic for this list, ;)
since the machine I'm thinking about upgrading is my notebook, and at
least some of the questions are laptop-specific.
Anywho, these are the upgrades I'm
On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 07:33:47PM +0200, Tony Crawford wrote:
although the 2.2r*0* CD does?
At first I thought I had a coaster, but it boots fine on other
machines. FWIW the Progeny 1.0 CD I got off a magazine cover
won't boot on the Toshiba either.
Very curious (and holding on
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 04:55:30PM +1000, Daniel Pittman wrote:
On Mon, 10 Sep 2001, Werner Heuser wrote:
know intuitively and I think thje other is discover. There is at
least two more.
`divine' and maybe some of the ARP packages.
`whereami', which is a suite to detect and configure
hi all,
has anyone any experiences with running linux on a
samsung nv5000 series notebook?
thank you very much,
florian.
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To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Mon, 2001-09-10 at 22:35, Hugo van der Merwe wrote:
(discover is a hardware detection system. Don't think it does network
environment detection too... I know there are others, also don't
remember what they are.)
divine does network environment detection, as does intuitively. I
maintain
On Tue, Sep 11, 2001 at 12:09:11AM +1000, Drew Parsons wrote:
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 04:55:30PM +1000, Daniel Pittman wrote:
`whereami', which is a suite to detect and configure the network.
Probably requires a little more scripting knowledge than some of the
others, though.
I'm
On Sun, 9 Sep 2001, Tom Allison wrote:
CaT wrote:
On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 03:04:28PM +0100, Vivek wrote:
Er. I just added the woody lines to my sources.list and did an
apt-get update
apt-get dist-upgrade
[cut]
Maybe I have a dumb question.
After you change the sources.list from
I've sent the following message to a couple of the XFree86
mailing lists, and haven't got much back--maybe someone
here can help? Thanks.
I've been working on a Dell Latitude C600 with an
ATI Rage 128 Mobility LF (or something like that).
I want to be able to start X up on an external
monitor
On Mon, 10 Sep 2001, Daniel Pittman wrote:
On Mon, 10 Sep 2001, Werner Heuser wrote:
know intuitively and I think thje other is discover. There is at
least two more.
`divine' and maybe some of the ARP packages.
`whereami', which is a suite to detect and configure the network.
Probably
On Sunday 09 September 2001 09:03 pm, Scott Bigham wrote:
This is, I humbly submit, at least partially on-topic for this list, ;)
since the machine I'm thinking about upgrading is my notebook, and at
least some of the questions are laptop-specific.
[...]
- XFree86: 3.3.6 - 4.1.0
My
Drew Parsons wrote (on 10 Sep 2001 at 23:36):
The bit I don't understand is why you can boot from 2.2r0. It
doesn't
work for me (490CDT).
Oops! You're right, 2.2r0 doesn't boot either. Must have been a
problem with my memory--the wet one. I could have sworn I have
(or had) a system here
Thanks, but I've tried it with quite a few different resolutions.
Right now I'm testing at 1024x768.
--Daniel
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 01:20:03PM -0400, Yannick Asselin wrote:
Section Screen
Identifier Screen0
Device Card0
MonitorMonitor0
this is what I've got so far...
I did the apt-get install irda-common irda-tools
I commented out all but the following lines in /etc/modutil/irda
alias tty-ldisk-11 irtty
alias char-major-60 ircomm-tty
(i have 2.2.19 kernel)
(I removed all the 'dongles')
options nsc-ircc dongle_id=0x09
alias
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
and syslog says:
executing: '/sbin/modprobe irda0'
nsc-ircc, Found chip at base=0x2e
nsc-ircc, driver loaded (Dag Brattle)
nsc-ircc_open(), can't get iobase of 0x2f8
+ /lib/modules/2.2.19/misc/nsc-ircc.o: init_module: Device or
Well I was able to get the printer (a BJC-80) working with the Linux IRDA
stack. I think it had something to do with my kernel configuration. I was
using the 2.4.8 kernel with the entire IRDA stack modularized. After the
successful installation of the irda-common and irda-tools packages, the
There are several packages in Debian currently which attempt to figure out
which network you are own and configure your ethernet device accordingly. I
know intuitively and I think thje other is discover. There is at least two
more.
know intuitively and I think thje other is discover. There is at least two
more.
`divine' and maybe some of the ARP packages.
Werner
--
|=| Werner Heuser = Keplerstr. 11A = D-10589 Berlin = Germany
|=| [EMAIL PROTECTED] T. +49-30-3495386
|=| http://MobiliX.org
I had a similar problem when I did a potato install and
upgraded to unstable. I got around it by commenting out any
axnet drivers in the /etc/pcmcia/* .
On Sat, Sep 08, 2001 at 09:50:27AM -0400, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello,
I Recently installed Debian on a laptop with a flaky cd-rom and no
Hi,
I downloaded netdrivers-3.0.1.src.rpm from ftp://ftp.scyld.com/pub/network/
I put the driver-sources in /usr/src/modules/netdrivers and tried to
compile them just typing 'make'.
I get the following compiling errors:
/usr/src/linux/include/asm/spinlock.h:26: conflicting types for
Hi there!
First off, I've never tried the irda package that comes whith debian. I always
get the source tarball, and it has always worked for me..
Have you tried to load the irda modules by hand? instead of hoping that
irattach will do it for you?
The error you see in the syslog, is to my
On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 09:06:41PM -0400, Tom Allison wrote:
OK, I probably did some bad things here.
But this is what I've done...
1) dselect - purge - irda-common, irda-utils
2) rm /dev/ir* (removed all these various irda related device references)
3) dselect - install - irda-common,
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
If you are only interested in sir, you might try the following procedure:
insmod irda
insmod irtty
insmod ircomm
insmod ircomm-tty
irattach /dev/yourtty -s
and then it should work... at least that one has never failed for me.
I
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 10:30:18AM +0200, Michael Thaler wrote:
Sorry, I forgot the infos about my system. I am using debian unstable
with kernel 2.4.8
On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 11:13:33PM -0700, Sean 'Shaleh' Perry wrote:
There are several packages in Debian currently which attempt to figure out
which network you are own and configure your ethernet device accordingly. I
know intuitively and I think thje other is discover. There is at least
Johan Romin wrote:
Hi there!
First off, I've never tried the irda package that comes whith debian. I always
get the source tarball, and it has always worked for me..
Have you tried to load the irda modules by hand? instead of hoping that
irattach will do it for you?
The error you see in the
NOKUBI Takatsugu wrote:
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
If you are only interested in sir, you might try the following procedure:
insmod irda
insmod irtty
insmod ircomm
insmod ircomm-tty
irattach /dev/yourtty -s
and then it should work... at least that one has never
Any idea what this could actually mean (and what to do to get rid of
it)???
probable hardware bug: clock timer configuration lost - probably a VIA686a
CPU: Intel Pentium III
Kernel: 2.2.19
Os: Debian/GNU linux stable
thanks
bye
micha
Linux is user friendly, it's just a bit picky
Chris Halls wrote:
Are you tring to get fast infrared? If so, you will need to uncomment the
lines in /etc/modutils/irda:
/etc/modultils/irda -
# To use the NSC driver on a Thinkpad laptop: uncomment the following:
options nsc-ircc dongle_id=0x09
alias irda0 nsc-ircc
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 01:52:43PM +1000, CaT wrote:
If you want a 2.4.x kernel then hit ftp.xx.kernel.org (where xx is
your country code (or the one closest to you via the innanet) and roll
your own.
I'm not sure but I don't -think- there is a 2.4.x kernel package for
debian yet (unless it's
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 07:06:49AM -0400, Tom Allison wrote:
Chris Halls wrote:
/etc/modultils/irda -
# To use the NSC driver on a Thinkpad laptop: uncomment the following:
options nsc-ircc dongle_id=0x09
alias irda0 nsc-ircc
--
Everything here was
On Mon, 2001-09-10 at 22:35, Hugo van der Merwe wrote:
(discover is a hardware detection system. Don't think it does network
environment detection too... I know there are others, also don't
remember what they are.)
divine does network environment detection, as does intuitively. I
maintain
On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 10:03:17PM -0400, Scott Bigham wrote:
This is, I humbly submit, at least partially on-topic for this list, ;)
since the machine I'm thinking about upgrading is my notebook, and at
least some of the questions are laptop-specific.
Anywho, these are the upgrades I'm
On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 07:33:47PM +0200, Tony Crawford wrote:
although the 2.2r*0* CD does?
At first I thought I had a coaster, but it boots fine on other
machines. FWIW the Progeny 1.0 CD I got off a magazine cover
won't boot on the Toshiba either.
Very curious (and holding on to
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 04:55:30PM +1000, Daniel Pittman wrote:
On Mon, 10 Sep 2001, Werner Heuser wrote:
know intuitively and I think thje other is discover. There is at
least two more.
`divine' and maybe some of the ARP packages.
`whereami', which is a suite to detect and configure the
hi all,
has anyone any experiences with running linux on a
samsung nv5000 series notebook?
thank you very much,
florian.
On Tue, Sep 11, 2001 at 12:09:11AM +1000, Drew Parsons wrote:
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 04:55:30PM +1000, Daniel Pittman wrote:
`whereami', which is a suite to detect and configure the network.
Probably requires a little more scripting knowledge than some of the
others, though.
I'm
On Sun, 9 Sep 2001, Tom Allison wrote:
CaT wrote:
On Sun, Sep 09, 2001 at 03:04:28PM +0100, Vivek wrote:
Er. I just added the woody lines to my sources.list and did an
apt-get update
apt-get dist-upgrade
[cut]
Maybe I have a dumb question.
After you change the sources.list from
I've sent the following message to a couple of the XFree86
mailing lists, and haven't got much back--maybe someone
here can help? Thanks.
I've been working on a Dell Latitude C600 with an
ATI Rage 128 Mobility LF (or something like that).
I want to be able to start X up on an external
monitor (as
I recently compiled a kernel from v.2.2.19 to v.2.4.4
After the make bzimage command (for those familiar with the process) I was
not able to see the file bzImage in the
/usr/src/kernel-2.4.4-source/.../i386/boot/ folder. The how-to states a
linux folder in the src folder but for some reason it
On Mon, 10 Sep 2001, Daniel Pittman wrote:
On Mon, 10 Sep 2001, Werner Heuser wrote:
know intuitively and I think thje other is discover. There is at
least two more.
`divine' and maybe some of the ARP packages.
`whereami', which is a suite to detect and configure the network.
Probably
On Sunday 09 September 2001 09:03 pm, Scott Bigham wrote:
This is, I humbly submit, at least partially on-topic for this list, ;)
since the machine I'm thinking about upgrading is my notebook, and at
least some of the questions are laptop-specific.
[...]
- XFree86: 3.3.6 - 4.1.0
My
Drew Parsons wrote (on 10 Sep 2001 at 23:36):
The bit I don't understand is why you can boot from 2.2r0. It
doesn't
work for me (490CDT).
Oops! You're right, 2.2r0 doesn't boot either. Must have been a
problem with my memory--the wet one. I could have sworn I have
(or had) a system here
Thanks, but I've tried it with quite a few different resolutions.
Right now I'm testing at 1024x768.
--Daniel
On Mon, Sep 10, 2001 at 01:20:03PM -0400, Yannick Asselin wrote:
Section Screen
Identifier Screen0
Device Card0
MonitorMonitor0
this is what I've got so far...
I did the apt-get install irda-common irda-tools
I commented out all but the following lines in /etc/modutil/irda
alias tty-ldisk-11 irtty
alias char-major-60 ircomm-tty
(i have 2.2.19 kernel)
(I removed all the 'dongles')
options nsc-ircc dongle_id=0x09
alias
In article [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
and syslog says:
executing: '/sbin/modprobe irda0'
nsc-ircc, Found chip at base=0x2e
nsc-ircc, driver loaded (Dag Brattle)
nsc-ircc_open(), can't get iobase of 0x2f8
+ /lib/modules/2.2.19/misc/nsc-ircc.o: init_module: Device or resource
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