Re: Solved: Re: DVDs reproduction a little slow
On Saturday 31 May 2003 02:16 pm, Sara Gil Casanova wrote: Check that DMA is turned on on the DVD-ROM hdparm -d /dev/hdc No, it wasn't. I turned it on on the hard disk, but did'n't think of the DVD-ROM. I can't try it right now with any DVD, but I guess now it will work fine. Thanks a lot :) make sure you place an entry in hwtools as well so that your settings last beyond a reboot. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: My first question on Debian
On Wednesday 28 May 2003 09:57 am, Bijan Soleymani wrote: [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Ever had tha hard disk fail on your server? and in Solaris/Sparc, simply remove the defected hard disk and add a new one. Without a single reboot or interference in work. *That* I call near perfect. Solaris is often called Slowlaris. Not without reason. I have a couple of old Sun workstations at work, and I installed Debian on them. Also does Solaris provide this on Intel hardware!? I really don't think so. If any of the hard disks fail on my intel computers I just replace it with a cheap IDE disk. The SCSI disks in my sun computers are probably worth more than the rest of the old computers themselves. Bijan I don't think that Solaris is so slow on x86. And yes, there is Solaris for Intel hardware. I know there is Solaris on intel. I just doubt that it allows you to hot-swap IDE hard disks. Bijan hotswaping IDEs require hardware level ability as well as kernel level abilities. X86 lacks all core hardware hotswapability...periferal hardware is fine but swaping things like CPUs, Memory, harddrives, etc is impossable on X86. Jeremy -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: DVD VMG info ?
On Wednesday 28 May 2003 10:49 am, David selby wrote: Am happily playing with gmplayer xine. I have come across some DVDs which xine refuses to do anything with and gmplayer reports cant open VMG info! Can anybody shine any light on this ? Dave do you have libdvdcss2 installed? -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: howto listening to Audio CD after enabling ide-scsi
On Tuesday 27 May 2003 11:16 am, Aryan Ameri wrote: On Tuesday 27 May 2003 16:14, Jeremy Petzold wrote: On Tuesday 27 May 2003 06:48 am, Aryan Ameri wrote: Hi there: On my ThinkPad A31 which has a mix of sarge/sid installed on it, I have enabled ide-scsi emulation, since I have a combo (DVDROM CDRW) drive. To enable ide-scsi I have added alias scd2 srmod alias scsi_hostadapter ide-scsi options ide-cd ignore=hdc through the use of /etc/modutils/actions to /etc/modules.conf and added append=hdc=ide-scsi to /etc/lilo.conf And yes, I can burn CDs with no problem. But now I can't listen to Audio CDs. My CD drive (as you have guessed) is now /dev/scd2 but when I issue the comman 'cdplay /dev/scd2' cdplay gives the 'nodisc' message to me. Same with kscd. These are Audio CDs which I listen to them in Mandrake, and with my CD player. Am I missing anything here ? Cheers -- /* There is SCO owned IP all over the Linux kernel. SCO will hunt them. Free software infidels are liars. We will kill them all, and roast their stomach in hell. Our estimates show that all slashodot viewers will die. --Mohammad Al-Sahhaf SCO Sopkesman, Former Iraqi information minister*/ Aryan Ameri make a sym link from /cdrom to /dev/hdc you should have no problems after that also download hdparm and hwtools and I once installed hdparm, and while I haven't done anything with it, rebooted my system. After that, I couldn't boot into Debian anymore, I had to boot Knoppix, chroot and then remove hdparm from there. I again rebooted and debian came up with no problem. I mean I didn't do anything whith hdparm, I just installed it, rebooted (straight after installing it) and couldn't boot into my system anymore. Strange I guess. set up 32 bit i/o and DMA for your hard drive and optical drive. I don't underestand what this means. Can anyone explain what is a 32 bit i/o and DMA and what is the advantage of setting u such a thing? that was a pretty odd problem.hmm... but DMA is Direct Memory Access. the Drive can send data directly to the main memory rather than sending the data to the CPU first which will slow down throughput (bad for watching DVDs and writing to hard drives and CD-RW etc) and the 32 bit i/o will let you take advantage of your full PCI buss (which is 32 bit unless you have high end hardware..in that case it might be 64...but unlikely...dunno for other than i386 so YMMV) Jeremy -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
how to get MOzilla to print to Cups printer through kprint
how can you get mozilla to print to the cups printer I have? be it through kprint or directly through cups? I could not find any info on it in mozilla help so I am hoping that one of you may have had an experience with this. thanks, Jeremy -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: how to get MOzilla to print to Cups printer through kprint
On Tuesday 27 May 2003 08:08 pm, Donald Spoon wrote: Jeremy Petzold wrote: how can you get mozilla to print to the cups printer I have? be it through kprint or directly through cups? I could not find any info on it in mozilla help so I am hoping that one of you may have had an experience with this. thanks, Jeremy If you have the cupsys-bsd package installed, then the Default/Postscript selection in Mozilla works just fine for me. Recent changes in X (from testing) have introduced Xprint on my system, which I am just starting to expore. It is supposed to interface recent versions of Mozilla with CUPS too, but I don't know enuf about it to be able to advise you...sorry. Cheers, -Don Spoon doe sit just send the data directly to cups? -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Scroll mouse?
On Sunday 07 April 2002 01:22 am, Crispin Wellington wrote: On Sun, 2002-04-07 at 08:38, Jeremy Petzold wrote: Florentin Ionescu wrote: what mouse ? On Sat, 6 Apr 2002, jeremy wrote : | Date: Sat, 6 Apr 2002 14:00:32 -0500 | From: jeremy [EMAIL PROTECTED] | To: debian-user@lists.debian.org | Subject: Scroll mouse? | Resent-Date: Sat, 06 Apr 2002 16:06:51 -0800 | Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org | | I have the ZAxisMapping set correctly in my XFree86-4.conf file but I | do not seem to be able to get scrolling to work...any Idea what is | wrong?\ | | Thanks logitech optical USB using a USB to PS/2 adapter Make sure the protocol of the mouse is set to imps/2 not ps/2 Crispin Wellington can I manualy edit that? what file do I go into? XFree86config-4? or what? thanks Jeremy Petzold -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Scroll mouse?
Florentin Ionescu wrote: what mouse ? On Sat, 6 Apr 2002, jeremy wrote : | Date: Sat, 6 Apr 2002 14:00:32 -0500 | From: jeremy [EMAIL PROTECTED] | To: debian-user@lists.debian.org | Subject: Scroll mouse? | Resent-Date: Sat, 06 Apr 2002 16:06:51 -0800 | Resent-From: debian-user@lists.debian.org | | I have the ZAxisMapping set correctly in my XFree86-4.conf file but I do not | seem to be able to get scrolling to work...any Idea what is wrong?\ | | Thanks | | | logitech optical USB using a USB to PS/2 adapter -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of unsubscribe. Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]