w
to use it as your mail client as well.
mh (and nmh) are other command-line mail programs. I'm not sure if they
support gnupg or not.
Personally, I use mutt.
Matt
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test on the university. Thanx. :o)
Check out gnumeric, it's a standalone spreadsheet program.
I'm not sure if it's under 20 MB or not, since it requires the GNOME
library.
Hope that helps,
Matt
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vices,
but apparently not. So I extracted the archive
/usr/portage/distfiles/i2c-2.8.1.tar.gz. The prog directory is empty,
though (even after doing a make).
Does anyone happen to know how I can get these i2c devices created?
Thanks,
Matt
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re shown when I print the partition table from fdisk.
Plus, I have no /dev/hda[1-4] devices.
What are the chances I ruined the partition table of the IDE drive while
I was playing with grub? Is there anything else I can do to further
diagnose the problem and/or get at the data on that drive?
Than
On Wed, Feb 04, 2004 at 12:10:30PM -0500, Alex Nelson wrote:
> Matt Garman wrote:
> >However, when I run "sensors-detect", it says the following:
> >
> >No i2c device files found. Use prog/mkdev/mkdev.sh to create them.
>
> If you are running a 2.6.x kernel, ma
nd perhaps figured out what is specifically causing the problem?
Thanks!
Matt
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a few references to the ACPI situation now, but haven't
bothered to get the full story. Does anyone happen to have a good link
discussing the ACPI?
When you suggest disabling ACPI, do you mean in the Linux kernel or in
the BIOS?
Thanks,
Matt
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can and cannot
connect to that service.
Hope that helps!
Matt
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ow down the development process.
But if such a system were fully automated, easy to use---ubiquitous---it
would be easy to add the kind of accountability OSS needs to combat the
naysayers (and anti-OSS FUD).
Sorry, I'm starting to rant/ramble/daydream :)
Matt
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On Fri, Feb 13, 2004 at 02:02:54PM -0800, Eric Paynter wrote:
> Matt Garman said:
> > This would serve a huge purpose for OSS: accountability, and and
> > easy means to verify source code (who made it, where it came from,
> > etc, etc). The intent is to help OSS "prove&
quite
impressive. When you take into consideration that a lot of this is
hobby/volunteer work, I personally think it's astounding how robust the
support is. I've seen OSS projects that have more structured support
facilities and bug tracking than I have at work.
Just my thoughts (this i
ion.
Any hints would be appreciated!
Thank you,
Matt
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Is there a good diagnostic tool for
catching something as nebulous as this?
Thank you for any ideas or suggestions,
Matt
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sing CPU :)
So does anyone out there have a Matrox g550, who can comment on it's
hardware 3D support?
Thanks,
Matt
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n short: benchmarking could be a really interesting study if you
have the time!
Matt
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The server will
recognize the sequence and open port 22.
Like I said, I don't have any firsthand experience with such a tool,
but I've always thought it sounds incredibly clever.
Maybe someone around here has some experience with port knocking and
can offer some more insight.
Good luck!
M
On Thu, Nov 13, 2003 at 07:36:50AM -0800, Mark Knecht wrote:
> Interesting. I was running a standard xterm yesterday when I tested,
> so following on I just tried dosemu under Eterm. The arrow keys work,
> but the Alt key doesn't, so I cannot get back to the menu when I try
> to get out of FreeDOS
On Thu, Nov 20, 2003 at 08:59:47AM -0800, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Interesting to know about xdosemu. I'll try that out.
>
> One question - how do you cleanly exit for dosemu? I didn't find a
> command to shut it down, other than just killing it which probably
> isn;t the right thing to do.
I u
A while back I posted a message talking about the performance
differences of a c++ program I wrote on gentoo and debian. In the end,
I chalked up the performance degrade on gentoo to my having built gcc
with too many optimizations. When I recompiled gcc with more
"conservative" settings, my prog
On Mon, Nov 24, 2003 at 08:44:44AM -0600, Van Eps, Nathan D. (James
Tower) wrote:
> That is weird. A compiler should generate the same code whether it is
> optimized or unoptimized. It would be interesting to hear an
> explanation from the gcc folk as to what causes this.
I think it had more to do
While daydreaming during a boring meeting, I was thinking how nice it
would be to have a Linux box at work (currently I have only a Win2k
machine). However, I'm so used to having root that if I got a Linux
machine at work, I'd probably only have normal user access.
In the past, on the various Un
'm not sure how to futher
diagnose the problem.
Anyone have any ideas, thoughts, hints, suggestions, etc?
Thanks,
Matt
[1] http://www.scyld.com/diag/index.html
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you wish to make
available to vanilla C, you have to write some kind of interface or
wrapper code.
Look at it this way, C++ is a *superset* of C. You can call C functions
from C++. But you can't call C++ code from C without writing some C++
that allows you to do that.
Hope that helps,
Matt
-
k up a dead project and bring it back to life.
MG
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ing bonnie++), and
the drives certainly aren't a bottleneck.
Thanks for the idea though!
Matt
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al email.
But, the transfer speeds are all essentially the same using various
protocols. Thus far I've used the following methods to transfer files:
- http
- sftp/scp (encryption overhead doesn't seem to impact
performance)
- rsync
- samba
Thanks again
long time? I have another 120 GB
drive in a second computer; I could just use rsync to make a backup of
everything, then go to work with fdisk if that would be safer and/or
faster.
Thanks for any thoughts!
Matt
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y other X apps (gkrellm, MozillaFirebird, konqueror, etc) do not
have any apparent font problems.
Any thoughts?
Thanks,
Matt
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e it to use the good old-fashoned
> font that matches my xterm which I have been staring at every day for at least
> 10 years.
>
> My solution was to set USE=-gtk2 and rebuild gvim.
Yup, that fixed it!
Thanks,
Matt
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STL type found - did you forget to install
libstdc++-devel ?"
!!! ERROR: kde-base/arts-1.1.5 failed.
!!! Function kde_src_compile, Line 117, Exitcode 1
!!! died running ./configure, kde_src_compile:configure
Any thoughts or ideas?
Thanks,
Matt
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that the
Alpha PAL HSFs aren't known for their quietness.
Just curious :)
Matt
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rg/doc/en/gentoo-security.xml
[3] http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/gentoo-security.xml#doc_chap12_pre5
[4] http://shorewall.sourceforge.net/
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Hello:
I used the Athlon XP v1.4 (dated 9/11) Live CD disk 1 to do a Stage 3
install of Gentoo. Everything *seemed* to go okay, until reboot, when
Grub couldn't find the kernel.
I used the Live CD as a rescue disk, looked at my install drive, and,
sure enough, no kernel was installed! Also, th
On Wed, Oct 15, 2003 at 02:19:11PM +0100, Jon Dye wrote:
> Did you create a seperate /boot partition? If so did you look in
> there for your kernel rather than the / partition (which would of
> had an empty /boot in that case). You also need to tell grub to
> look in your /root partition rather t
On Wed, Oct 15, 2003 at 11:17:28AM -0400, Chris I wrote:
> > In file included from nv.c:14:
> > nv-linux.h:24:31: linux/modversions.h: No such file or directory
> > nv.c: In function `cleanup_module':
> > nv.c:861: warning: unused variable `i'
> > make: *** [nv.o] Error 1
>
> > And it's true,
Can I run two (or more) simultaneous instances of emerge? Would this
create any consistency problems or is the Portage system smart enough
to synchronize its accounting?
Also, is there a difference in specifying a package name by its
fully-qualified name as opposed to just the package name? In
On Thu, Oct 16, 2003 at 10:30:24AM -0700, Ian Truelsen wrote:
> I am looking to get a new video card for my desktop (the old Voodoo
> 3 is starting to show its age). What I would like to know is which
> of the big two nVidia or ATI are better supported under Linux for
> framebuffer stuff and for DR
Purusing the Gentoo FAQ, I ran across the following:
"ReiserFS and filesystem corruption issues -- how to fix'em, etc
If your ReiserFS partition is corrupt, try booting the Gentoo Linux
boot CD and run reiserfsck --rebuild-tree on the corrupted filesystem.
This should make the filesystem con
On Thu, Oct 16, 2003 at 04:24:37PM -0600, Nate Duehr wrote:
> On Thu, Oct 16, 2003 at 04:24:04PM -0600, Collins Richey wrote:
> > 2) Re both resierfs and xfs, I've seen about equal numbers of
> > responses on any number of mailing lists:
> >
> > "pick-a-fs" ate my lunch, hard drive, and syste
I'm a bit worried about data corruption with reiserfs, and more
concerned with stability and reliability than performance. So I think
I'd like to convert my reiserfs partitions to ext3.
What would be the best way to accomplish this (without doing a
re-install)? I was thinking of the following pr
On Fri, Oct 17, 2003 at 05:32:55PM +0100, Rick [Kitty5] wrote:
> I have never really been a KDE fan, although I have been using it on
> my gentoo workstation as I had problems getting Gnome to work
> properly. I have to say its far to 'busy' for my tastes, would love
> to purge all the bundled 'eve
I merged the development version of fluxbox (v0.9.6) via
/usr/portage/x11-wm/fluxbox/fluxbox-0.9.6_pre9.ebuild. I also installed the
package artwiz-fonts. At least xfontsel can see the artwiz fonts. However,
fluxbox is not using them.
So I'm curious if I need to indicate the location of the ar
On Mon, Oct 20, 2003 at 09:10:13PM +0200, Patrick Marquetecken wrote:
> Is this the same for the grub.config ?
> Not the use of sda but only hda
Yup. I discovered (by trial and error) that there are some subtleties
to how grub sees disks. I have both IDE and SCSI hard drives in my
computer. I i
On Tue, Oct 21, 2003 at 01:50:44PM +0200, Sigurd Stordal wrote:
> > now theres a question. is there any app that i can use to rip 2 cds
> > at once? i have 2 CD rom drives and 2 CPUs and enough memory (1gb)
> > so i think
>
> Well you could use two instances of grip, and set the cdrom device in
> t
I just got a new hard disk and installed gentoo on it. I've got a c++
development project that I was working on that runs noticeably slower on
my gentoo box than it did on under my debian unstable installation.
I basically wrote a CSV file reader in C++. The implementation uses a
vector of vect
On Tue, Oct 21, 2003 at 09:55:35AM -0400, Chris Bare wrote:
> BS. What you already know is easier to use. I think Linux has a
> different learning curve than windows. Initially it's tough, but once
> you get some basic concepts (editing a file, find, grep) the curve
> flattens out. I think with win
On Tue, Oct 21, 2003 at 07:47:58AM -0400, Eric Livingston wrote:
> I'm curious regarding the penetration of linux as a comprehensive
> solution for all computing tasks in a normal day. i.e. what percentage
> of Linux users are 100% linux, or even 100% Gentoo for that matter.
Well, I'll chime in wi
On Wed, Oct 22, 2003 at 07:08:39AM +0800, William Kenworthy wrote:
> On all the machines (athlon t-bird, p4) I have tried so far, -O3
> always decreases performance - O2 is best (dramatically so on
> something like a
Indeed, in this case, O2 is faster than O3. I assumed Debian's gcc
package was c
I have the following mplayer merged on my system:
mplayer --version
MPlayer 0.92-3.2.3 (C) 2000-2003 MPlayer Team
CPU: Advanced Micro Devices (Family: 6, Stepping: 0)
Detected cache-line size is 64 bytes
CPUflags: MMX: 1 MMX2: 1 3DNow: 1 3DNow2: 1 SSE: 1 SSE2: 0
Compiled for x86 CPU with exten
On Wed, Oct 22, 2003 at 06:49:05PM +0100, Ciaran McCreesh wrote:
> On Wed, 22 Oct 2003 12:29:33 -0500 Matt Garman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> wrote:
> | Has anyone ever seen anything like this? Any ideas on what might be
> | wrong?
>
> mplayer fullscreen has issues with fluxb
Inspired by the recent threads regarding disk performance, I thought I'd
do a bit of (informal) benchmarking.
I have two machines, an OpenBSD box and a gentoo box. Each has a SCSI
drive and an IDE drive. The two IDE drives are the same make and model.
All OpenBSD filesystems are FFS and all gen
Does anyone out there happen to use dosemu? If so, did you have to do
anything special to get your arrow keys to work?
It appears that dosemu is interpreting the arrow keys (right, left,
up, down) as an escape key. If I use the "edit" program, and I invoke
the menus at the top of the screen, I
On Wed, Nov 12, 2003 at 01:07:25PM -0800, Mark Knecht wrote:
> Possibly this has something to do with the keyboard driver you are
> calling, or the specific keyboard you are using, and not dosemu
> itself?
In my initial post, I was running dosemu under aterm (within X
obviously). I also tried it
I was just curious if anyone on this list is running gentoo on an AMD64
platform, and what the results have been. I'm interested in the
stability and performance you're seeing. Are compile times affected?
How does the machine feel? Any other interesting comments?
Just thought that might make f
what ARE the good "RAID" motherboards (for
the extra IDE channels) or good add-on IDE PCI controllers? By "good"
I mean having mature, stable Linux drivers?
Matt
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is
conceptually, using a "stage 3" install should get me up and running
the most quickly, but I can still custom-compile most (or all?) of the
stage 3 programs, right?
Thanks for your feedback!
Matt
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Matt
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On Wed, Apr 02, 2003 at 09:07:09PM +0100, Jan Drugowitsch wrote:
> Is there any way with standard-gentoo tools to also keep track of
> software installed with ./configure && make && make install? I used
> install-log with LFS, but if there's a chance to use a different
> system I would be glad to h
x27;t have more to offer!
Matt
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problem is
graphics related.
Another side note: I have another computer running on virtuall the
same hardware, with which I use the same kernel, etc. X11 does seem
to lock up from time to time on this machine, but I can still ssh in
and kill/reset processes as needed.
Thanks again!
Matt
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