testing/unstable 64 bit kernel with xen

2008-05-27 Thread Anton Piatek
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Anyone know why there arent any amd64 xen kernel images in testing/unstable?

I am on kernel 2.6.24 and the idea of moving back to 2.6.18 just to
play with xen doesnt really appeal

I guess I will have to build my own kernel...

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Re: chroot64 the chroot32

2008-01-31 Thread Anton Piatek
I had a similar problem - I solved it by using 64 bit wherever
possible, and moved firefox to 64 bit using nspluginwrapper to do
flash etc - java however is still a problem as there doesnt seem to be
a java plugin for firefox in the 64 bit builds.

I couldnt think of a good way to solve it with chroots, as that would
become infitite looping

Anton

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Re: m-a question

2007-02-07 Thread Anton Piatek
On Wednesday 07 February 2007 16:17, Zachary Rizer wrote:
 - Original Message 
 From: Lennart Sorensen [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 To: Zachary Rizer [EMAIL PROTECTED]
 Cc: debian-amd64@lists.debian.org
 Sent: Wednesday, February 7, 2007 10:48:58 AM
 Subject: Re: m-a question

 On Wed, Feb 07, 2007 at 07:14:35AM -0800, Zachary Rizer wrote:
  When using module assistant to install a package (e.g. nvidia driver,
  some wireless driver, whatever), it only compiles a module for that
  currently-running kernel, correct?

 It only does so by default.  You can give it a list of kernel versions
 to compile for.

  So, then, after a dist-upgrade, in which I have installed a new kernel,
  when the machine is rebooted into this new kernel, I must re-run m-a to
  install the modules for the new kernel?
 
  Is there any way around this?  I have to install my wireless drivers with
  m-a, so if I reboot into a new kernel, I have no connectivity and have to
  be physically at the machine.

 m-a a-i -t -l 2.6.18-4-k7 nvidia

 That works even before booting a new kernel.  Well it works for _most_
 modules, a few are a bit broken in their build system I believe, or at
 least some used to be.

 You can list multiple versions, comma seperated (as far as I remember)

It is a shame that it is not build into part of the mkinitrd scripts to build 
your standard modules when installing a new kernel... 

Anton

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Re: KernelOops

2007-02-07 Thread Anton Piatek
On Tuesday 06 February 2007 23:12, Wolfgang Mader wrote:
 I found out, that on heavy system load, my power supply only delivers
 +11,4V. This seemes to be the lower limit to the specs. Could this course
 the problems descripet below?

  -/var/log/messages---
 
  Nov  5 21:27:17 FUCKUP kernel: Process Xorg (pid: 3404, threadinfo
  8100359ea000, task 810037bd3770)
  Nov  5 21:27:17 FUCKUP kernel: Stack:  8025e93f 80210aaa
  81003f38a868 8100192b9200
  Nov  5 21:27:17 FUCKUP kernel:  0001 802a9ac0
  4000 0020
  Nov  5 21:27:17 FUCKUP kernel:   


Not enough power can cause all sorts of problems. If you think your 
powersupply is underspecced for your hardware it is worth upgrading it. I 
would be surprised if anything 400W is causing problems though (unless they 
only happen when using the graphics card intensively).

Anton
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chroot question

2007-01-20 Thread Anton Piatek
I posted this on Debian-user list, but thought someone here might have tried 
this already...

I have a amd64 install of debian with a 32bit chroot for a couple of apps.
This works great, but I have a question.

Is it possible to have an application inside the 32bit chroot launch an
application on my main 64 bit system? (e.g. a photo browsing program in the
32bit chroot launching gimp, which is installed in my main 64 bit system).
I currently launch my 32bit programs with schroot and am hoping I can set
something to make specific programs outside the chroot available...

I cannot think of how this can be achieved, so any ideas are welcomed.

Regards,

Anton

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Re: About the apache2-ssl-certificate script

2006-12-11 Thread Anton Piatek
Searching for apache2-ssl-certificate on the debian package site gives a match 
for amd64 in apache2-common (2.0.54-5sarge1)
http://packages.debian.org/cgi-bin/search_contents.pl?word=apache2-ssl-certificatesearchmode=searchfilesanddirscase=insensitiveversion=stablearch=amd64

but it is in /usr/sbin/ so make sure you have a full root environment to find 
it in your path...

Anton
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Re: About the apache2-ssl-certificate script

2006-12-11 Thread Anton Piatek
On Monday 11 December 2006 19:22, Anton Piatek wrote:
 Searching for apache2-ssl-certificate on the debian package site gives a
 match for amd64 in apache2-common (2.0.54-5sarge1)
 http://packages.debian.org/cgi-bin/search_contents.pl?word=apache2-ssl-cert
ificatesearchmode=searchfilesanddirscase=insensitiveversion=stablearch=a
md64

 but it is in /usr/sbin/ so make sure you have a full root environment to
 find it in your path...

Just noticed that it is only listed in stable and experimental, not testing... 

Anton

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