Re: [gentoo-dev] Re: [gentoo-core] [treequake] virtual/mysql addition
Robin H. Johnson wrote: On Tue, Nov 28, 2006 at 02:50:43AM +0100, Marius Mauch wrote: Two things I'm always wondering about when this topic comes up: - is there really a need for USE=client? In most cases people request to exclude the server part, can't remember ever seeing a request to exclude the client. I can't find the bug right now, but this did pop up where the client was a GUI app, and they wanted to get away from needing all the dependencies it pulled in that way. Would controlling building of the client via a flag such as 'X' or 'gtk' be inappropriate in that scenario? -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] Monthly Gentoo Council Reminder for November
Ciaran McCreesh wrote: On Sun, 05 Nov 2006 01:35:43 -0800 Peter Gordon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: | On Wed, 2006-11-01 at 08:40 +, Mike Frysinger wrote: | > If you have something you'd wish for us to chat about, maybe even | > vote on, let us know ! Simply reply to this e-mail for the whole | > Gentoo dev list to see. | | I have one item that I would like to see addressed in the next | possible council meeting: The reply behavior of gentoo-core messages. Wow. That's about the pettiest and least relevant thing you could ask them to discuss. Why not ask for a vote on what colour the soft icecream machine should be whilst you're at it? Pink, obviously, to match the ponies. -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] Re: treecleaner removals
Duncan wrote: Just to let you guys know, us users thank you too. It's not a glamorous job, but there was a lot of cruft built up and it needed done, and some of us (yes, even users) appreciate it. ++ -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] use.force as a complement to use.mask in profiles
Brian Harring wrote: Question your method of bootstraping then- note that for gcc it's nocxx, not cxx. Meaning, USE=nocxx _disables_ building cxx; this is why default IUSE is requested, to kill off the 'no' (and it's seperate from my point)- c++ related failures there would be due to either Sorry, lack of thinking on my part. Was actually USE="-* minimal nocxx pam", which is significantly different and therefore not related to the use.force discussion. Sorry for wasting your bandwidth. -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] use.force as a complement to use.mask in profiles
Peter Gordon wrote: Zac Medico wrote: The difference with use.force is that it prevents flags, that are deemed extremely important, from being accidentally disabled by the user. If they were so "extremely important" then they would not be optional, and hence not even be USE flags at all, no? Or am I missing something? Hmm... I set out to build a system recently (since 2006.0) with USE="-*", just to see if I could. After borking python a couple of times (you know how it is ;)), I was prevented from completing system by a couple of ebuilds failing on not having c++ available. One was bison, which failed on one of its examples rather than on the program itself. I can't remember what the other package was, but it was a C-only package (yacc maybe? or did it begin with a 'g'?) that failed in configure - I remember wondering where the "Removing useless C++ checks" message was when I needed it. Around about then I stopped having spare time, so I never filed bugs or investigated further. My point, now that I've bored you all with a long story, is that if you're careful about it, no USE flag is *truly* required, at least for a working system. Sure, some are highly recommended - but isn't that what defaults are for? :) -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] Last rites for some CD/DVD-recording applications
Luis Medinas wrote: I've talked with Lars we will keep xcdroast for a bit. Instead we will remove simplecdrx that i will mask now. The upstream is dead for years and there's not need to keep it. Oh, I see - you don't care *what* you remove, you're just itching to remove *something*! ;) (much <3 to all tree-cleaning endeavours of course) -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] SpanKY's Nominations for the Gentoo Council 2007
Mike Doty wrote: Vote Taco! If elected, I promise to add 2 minutes to nap time every Friday and double juice boxes every third Wednesday of the month. WTF! I want to be a dev if there's juice boxes involved! *runs off to take the ebuild quiz* -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] SpanKY's Nominations for the Gentoo Council 2007
George Prowse wrote: pauldv jr seconded :D -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] Pending Removal of $KV
Arek (James Potts) wrote: If they don't actually build against the kernel, couldn't/shouldn't they look at either kernel-headers or the output of `uname -r`? Kernel headers being the virtual/linux-headers dependency that Georgi mentioned. `uname -r` works, but is annoying because you can't build for a kernel other than the one you're running. -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] embedded overlay on overlays.gentoo.org
Stefan Schweizer wrote: Hi, solar has requested an account on overlays.gentoo.org for the embedded overlay for you. Your password: DX7wnSe40Y Kind regards, Stefan o_O -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] Re: [ANNOUNCE] Project Sunrise - Gentoo User Overlay
Peter wrote: Nonetheless, the bug is active, with a good number of people subscribing to it and contributing to it. The sunshine overlay would be an ideal place to store a kernel source tree or any project which would never find a home in portage. Pardon me if I'm totally confused, but isn't this what BMG is for? -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] Gentoo 'Images' without gcc/portage?
Allen Rohner wrote: I have been a Gentoo user for several years, but this is my first step into gentoo development. I'm looking at the feasability of using gentoo for a product at work. Is it possible to use a Gentoo host machine to create a linux 'image' (ramdisk/ext2fs/iso) that does not contain portage or gcc? I have looked at several embedded gentoo web pages, and am familiar with the "ROOT=/opt/image emerge busybox dropbear" type command line, but all of the examples I've seen create a portage tree on the image. Additionally, getting past bootstrap.sh is painful. I am looking to use Gentoo to create a standard x86 environment complete with apache and X, but with no gcc or portage on the target machine. Additionally, use the same technique to cross-compile to a ppc embedded system. Is this possible? Is it a good idea? Thanks, Allen Rohner dev-util/catalyst is the tool used to build Gentoo's official LiveCDs. Despite being ~arch, >=catalyst-2 works fairly well as far as I know. -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-dev] Putting qa warnings to a text file instead of showing them to the world
However, by bitching about problems, there are some users that decide to check WTF is this warning, in turn they urge devs to fix it (and that is the main point of QA, right?), they report it with their bug reports and so on. In other words, the problem gets _NOTICED_ by everybody. IMHO, leave it as it is now and don't bother. It is not that much of an output, compared to the compile output anyway. I'd prefer even having it red/bold/whatever for easy spotting. I agree - hiding QA stuff just makes it be there longer. The more people notice it, the more likely it is to get fixed, which is the best way of making it not show up (IMHO anyway). And for the future, what about defining something like GENTOO_LEVEL="n00b|user|know_how|master|admin|dev|guru" in make.conf? And act acording to this, but trying to move the user up a level or two most of the time. I don't think many people would enjoy having a system that made it its business to tell them what they should know about. Different people have different learning rates and learn in different ways about different things. People who want to learn to solve their own problems will; those who don't aren't likely to want their computer to try to force them to (although I'll admit that Gentoo doesn't exactly attract loads of the latter type). -- gentoo-dev@gentoo.org mailing list