Re: [gentoo-user] /etc/init.d/: ntpd or ntp-client?
On 4 Feb 2009, at 13:40, Justin wrote: pkg_postinst() { ewarn "You can find an example /etc/ntp.conf in /usr/share/ntp/" ewarn "Review /etc/ntp.conf to setup server info." ewarn "Review /etc/conf.d/ntpd to setup init.d info." echo elog "The way ntp sets and maintains your system time has changed." elog "Now you can use /etc/init.d/ntp-client to set your time at" elog "boot while you can use /etc/init.d/ntpd to maintain your time" elog "while your machine runs" Except that here, ntp-client seems to start *before* the network, so fails to find the ntp-server. I'll investigate this more later. Stroller.
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Commenting out multiple lines in vim
On 14 Feb 2009, at 05:03, daid kahl wrote: Is there any way to access the vim buffers from other than vi? Using Konsole, if I want to copy something from vim I have to highlight with the mouse and right click, which is annoying. I really just want a better way to copy from Konsole that doesn't involve right click. At least shift+insert works for pasting from elsewhere... Do you want to copy without using right-click (i.e. copy upon mouse select) or copy without using the mouse at all? I assume the latter, but that was not my initial reaction when I read "I really just want a better way ... that doesn't involve right click". Haha, either one. I guess ideally it would be neat to be able to copy from Konsole without using the mouse at all, but I'd settle for mouse highlight and keystroke. Since I use a laptop with a touchpad, the highlighting isn't a huge hand motion away from the keyboard. Though, strtictly speaking, this thread is on vim, and I like to copy from vim more than Konsole anyway (except for like compile bugs, which I guess I could access through vim and the log files). I can certainly answer copying using mouse but without needing to click. I started to write this before I realised the other possibility: IMO terminal emulators should copy on selection, as was the traditional X11 style. This is clearly undesirable behaviour in most any other application - in a word-processor or email program you may want to highlight a selection of text which you want to paste over, and it's no use trying that when doing so overwrites the clipboard - but that doesn't ever apply to terminal applications. Surely Konsole should offer a copy-upon-selection option? I then realised that it was daft to ask this question without Googling it and quickly found this thread: http://forums.whirlpool.net.au/forum-replies-archive.cfm/718984.html The last post gives the answer, I think. It must surely be possible to access the clipboard API at the command line & create a vim command that passes the highlighted text to it, but I have no idea how. Stroller.
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Commenting out multiple lines in vim
> Is there any way to access the vim buffers from other than vi? Using >> Konsole, if I want to copy something from vim I have to highlight with the >> mouse and right click, which is annoying. I really just want a better way >> to copy from Konsole that doesn't involve right click. At least >> shift+insert works for pasting from elsewhere... >> > > Do you want to copy without using right-click (i.e. copy upon mouse select) > or copy without using the mouse at all? I assume the latter, but that was > not my initial reaction when I read "I really just want a better way ... > that doesn't involve right click". > > Stroller. > > Haha, either one. I guess ideally it would be neat to be able to copy from Konsole without using the mouse at all, but I'd settle for mouse highlight and keystroke. Since I use a laptop with a touchpad, the highlighting isn't a huge hand motion away from the keyboard. Though, strtictly speaking, this thread is on vim, and I like to copy from vim more than Konsole anyway (except for like compile bugs, which I guess I could access through vim and the log files). ~daid
Re: [gentoo-user] rc single, rc default console login
Joshua Murphy wrote: > On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 3:05 AM, Dale wrote: > >> Hi folks, >> >> I from time to time will go to a console and do a rc single to go to >> single user mode. I have noticed something weird when I go back to rc >> default tho. On the #1 console, it acts and looks like I am logged out >> but when I type in the user name root, it acts like it is a command. >> Same with the password. However, if I just type in a command, it spits >> that back out too. It doesn't seem to like a login or a command. >> >> It did this a bit ago. I just typed in junk and let it reach the bad >> login limit and reset the console. It then gave me a login and let me >> do a legitimate login. It cleared the screen which is what is in >> .bash_login so I know I am logged in. >> >> This is just sort of weird to me. The screen when it gets through >> starting services looks just like it does when I reboot. I see the last >> few services at the top then my login prompt at the bottom. Everything >> looks normal but it's not. What can I check? Is this normal? When I >> type in rc default should something reset tty1 so that a new login is >> required? It acts like it is still logged in as root which could be a >> security problem for some. Just curious really. >> >> Dale >> >> :-) :-) >> > > Sounds like it's not closing out of the existing shell on the terminal > but is till starting a login process on top of it. The lazy fix is to, > when you go single user, throw a " & logout" on the end of the command > to make sure the shell closes out. > > If you want to poke around and see, for certain, that it is doing what > I'd guess it is.. change your inittab and add another login in single > user mode on tty2, log in, and check "w" for an active session on > another tty. > > I wasn't sure how to add another login so I tried this. When I went from single back to default, I typed in "rc default & exit" to see what that did. It did like I think it should do with that. It took me back to a login and none of the looking like one thing but being another. Shouldn't something do that automatically tho? On mine, it switches to the GUI when I go back to default. I'm just curious if this could be a security issue for someone else or is this just me? Dale :-) :-)
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Commenting out multiple lines in vim
On 14 Feb 2009, at 04:21, daid kahl wrote: You can also enable line numbering, either in command mode using "set nu", or in ~/.vimrc (which I prefer since I always like line numbers, except if I'm copy and pasting...then it's annoying). There is also a macro I made (stole from somewhere and modified) to enter the date on \d entered in both command mode and entry mode, which I find handy for journals or timestamp comments in code. You can, of course, rearrange and edit how the time appears if you dislike my style. "Timestamp script for command (normal) mode nmap \d :execute "normal i" . strftime("%d %b %Y %H:%M:%S ") "Timestamp script for insert mode imap \d =strftime("%d %b %Y %H:%M:%S ") Thanks for the tips. I don't have immediate need for them, but I will bear them in mind. Is there any way to access the vim buffers from other than vi? Using Konsole, if I want to copy something from vim I have to highlight with the mouse and right click, which is annoying. I really just want a better way to copy from Konsole that doesn't involve right click. At least shift+insert works for pasting from elsewhere... Do you want to copy without using right-click (i.e. copy upon mouse select) or copy without using the mouse at all? I assume the latter, but that was not my initial reaction when I read "I really just want a better way ... that doesn't involve right click". Stroller.
[gentoo-user] Re: Commenting out multiple lines in vim
> >>> In vim, you can just select the rectangular region with Ctrl-v, > >>> then type "I#". This will insert # in each line at the same > >>> column. > >> > >> If you want to comment a series of lines m-n , it's quicker to do : > >> > >> :m,ns/^/#/ > > > > I saw similar comments in my Google searches, but I am flummoxed how one > > could find it so. > > > > Is it only on my keyboard that forward-slash is a "lower-case" character > > that is accessed *without* the shift key deployed? > > > > How do you know m & n? > > Column and line numbers are shown on the lower right part of the screen. > > You can also enable line numbering, either in command mode using "set nu", or in ~/.vimrc (which I prefer since I always like line numbers, except if I'm copy and pasting...then it's annoying). There is also a macro I made (stole from somewhere and modified) to enter the date on \d entered in both command mode and entry mode, which I find handy for journals or timestamp comments in code. You can, of course, rearrange and edit how the time appears if you dislike my style. "Timestamp script for command (normal) mode nmap \d :execute "normal i" . strftime("%d %b %Y %H:%M:%S ") "Timestamp script for insert mode imap \d =strftime("%d %b %Y %H:%M:%S ") Is there any way to access the vim buffers from other than vi? Using Konsole, if I want to copy something from vim I have to highlight with the mouse and right click, which is annoying. I really just want a better way to copy from Konsole that doesn't involve right click. At least shift+insert works for pasting from elsewhere... ~daid
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Commenting out multiple lines in vim
On 13 Feb 2009, at 21:45, Nicolas Sebrecht wrote: On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 07:58:52PM +, Stroller wrote: Not when you are working with the keyboard most of the time. Taking your hands off the keyboard to use the mouse is time consuming and becomes rather annoying. LOL! But so true. Sorry. I was LOLing at the idea that one might use a mouse with vim, or even a mouse-enabled vim. I realised immediately after posting that this was not obvious. Stroller.
Re: [gentoo-user] {OT} convert all .png to 0 compression
>> My music folder is filled with images like this: >> >> artist/album/cover.png >> artist/album/CD/front.png >> artist/album/CD/back.png >> >> I think gmpc is struggling with all of the decompression so I'd like >> to change all of their compression to 0. Does anyone know of an easy >> way to do this? >> >> - Grant > > Yes! Emerge app-arch/advancecomp and then do "advpng -z0 yourfile.png" > to recompress the PNG with 0 compression. > > Paul Fantastic, thank you Paul. - Grant
Re: [gentoo-user] {OT} convert all .png to 0 compression
On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 5:22 PM, Grant wrote: > My music folder is filled with images like this: > > artist/album/cover.png > artist/album/CD/front.png > artist/album/CD/back.png > > I think gmpc is struggling with all of the decompression so I'd like > to change all of their compression to 0. Does anyone know of an easy > way to do this? > > - Grant Yes! Emerge app-arch/advancecomp and then do "advpng -z0 yourfile.png" to recompress the PNG with 0 compression. Paul
[gentoo-user] trouble with evince (mime bad?)
Recently evince stopped working on one of my machines, ajglap. For every pdf, evince opens a window and complains unable to open document unhandled mime type Sometimes the mime type is application/text other times it is application/octet-stream. But the file is definitely a pdf. For example vita.pdf begins %PDF-1.2 grep pdf /etc/mime.types gives application/pdfpdf I know there was a recent discussion about evince, but for that user, evince knew the file type was application/pdf. Since evince on another machine, allan, can view these files, I don't think the files have gotten corrupted. The files are on ajglap; allan nfs mounts the files. Also acroread on ajglap has no trouble. I have rebuild evince/poppler/poppler-bindings with no change. I also ran revdep-rebuild, which rebuilt nothing. Any help would be appreciated. thanks, allan
[gentoo-user] {OT} convert all .png to 0 compression
My music folder is filled with images like this: artist/album/cover.png artist/album/CD/front.png artist/album/CD/back.png I think gmpc is struggling with all of the decompression so I'd like to change all of their compression to 0. Does anyone know of an easy way to do this? - Grant
[gentoo-user] Re: Commenting out multiple lines in vim
On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 07:58:52PM +, Stroller wrote: > > Not when you are working with the keyboard most of the time. Taking > > your hands off the keyboard to use the mouse is time consuming and > > becomes rather annoying. > > LOL! But so true. -- Nicolas Sebrecht
Re: [gentoo-user] screen, mc, htop
On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 1:35 PM, András, Csányi - Sayusi Ando wrote: > Hi all! > > I'm here again. > > So, the problem points is I can't decide what is the real problem. But > I can describe the symptomes. > > I use screen lot of and I like it veery much. Few weeks ago - when I > reinstall gentoo, started this weird thing. > If I start mc in the screen nothings happen. I can see the cursos is > stop before the last line and waiting... > Generally first time the mc is start and I can work with. But, random > long time later the mc is start doing this stupid behavior what I > wrote upper. This thing is independent what I did. Last time is > started after I use vim to edit an file. Yesterday started after I > write in mc's command line 'df -h' and hit Enter. > > If I detached screen I can start an mc. So, mc is working. If I > straced the process what is waiting I can see only this in the outline > of strace: > > "read(0," > > In the screen I can't interrupt the process with Control-c or > Control-d. I can kill this process with C-a K but in this case the > screen windows will die too. > The screen do this with users and root user too. The 'screen -wipe' > command isn't solution. About my experiences the reboot is the > solution, only... > > The important informations: > app-misc/screen-4.0.3 multiuser nethack pam -debug -selinux > app-misc/mc-4.6.2_pre1 7zip gpm ncurses nls -samba slang unicode -X > > This information is enough or do you need more? > > But there is an another crazy thing. > If I start htop - after the mc and screen started doing the strange > behavior - nothing happen. I detouch the screen and touch back the > htop is working fine. > > I hope somebody can tell me what is the problem because I don't know. :( > > Thank you! > > András Very strange. I just tried this combination and it all works for me. Here's my versions (am on ~amd64) app-misc/screen-4.0.3 USE="pam -debug -multiuser -nethack (-selinux)" app-misc/mc-4.6.2_pre1 USE="X gpm nls samba unicode" sys-process/htop-0.8.1-r1 USE="unicode -debug" I do not use "multiuser" or "nethack" USE flags for scren. You do not use "samba". Otherwise everything seems the same. Paul
Re: [gentoo-user] kde 4.2 no prefixed problems
On Friday 13 February 2009 19:01:32 Andrés Becerra Sandoval wrote: > Hi, > > I installed kde-4.2 with USE="kdeprefix" two weeks ago and everything > I needed was working all right. > > Then I decided to change my USE flags and delete kdeprefix in order to > have kde in /usr. After that I: > > - Did an emerge -uDN world > - Deleted my user folders .kde* > > The result was a kde-4.2 merged back, but with the following > applications crashing: Unmerge EVERYTHING related to KDE-4.2. Every last package you can find, including Qt. Inspect emerge --depclean carefully and run it. Examine your world and make sure there's nothing left from KDE4. Make especially sure you are not mixing stuff from an overlay and the portage tree. Then rebuild the whole lot the way you want it with the actual USE flags you want. This seems the wrong way round, but it isn't. I spent almost a week struggling to no avail with krunner and kopete doing the same things as yours, when complete reinstall fixed all of it in 8 hours. -- alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
Re: [gentoo-user] Commenting out multiple lines in vim
On 13 Feb 2009, at 09:24, Joost Roeleveld wrote: ... On my system I then need to move the cursor to actually see the change, is this normal? Here the change appears when you move the cursor... or after a slow second. Stroller.
Re: [gentoo-user] Commenting out multiple lines in vim
On 13 Feb 2009, at 06:49, Eray Aslan wrote: ... Surely it's easier just to highlight the lines? Not when you are working with the keyboard most of the time. Taking your hands off the keyboard to use the mouse is time consuming and becomes rather annoying. LOL! Stroller.
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: x86 versus amd64 - where is it set / overwritten
On 13 Feb, Ian Lee wrote: > Nikos Chantziaras wrote: >> Helmut Jarausch wrote: >>> On 13 Feb, Nikos Chantziaras wrote: Helmut Jarausch wrote: > Hi, > > I'm working on an AMD opteron, definitely an AMD64 machine. > > /etc/make.conf contains > CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu" > > my profile is > default/linux/amd64/2008.0/desktop > > Still, when emerging sci-libs/acml, portage > fetches the 32-bit variant of the package. > The SRC_URI depends on use flags x86 and amd86. This package is fetch restricted. It shouldn't actually fetch anything. You have to download the correct tarball and place it in /usr/portage/distfiles. >>> >>> OK, my wording was wrong. I did fetch the 64-bit version but emerge >>> didn't use it, but told me to fetch the 32-bit version. >> >> Hmm. Get that one too then and see which one is picked when the actual >> emerge starts. It could be that it needs both. If it ends up building >> the 32-bit one only, then I guess it's time for a bug report :) >> >> > > Its definitely a 64/32 bit problem and nothing to do with the int64 use > flag? > Sorry, it's probably (partially) my fault. I've tried to generate an overlay for version 4.2.0 (currently portage has only 4.1.0-rc1). Now, ebuild ... digest required to download all six packages ( 3 for gfortran plus 3 for ifort ). Sorry for the noise, Helmut. -- Helmut Jarausch Lehrstuhl fuer Numerische Mathematik RWTH - Aachen University D 52056 Aachen, Germany
[gentoo-user] screen, mc, htop
Hi all! I'm here again. So, the problem points is I can't decide what is the real problem. But I can describe the symptomes. I use screen lot of and I like it veery much. Few weeks ago - when I reinstall gentoo, started this weird thing. If I start mc in the screen nothings happen. I can see the cursos is stop before the last line and waiting... Generally first time the mc is start and I can work with. But, random long time later the mc is start doing this stupid behavior what I wrote upper. This thing is independent what I did. Last time is started after I use vim to edit an file. Yesterday started after I write in mc's command line 'df -h' and hit Enter. If I detached screen I can start an mc. So, mc is working. If I straced the process what is waiting I can see only this in the outline of strace: "read(0," In the screen I can't interrupt the process with Control-c or Control-d. I can kill this process with C-a K but in this case the screen windows will die too. The screen do this with users and root user too. The 'screen -wipe' command isn't solution. About my experiences the reboot is the solution, only... The important informations: app-misc/screen-4.0.3 multiuser nethack pam -debug -selinux app-misc/mc-4.6.2_pre1 7zip gpm ncurses nls -samba slang unicode -X This information is enough or do you need more? But there is an another crazy thing. If I start htop - after the mc and screen started doing the strange behavior - nothing happen. I detouch the screen and touch back the htop is working fine. I hope somebody can tell me what is the problem because I don't know. :( Thank you! András -- - - -- Csanyi Andras -- http://sayusi.hu -- Sayusi Ando -- "Bízzál Istenben és tartsd szárazon a puskaport!".-- Cromwell
Re: [gentoo-user] emerge on new install has die "econf failed"
Thanks for you directions - you pointed me where I needed to see. Something near there mentioned checking the clock, which I did, it was set three years ago. I set the BIOS clock, to local time, then reset it to UTC time (doh!) I then ran # emerge ntp and it worked! Hopefully that was it! I am now running #emerge apache and it is paused at this --- >>> Emerging (8 of 48) app-text/libpaper-1.1.23 * Fetching files in the background. To view fetch progress, run * `tail -f /var/log/emerge-fetch.log` in another terminal. -- I don't see any activity... Well, I'll give it some time... The tail command seems to indicate Connecting to mirrors.rcn.net|207.172.2.141|:21... failed: Connection timed out. Retrying. so time might just fix that. In any case - thanks for the help! Mike Kazantsev wrote: On Thu, 12 Feb 2009 16:36:31 -0600 Joseph Davis wrote: I looked as you suggested, and this is what I found - I'm still clueless. which: no gtkdoc-rebase in (/usr/local/sbin:/sbin:/usr/sbin:/usr/lib/portage/bin:/usr/local/bin:/bin:/usr/bin:/opt/bin:/usr/i486-pc-linux-gnu/gcc-bin/4.1.2) make[5]: [install-data-local] Error 1 (ignored) Looks like non-critical error to me, something else probably happened even before that one.
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: x86 versus amd64 - where is it set / overwritten
Nikos Chantziaras wrote: Helmut Jarausch wrote: On 13 Feb, Nikos Chantziaras wrote: Helmut Jarausch wrote: Hi, I'm working on an AMD opteron, definitely an AMD64 machine. /etc/make.conf contains CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu" my profile is default/linux/amd64/2008.0/desktop Still, when emerging sci-libs/acml, portage fetches the 32-bit variant of the package. The SRC_URI depends on use flags x86 and amd86. This package is fetch restricted. It shouldn't actually fetch anything. You have to download the correct tarball and place it in /usr/portage/distfiles. OK, my wording was wrong. I did fetch the 64-bit version but emerge didn't use it, but told me to fetch the 32-bit version. Hmm. Get that one too then and see which one is picked when the actual emerge starts. It could be that it needs both. If it ends up building the 32-bit one only, then I guess it's time for a bug report :) Its definitely a 64/32 bit problem and nothing to do with the int64 use flag?
[gentoo-user] Re: x86 versus amd64 - where is it set / overwritten
Helmut Jarausch wrote: On 13 Feb, Nikos Chantziaras wrote: Helmut Jarausch wrote: Hi, I'm working on an AMD opteron, definitely an AMD64 machine. /etc/make.conf contains CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu" my profile is default/linux/amd64/2008.0/desktop Still, when emerging sci-libs/acml, portage fetches the 32-bit variant of the package. The SRC_URI depends on use flags x86 and amd86. This package is fetch restricted. It shouldn't actually fetch anything. You have to download the correct tarball and place it in /usr/portage/distfiles. OK, my wording was wrong. I did fetch the 64-bit version but emerge didn't use it, but told me to fetch the 32-bit version. Hmm. Get that one too then and see which one is picked when the actual emerge starts. It could be that it needs both. If it ends up building the 32-bit one only, then I guess it's time for a bug report :)
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: x86 versus amd64 - where is it set / overwritten
On 13 Feb, Nikos Chantziaras wrote: > Helmut Jarausch wrote: >> Hi, >> >> I'm working on an AMD opteron, definitely an AMD64 machine. >> >> /etc/make.conf contains >> CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu" >> >> my profile is >> default/linux/amd64/2008.0/desktop >> >> Still, when emerging sci-libs/acml, portage >> fetches the 32-bit variant of the package. >> The SRC_URI depends on use flags x86 and amd86. > > This package is fetch restricted. It shouldn't actually fetch anything. > You have to download the correct tarball and place it in > /usr/portage/distfiles. > OK, my wording was wrong. I did fetch the 64-bit version but emerge didn't use it, but told me to fetch the 32-bit version. -- Helmut Jarausch Lehrstuhl fuer Numerische Mathematik RWTH - Aachen University D 52056 Aachen, Germany
[gentoo-user] Re: x86 versus amd64 - where is it set / overwritten
Helmut Jarausch wrote: Hi, I'm working on an AMD opteron, definitely an AMD64 machine. /etc/make.conf contains CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu" my profile is default/linux/amd64/2008.0/desktop Still, when emerging sci-libs/acml, portage fetches the 32-bit variant of the package. The SRC_URI depends on use flags x86 and amd86. This package is fetch restricted. It shouldn't actually fetch anything. You have to download the correct tarball and place it in /usr/portage/distfiles.
[gentoo-user] Re: kde 4.2 no prefixed problems
Andrés Becerra Sandoval wrote: Hi, I installed kde-4.2 with USE="kdeprefix" two weeks ago and everything I needed was working all right. Then I decided to change my USE flags and delete kdeprefix in order to have kde in /usr. After that I: - Did an emerge -uDN world - Deleted my user folders .kde* Check if /usr/kde/4.2/ has any files in it; there shouldn't be any in a non-prefixed install. If there are, check the packages they belong to: equery belongs `find /usr/kde/4.2` and try to re-emerge those packages.
[gentoo-user] x86 versus amd64 - where is it set / overwritten
Hi, I'm working on an AMD opteron, definitely an AMD64 machine. /etc/make.conf contains CHOST="x86_64-pc-linux-gnu" my profile is default/linux/amd64/2008.0/desktop Still, when emerging sci-libs/acml, portage fetches the 32-bit variant of the package. The SRC_URI depends on use flags x86 and amd86. My /etc/make.conf does not contain the x86 use-flag but the amd64 use-flag. So, what am I missing? Many thanks for a hint, Helmut. -- Helmut Jarausch Lehrstuhl fuer Numerische Mathematik RWTH - Aachen University D 52056 Aachen, Germany
Re: [gentoo-user] rc single, rc default console login
Joshua Murphy wrote: > On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 3:05 AM, Dale wrote: > >> Hi folks, >> >> I from time to time will go to a console and do a rc single to go to >> single user mode. I have noticed something weird when I go back to rc >> default tho. On the #1 console, it acts and looks like I am logged out >> but when I type in the user name root, it acts like it is a command. >> Same with the password. However, if I just type in a command, it spits >> that back out too. It doesn't seem to like a login or a command. >> >> It did this a bit ago. I just typed in junk and let it reach the bad >> login limit and reset the console. It then gave me a login and let me >> do a legitimate login. It cleared the screen which is what is in >> .bash_login so I know I am logged in. >> >> This is just sort of weird to me. The screen when it gets through >> starting services looks just like it does when I reboot. I see the last >> few services at the top then my login prompt at the bottom. Everything >> looks normal but it's not. What can I check? Is this normal? When I >> type in rc default should something reset tty1 so that a new login is >> required? It acts like it is still logged in as root which could be a >> security problem for some. Just curious really. >> >> Dale >> >> :-) :-) >> > > Sounds like it's not closing out of the existing shell on the terminal > but is till starting a login process on top of it. The lazy fix is to, > when you go single user, throw a " & logout" on the end of the command > to make sure the shell closes out. > > If you want to poke around and see, for certain, that it is doing what > I'd guess it is.. change your inittab and add another login in single > user mode on tty2, log in, and check "w" for an active session on > another tty. > > Well, what I noticed is that when I go to single user, I have to type in my password again. I would think it would do the same when going the other way around. I'll go single user here in a little bit and try that "w" command and see what it says. I just thought it weird that it is doing this way and was curious whether it is the standard or something specific to me. Thanks Dale :-) :-)
[gentoo-user] kde 4.2 no prefixed problems
Hi, I installed kde-4.2 with USE="kdeprefix" two weeks ago and everything I needed was working all right. Then I decided to change my USE flags and delete kdeprefix in order to have kde in /usr. After that I: - Did an emerge -uDN world - Deleted my user folders .kde* The result was a kde-4.2 merged back, but with the following applications crashing: - kopete - kmail - kontact - kaddresbook - korganizer With error messages like this: kaddressbook(10155)/kdepimlibs (kabc) KABC::StdAddressBook::self: asynchronous= true kaddressbook(10155)/kresources KRES::Factory::self: kaddressbook(10155)/kdecore (KSycoca) KSycocaPrivate::openDatabase: Trying to open ksycoca from "/var/tmp/kdecache-abecerra/ksycoca4" kaddressbook(10155)/kresources KRES::ManagerImpl::ManagerImpl: kaddressbook(10155)/kresources KRES::ManagerImpl::readConfig: kaddressbook(10155)/kresources KRES::Factory::self: kaddressbook(10155)/kdepimlibs (kabc) KABC::StdAddressBook::StdAddressBook: kaddressbook(10155)/kdepimlibs (kabc) KABC::StdAddressBook::self: calling init after instance creation kaddressbook(10155)/kresources KRES::Factory::Private::resourceInternal: ( "file" , config ) kaddressbook(10155)/kresources KRES::Factory::Private::resourceInternal: no such type "file" KCrash: crashing... crashRecursionCounter = 2 KCrash: Application Name = kaddressbook path = pid = 10155 sock_file=/home/abecerra/.kde4/socket-quark/kdeinit4__0 (10154)/: Communication problem with "kaddressbook" , it probably crashed. Error message was: "org.freedesktop.DBus.Error.NoReply" : " "Message did not receive a reply (timeout by message bus)" " Does anybody has any suggestions to fix these problems?, all this packages used to work when I had kde prefixed! Thanks, -- Andrés
Re: [gentoo-user] --emptytree and slots
On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 8:34 AM, Helmut Jarausch < jarau...@igpm.rwth-aachen.de> wrote: > Hi, > > switching to a new machine is good opportunity to do > house-cleaning. > > I wonder what emerge --emptytree does when several versions of some > packages like kde or gcc are installed (in different slots). > The entry in the 'world' file does not contain the slot info. > > Is there any danger it will leave my machine with only one version > of each package? > > Many thanks for your help, > Helmut. > > -- > Helmut Jarausch > > Lehrstuhl fuer Numerische Mathematik > RWTH - Aachen University > D 52056 Aachen, Germany > > emerge -e world will re-emerge every package which is a dependency of packages in your world file. It won't, however, do housecleaning of packages in separate slots which are not used. To do that: #usually required to make the next step happy emerge -uDN world emerge -p --depclean Make sure you have the -p option, and sanity check the output of --depclean. It's almost always correct, but only almost. See man emerge for more information on other useful things the --depclean can do (in particular, it does what most people seem to think 'equery depends' does). Nick
[gentoo-user] Re: KDE-4.2 problems
András wrote: But - there is always an 'but'... ;) - k3b is depends on kdelibs-3.5.x. Yesterday I wanted to update my system and kdelibs-4.x and kdelibs-3.5.x are blocked package. I installed kde-4.2 with kdeprefix USE flag. I have 3.5.10 together with 4.2.0 installed. There's no blockage. Make sure you have the 3.5.10 packages in your package.keywords. Other hand the Openoffice with kde flag has dependency to kdelibs-3.5.x. It works with 3.5.10, see above. Or you can change its USE flags to "gtk -kde" and use an Oxygen Gtk theme in order for OOo to look a bit more integrated into KDE 4. There's no Oxygen theme for KDE 3. I thought that I downgrade the system to kde-3.5 and I will make an usable environment with compiz to work. With the kdeprefix use flag I can manage kde-4.x tree too. You don't need to downgrade. I'm using KDE 4.2.0 here and also have KDE 3.5.10 libraries for stuff like k3b and Amarok 1. They work nicely in KDE 4.
[gentoo-user] --emptytree and slots
Hi, switching to a new machine is good opportunity to do house-cleaning. I wonder what emerge --emptytree does when several versions of some packages like kde or gcc are installed (in different slots). The entry in the 'world' file does not contain the slot info. Is there any danger it will leave my machine with only one version of each package? Many thanks for your help, Helmut. -- Helmut Jarausch Lehrstuhl fuer Numerische Mathematik RWTH - Aachen University D 52056 Aachen, Germany
Re: [gentoo-user] rc single, rc default console login
On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 3:05 AM, Dale wrote: > Hi folks, > > I from time to time will go to a console and do a rc single to go to > single user mode. I have noticed something weird when I go back to rc > default tho. On the #1 console, it acts and looks like I am logged out > but when I type in the user name root, it acts like it is a command. > Same with the password. However, if I just type in a command, it spits > that back out too. It doesn't seem to like a login or a command. > > It did this a bit ago. I just typed in junk and let it reach the bad > login limit and reset the console. It then gave me a login and let me > do a legitimate login. It cleared the screen which is what is in > .bash_login so I know I am logged in. > > This is just sort of weird to me. The screen when it gets through > starting services looks just like it does when I reboot. I see the last > few services at the top then my login prompt at the bottom. Everything > looks normal but it's not. What can I check? Is this normal? When I > type in rc default should something reset tty1 so that a new login is > required? It acts like it is still logged in as root which could be a > security problem for some. Just curious really. > > Dale > > :-) :-) Sounds like it's not closing out of the existing shell on the terminal but is till starting a login process on top of it. The lazy fix is to, when you go single user, throw a " & logout" on the end of the command to make sure the shell closes out. If you want to poke around and see, for certain, that it is doing what I'd guess it is.. change your inittab and add another login in single user mode on tty2, log in, and check "w" for an active session on another tty. -- Poison [BLX] Joshua M. Murphy
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Commenting out multiple lines in vim
On Fri, February 13, 2009 1:37 pm, Nicolas Sebrecht wrote: > > On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 10:24:34AM +0100, Joost Roeleveld wrote: > >> True, but with this method, you don't use the mouse, just the keyboard: >> 1) Go to first line > > Press gg Actually meant going to first line of block you want to comment out > >> 2) Press +V >> 3) go to last line > > Press G Ditto, but last line of what you want to comment out > >> 4) Press > > Why this stage ? Oops, typo... > >> 5) Press +I >> 6) Press '#' >> 7) Press >> >> On my system I then need to move the cursor to actually see the change, >> is >> this normal? > > I don't have to here with vim72 or gvim. However, I have no idea of how > to fix this. I use vim-7.2 as well. Could easily be because it needs that to do a redraw of the screen. It's a minor annoyance which I can live with. And as I am the only one facing this, I don't see the point of raising a bug-report for it. -- Joost
[gentoo-user] Re: Commenting out multiple lines in vim
On Fri, Feb 13, 2009 at 10:24:34AM +0100, Joost Roeleveld wrote: > True, but with this method, you don't use the mouse, just the keyboard: > 1) Go to first line Press gg > 2) Press +V > 3) go to last line Press G > 4) Press Why this stage ? > 5) Press +I > 6) Press '#' > 7) Press > > On my system I then need to move the cursor to actually see the change, is > this normal? I don't have to here with vim72 or gvim. However, I have no idea of how to fix this. -- Nicolas Sebrecht
Re: [gentoo-user] KDE-4.2 problems
On Freitag 13 Februar 2009, András, Csányi - Sayusi Ando wrote: > Hi all! > > After few weeks suffer (under XP) I came back and I have few questions! > I installed kde-4.2 and this is love at first sight! > > But - there is always an 'but'... ;) - k3b is depends on > kdelibs-3.5.x. Yesterday I wanted to update my system and kdelibs-4.x > and kdelibs-3.5.x are blocked package. > I installed kde-4.2 with kdeprefix USE flag. install k3b- from the kde-testing overlay. It depends on kde 4.X > > Other hand the Openoffice with kde flag has dependency to kdelibs-3.5.x. > well, what do you get from ooo with kde useflag? Isn#t it just an artwork flag? > Other thing is powerdevil. This is an laptop (Dell Latitude e6400) and > with cpufrequtils I can manipulate (speedstep) the processors but > under KDE-4 I can't. I can't turn off one processor. I think > powerdevil can't communicate with something. The error message is > suggested few things and I did install these libs (libXext and one > more, I'm under Xp and I can't view) > Under XP I can choose many profile. With the hardest the laptop can > work almost 4 hours with batterys. Under Linux on 800Mhz (2 > processors) the powertop say ~2.5 hours. I think this is more than big > difference. you can create power profiles in the systemsettings app. But linux is known not to be as good as windows xp when it comes to power savings. > > I thought that I downgrade the system to kde-3.5 and I will make an > usable environment with compiz to work. With the kdeprefix use flag I > can manage kde-4.x tree too. compiz and usable are mutual exclusive. > > So there are my problems and I think I can manage (sometimes this time > is wasted time, but I like Iron Maiden very much ;) ). But I need > yours experience and suggestions, what do you do If you are in my > position? there is no reason to 'downgrade' to kde 3.5. Openoffice is usable without kde-flag - in kde. k3b is available for kde 4.2 (or use tkdvd which is ugly bug can do all the stuff you need most of the time). > > Thank you for help and I'm sorry my english. I feel dizzy, I have flu. not a good time to tinker with your system ;)
[gentoo-user] KDE-4.2 problems
Hi all! After few weeks suffer (under XP) I came back and I have few questions! I installed kde-4.2 and this is love at first sight! But - there is always an 'but'... ;) - k3b is depends on kdelibs-3.5.x. Yesterday I wanted to update my system and kdelibs-4.x and kdelibs-3.5.x are blocked package. I installed kde-4.2 with kdeprefix USE flag. Other hand the Openoffice with kde flag has dependency to kdelibs-3.5.x. Other thing is powerdevil. This is an laptop (Dell Latitude e6400) and with cpufrequtils I can manipulate (speedstep) the processors but under KDE-4 I can't. I can't turn off one processor. I think powerdevil can't communicate with something. The error message is suggested few things and I did install these libs (libXext and one more, I'm under Xp and I can't view) Under XP I can choose many profile. With the hardest the laptop can work almost 4 hours with batterys. Under Linux on 800Mhz (2 processors) the powertop say ~2.5 hours. I think this is more than big difference. I thought that I downgrade the system to kde-3.5 and I will make an usable environment with compiz to work. With the kdeprefix use flag I can manage kde-4.x tree too. So there are my problems and I think I can manage (sometimes this time is wasted time, but I like Iron Maiden very much ;) ). But I need yours experience and suggestions, what do you do If you are in my position? Thank you for help and I'm sorry my english. I feel dizzy, I have flu. András -- - - -- Csanyi Andras -- http://sayusi.hu -- Sayusi Ando -- "Bízzál Istenben és tartsd szárazon a puskaport!".-- Cromwell
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Gentoo's advantage: 'optimized for your system' -- huh?
On Thu, February 5, 2009 9:12 pm, Neil Bothwick wrote: > On Thu, 5 Feb 2009 21:03:30 +0100 (CET), Jes�s Guerrero wrote: > >> Gentoo is not a distro. You don't "use" it, It's a metadristro >> that can be used to build a proper distro, after that you can >> use the final product. > > It's a flatpack distro ;-) Can anyone tell me in which section of IKEA i can find the install set? :)
Re: [gentoo-user] Can't login from terminal?
On Fri, 13 Feb 2009 15:43:49 +0800 Chuanwen Wu wrote: > Hi, here is the root infomation in my /etc/passwd: > root:x:0:0:root:/root:/bin/bash Looks okay, can't see anything wrong in bash configs, too. > I got the login information below from the tail of /var/log/messages: ... I believe this clearly shows that pam shouldn't be the issue, but something that gets launched (and that should be shell) is. I don't know if there are any issues with bash and I rarely use it myself (only as a login shell on debian machines, 'cause they have it on root, installing zsh to usr), but prehaps there are in some bugzilla. Also, I can assume that getty somehow fails to launch /bin/login correctly or /bin/login somehow fails. You can check that getty (agetty, in gentoo), not something else, gets launched from /etc/inittab and recompile it, just in case. Then you can try recompiling the shadow package, since /bin/login, which should launch the shell belongs to it. You can also check if it's possible to make agetty run something else, then /bin/login (should be), and launch 'strace /bin/login' instead, or just run agetty through 'strace -f', which'll show you all the kernel calls it uses and if there are any failures. I've found some obscure mistakes (my mistakes, always) that way, but it might be quite time-consuming. -- Mike Kazantsev // fraggod.net
Re: [gentoo-user] Commenting out multiple lines in vim
On Fri, February 13, 2009 7:49 am, Eray Aslan wrote: > On 13.02.2009 07:48, Stroller wrote: >> On 13 Feb 2009, at 00:53, Philip Webb wrote: >>> 090212 Stroller quoted: In vim, you can just select the rectangular region with Ctrl-v, then type "I#". This will insert # in each line at the same column. >>> >>> If you want to comment a series of lines m-n , it's quicker to do : >>> >>> :m,ns/^/#/ >> >> I saw similar comments in my Google searches, but I am flummoxed how one >> could find it so. >> >> Is it only on my keyboard that forward-slash is a "lower-case" character >> that is accessed *without* the shift key deployed? >> >> How do you know m & n? > > Column and line numbers are shown on the lower right part of the screen. > >> Surely it's easier just to highlight the lines? > > Not when you are working with the keyboard most of the time. Taking > your hands off the keyboard to use the mouse is time consuming and > becomes rather annoying. True, but with this method, you don't use the mouse, just the keyboard: 1) Go to first line 2) Press +V 3) go to last line 4) Press 5) Press +I 6) Press '#' 7) Press On my system I then need to move the cursor to actually see the change, is this normal? -- Joost
[gentoo-user] rc single, rc default console login
Hi folks, I from time to time will go to a console and do a rc single to go to single user mode. I have noticed something weird when I go back to rc default tho. On the #1 console, it acts and looks like I am logged out but when I type in the user name root, it acts like it is a command. Same with the password. However, if I just type in a command, it spits that back out too. It doesn't seem to like a login or a command. It did this a bit ago. I just typed in junk and let it reach the bad login limit and reset the console. It then gave me a login and let me do a legitimate login. It cleared the screen which is what is in .bash_login so I know I am logged in. This is just sort of weird to me. The screen when it gets through starting services looks just like it does when I reboot. I see the last few services at the top then my login prompt at the bottom. Everything looks normal but it's not. What can I check? Is this normal? When I type in rc default should something reset tty1 so that a new login is required? It acts like it is still logged in as root which could be a security problem for some. Just curious really. Dale :-) :-)