Re: [gentoo-user] User no edit crontab
On 2/4/07, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: What else can cause this behavior? I've looked at permissions on /var/spool/cron, subdir, and files. They match my other installations where users can access cron. I use the tried and true vixie-cron. I had to add users that needed access to cron to the group cron. I am also using vixie-cron. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] scp login but confine the user to his home directory?
On 2/2/07, Mark Knecht <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi, I'm wondering if it is possible and/or advisable to set up an account where a user can scp files in and out of his home directory using scp but if he logs into the machine using ssh he cannot go anywhere outside of his home directory? How would I set something like this up? Mark, Rebuild openssh with the chroot USE flag enabled and then have a look at the following HOWTO: http://www.howtoforge.com/chrooted_ssh_howto_debian It's a bit of work to set up but it works well. We have a similar setup at work for our shared hosting customers. Regards, Greg -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] OT - Tutorial for configuring syslog-ng?
On 11/2/06, Michael Sullivan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Is there a tutorial or a guide or something for configuring syslog-ng, preferrably with examples? I want to alter my default syslog-ng.conf to filter mail logs to another file, but the man page doesn't make much sense to me, and I couldn't find anything online that had examples to show what exactly I needed to do... http://linux.cudeso.be/linuxdoc/syslog-ng.php -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Die, process! Die!
On 10/30/06, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: On 10/30/06, Michael Sullivan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I know my subject line is a little melodramatic, but this is really > frustrating. I frequently have processes that killall doesn't kill and > kill -9 doesn't touch. For instance, this is taken from top: > > 24135 root 16 0 229m 35m 1064 S 0.3 59.7 8:52.11 javadoc The only case that kill -9 doesn't work is if the process is locked up in a kernel call. What is this process doing...accesing network files per chance? > I have Cntrl+C on the emerge (five minutes ago) and I've issued multiple > killall javadocs and kill -9 24135 and still it runs. Is there a way of > getting rid of this process short of rebooting the machine? If -9 doesn't work, it means your kernel is hungup, and yeah, you'll have to reboot to fix. -Richard -- I seem to remember seeing a utility called zkill at packetstorm once that was intended to kill "zombie" processes. I'm not sure if this is what you are encountering but you might want to give it a look. It should be noted that zkill is one of those YMMV use-at-your-own-risk type utilities and I'm not even sure if it will work with recent kernels but it might be worth taking a look at. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] BIG reiserfs problem
On 10/29/06, William Kenworthy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: On Sat, 2006-10-28 at 20:25 +0100, Neil Bothwick wrote: > On Sat, 28 Oct 2006 14:14:06 -0500, Joe Menola wrote: > > > > > And DON'T use XFS if you can't afford an UPS. > > > > > > Unless you're using a laptop. > > > > Solar UPS? > > Battery! > actually laptops are worse - on mine laptop-mode doesnt detect when a battery runs out - so everything goes black! On one occasion I lost most of an ext3 file system, so I went back to reiserfs and no more problems. I have lost small areas of data with reiserfs (nothing recent though - very stable), but on ext3 Ive lost whole systems (desktops, and the laptop mentioned above). I'm a bit late joining the discussion but in my experience I would say I had problems with reiserfs about 50% of the time spread over the last six years or so. Most of the problems were the result of power failures but I had all sorts of strange things happen like /etc/X11/X11.conf being replaced with /etc/profile or some such nonsense. Data loss happened occasionally as well. I ended up creating a cronjob that ran sync every five minutes and that pretty much put a stop to the problems.. Now I avoid using reiserfs although I do use reiser4 for a squid cache and there does seem to be a noticable speed improvement. Otherwise I'm slowly moving everything over to jfs. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Can iptables recognize SSH traffic?
On 10/22/06, Nico Schümann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hello folks, I have a web server running on port 80 and a SSH daemon running on port 22. I don't want to change these ports because it just works this way. Can I configure iptables that it just accepts port 80 and if I try to connect with a ssh client to port 80 to forward this ssh traffic to port 22? I know how all this accept and forwards stuff works, but I can't find out an option to recognize ssh traffic. You might want to take a look at port knocking: http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/6811 -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Wow, this is what I call stable! ;-)
On 9/23/06, sdoma <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Solved, seems there is a replacement for openal, or the package has a new name, ... or ... BTW, as I said, I run a stable version (x86 without the '~') and I'm updating 87 (!!!) packages after a month or so. Is this normal? In this case I'll return to ~x86. If you're moving from ~x86 to x86 chances are portage is downgrading several packages. Once you have completed the migration to x86 you should only have a handful of updates a week at most. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] {OT} 2.4Ghz interference
On 9/18/06, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > I have an 802.11g network and I'm considering buying a wireless RF> > keyboard that uses the 2.4Ghz frequency. Am I setting myself up for> > interference problems?>> Probably not. I use a wireless mouse with my laptop all the time and > notice no problems.Does it operate on 2.4Ghz RF?- Grant--gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing listYou might have problems with a 2.4GHz wireless keyboard. If the keyboard is like most 2.4GHz wireless phones it uses FHSS instead of DHSS like your typical home wireless access point. Basically with FHSS you have 15 non-overlapping channels opposed to 3 for DHSS. Wireless phones use FHSS because it has better frequency rejection capabilities. DHSS provides better throughput with less interference rejection so you can probably guess why WAPs use DHSS. If you run your 802.11g on channel 11 you might be able to get away with it but I won't guarantee anything. If there is an option for a 5.8GHz wireless keyboard I would opt for that or one of the older 900MHz models.
Re: [gentoo-user] beamer
On 9/17/06, Uwe Thiem <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: I triedemerge --pretend --verbose beamerwhich returned nothing.Does anybody know whether it is in portage - and if so, under what name?Uwe[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ eix beamer* dev-tex/latex-beamer Available versions: 3.00-r1 ~3.01-r1 ~3.06 ~3.06-r1 Installed: none Homepage: http://latex-beamer.sourceforge.net/ Description: LaTeX class for creating presentations using a video projector. Is this the package you had in mind?
Re: [gentoo-user] Stray dependency on virtual/x11-7.0-r2
On 9/17/06, Kevin O'Gorman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: I just switched to modular X, and got to the point where the systemcomes up okay.I have a few remaining puzzles and problems. Here's one:When I do emerge -aDvu world, it wants to emerge[ebuild N] virtual/x11- 7.0-r2 USE="dri" 0 kBThe migration guide says this can happen when there's an outdated package.But equery says there are well over 100 such packages that depend onvirtual/x11. And they're all up to date. I've been running stable so far, with very few exceptions. Am I really to go unstable with all of these? This seemsextreme in view of the fact that a great many of them are KDE things, butKDE seems to be working just fine.What's a guy to do? Can I get away with just waiting for a while? emerge -aDvut will show the dependency tree which should tell you which package requires virtual/x11-7.0-r2. Once you have narrowed down which package requires it to be installed you can deal with it from there. Instead of going unstable with your entire system you can add the offending package to /etc/portage/package.keywords for instance. If it's a package you know you don't need you could also remove it. HTH Regards,Greg
Re: [gentoo-user] /etc/issue information
On 2/27/06, Marco Calviani <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Hi Richard,> Those escape characters are recognized only by the getty program,> which is used for console logins. You should still be able to use the> color setting escape sequences, since those are terminal escapes. But > the substitution stuff is getty specific, and will not work with ssh.thanks for sharing this info. It comes completely new for me. So, asfar as i understand, there is no way of having this info with ssh login? Am i right?Look and see if you have an /etc/issue.netAll of my old RedHat boxes used that file to display a logon banner via ssh.
Re: [gentoo-user] Why does wordpress require xterm?
On 2/22/06, Lance Jacobs <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: However, I already haveUSE="-X -gtk -gnome -qt -kde -alsa -xpm -opengl userprofiles ..."in make.conf, so somehow this is ignoring that "-xpm". Even addingwww-apps/wordpress -xpm in /etc/portage/package.use doesn't prevent the original emerge commandfrom trying to pull in xterm and X11. What am I missing now?Is it possible the xpm use flag was set when you built php?
Re: [gentoo-user] Abysmally slow 2D performance using proprietary Nvidia driver on dual Xeon system (EMT64)
On 11/11/05, Greg Bur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Well I tried without hyperthreading and without SMP and the results only > got worse. Now I am beginning to look at how I compiled things such as > glibc and xorg-x11. I already ran the undo process for prelink and now I > think I shall recompile glibc without nptl support to see if that makes any > difference. I am really treading water here but I have been forced to read > up on my hardware a lot more. I really wish I had taken better notes. Apparently I have fixed the problem now. I ended up updating to a newer kernel and used the ~amd64 nvidia drivers and everything is working as it should. I am still unsure what the real problem was assuming there even was a problem. At any rate, I appreciate the advice everyone offered. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] 32 bit binaries: installing/running on amd64 system
On 11/13/05, Alan E. Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Thank you, Greg: Glad to help > I think this is a step in the right direction. However, does this apply to > 32 bit binaries one might wish to install from an RPM, for example, or a DEB > file, from a 32 bit dist? Note the following: > Since you are basically building a 32-bit system in an environment similar to what you used to build your original system you would simply need to install the appropriate software into the 32-bit chroot environment. Once you have rpm and the Debian utilities installed you should be able to install packages from RPM or DEB although you will probably have to force the installations. I should mention that I myself am still quite new to using a 32-bit chroot environment on a 64-bit system so I may not have all of my facts correct but hopefully this is enough to get you on your way. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] 32 bit binaries: installing/running on amd64 system
On 11/13/05, Alan E. Davis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Several 32 bit binaries beg to be installed on this gentoo box. Is there a > good HOWTO on how to do this? > > Alan Davis > > Something like this perhaps? http://www.gentoo.org/proj/en/base/amd64/howtos/index.xml?part=1&chap=3 -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Abysmally slow 2D performance using proprietary Nvidia driver on dual Xeon system (EMT64)
On 11/10/05, Greg Bur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: Maybe the Nvidia drivers dont play well with threading and/or SMP? That's my guess that this point. If I get the inspiration tonight I'll try disabling hyperthreading in the BIOS and also recompiling the kernel without SMP support. What has me beating my head against the wall so much is not the poor performance but the fact that one out of every 10 or 15 attempts the driver works as expected. I suppose if something positive is to be made of this it is that I will be more reluctant to play any games because I will have to reboot into Windows. Well I tried without hyperthreading and without SMP and the results only got worse. Now I am beginning to look at how I compiled things such as glibc and xorg-x11. I already ran the undo process for prelink and now I think I shall recompile glibc without nptl support to see if that makes any difference. I am really treading water here but I have been forced to read up on my hardware a lot more. I really wish I had taken better notes.
Re: [gentoo-user] Abysmally slow 2D performance using proprietary Nvidia driver on dual Xeon system (EMT64)
On 11/10/05, A. Khattri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: On Thu, 10 Nov 2005, Greg Bur wrote:> It definitely is not an issue with swapping to disk. For some reason X is> causing a high CPU load and it acts like its only using one processor. If I> switch back to the open source driver the load seems to be balanced across > all "4" processors. To make things even more interesting if I open glxgears> while using the Nvidia driver the problem can be temporarily alleviated. The> CPU load drops back to normal and the system is much more responsive. The > open source driver is working fine for now but I sure would like to know> what it is that I'm doing to cause the Nvidia driver to perform so poorly.Maybe the Nvidia drivers dont play well with threading and/or SMP? That's my guess that this point. If I get the inspiration tonight I'll try disabling hyperthreading in the BIOS and also recompiling the kernel without SMP support. What has me beating my head against the wall so much is not the poor performance but the fact that one out of every 10 or 15 attempts the driver works as expected. I suppose if something positive is to be made of this it is that I will be more reluctant to play any games because I will have to reboot into Windows. gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Abysmally slow 2D performance using proprietary Nvidia driver on dual Xeon system (EMT64)
On 11/8/05, A. Khattri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: On Mon, 7 Nov 2005, Greg Bur wrote:> Dual 3.0Ghz Xeon> 2GB RAM> 128MB GeForce 6600GT> Audigy 2 soundcard>> free -t -o -m output:>> [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ free -t -o -m > total used free shared buffers cached> Mem: 2009 1505 503 0 440 584> Swap: 1953 2 1950> Total: 3962 1508 2454According to the output of free it looks like despite having 2Gb of RAM, your machine is swapping to disk. That will slow down your machine too. It definitely is not an issue with swapping to disk. For some reason X is causing a high CPU load and it acts like its only using one processor. If I switch back to the open source driver the load seems to be balanced across all "4" processors. To make things even more interesting if I open glxgears while using the Nvidia driver the problem can be temporarily alleviated. The CPU load drops back to normal and the system is much more responsive. The open source driver is working fine for now but I sure would like to know what it is that I'm doing to cause the Nvidia driver to perform so poorly.
Re: [gentoo-user] Abysmally slow 2D performance using proprietary Nvidia driver on dual Xeon system (EMT64)
On 11/7/05, A. Khattri <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: On Mon, 7 Nov 2005, Greg Bur wrote:> My apologies for not making this more clear. The system load spike begins> with the click and it hovers at or near 100% until the new task (opening a> program, displaying a menu, etc) has completed. Even moving a window causes > this to happen and the load only jumps on one processor, the other is idle> or nearly so. When the nvidia driver is working correctly (assuming the> driver is to blame) the load seems to be balanced evenly across both > processors.What are the specs of the machine? How much RAM when running X? ("free -t-o -m" in an xterm will tell you). How much free disk space? Dualprocessor machine? If so, SMP is enabled in your kernel? Is X using software rendering? Dual 3.0Ghz Xeon 2GB RAM 128MB GeForce 6600GT Audigy 2 soundcard free -t -o -m output: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ~ $ free -t -o -m total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 2009 1505 503 0 440 584 Swap: 1953 2 1950 Total: 3962 1508 2454 SMP is enabled in the kernel as well as hyperthreading in the BIOS. As for X using software rendering, to be completely honest I'm not sure and my guts are telling me that is what is happening here. I believe I have enabled all of the appropriate options in the kernel as well as /etc/X11/xorg.conf Many variables here. gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Abysmally slow 2D performance using proprietary Nvidia driver on dual Xeon system (EMT64)
On 11/7/05, brullo nulla <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > However, after about 10> minutes the system load on one processor sharply increases to 100% when> performing a simple task such as clicking on a button in Firefox, launching> a new gnome-terminal window or clicking on the "Applications" menu at the > top of the screen.I have not understood if the system load increases to 100% during theaction of clicking and only during the action or if it goes up andremains stable. My apologies for not making this more clear. The system load spike begins with the click and it hovers at or near 100% until the new task (opening a program, displaying a menu, etc) has completed. Even moving a window causes this to happen and the load only jumps on one processor, the other is idle or nearly so. When the nvidia driver is working correctly (assuming the driver is to blame) the load seems to be balanced evenly across both processors. In the second case you should launch "top" from a shell and see what process chews up your processor.m. top is telling me that X is the guilty party. I can renice X to a lower priority and get some responsiveness back but again, there are times when everything performs as expected. The problem is intermittant although it happens more often than not. --gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Abysmally slow 2D performance using proprietary Nvidia driver on dual Xeon system (EMT64)
Greetings, I have been trying to fix a somewhat puzzling and annoying problem over the last couple of months that has me absolutely stumped. I have been unable to isolate the cause of the problem and it appears to be intermittant at best. The issue rears its ugly head as follows: This is on a dual boot workstation with a Supermicro X6DAL-XTG motherboard, dual 3.0GHz Xeon processors and a GeForce 6600GT video card. The system has worked splendidly since I purchased it back in June with one exception: occasionally when rebooting the system to return to Linux from Windows the 2D performance in Gnome is terrible. The problem does not appear immediately nor does it happen every time. Initially gdmgreeter appears as it should and I enter my login credentials. The Gnome desktop loads quickly and as I start to work applications load normally. However, after about 10 minutes the system load on one processor sharply increases to 100% when performing a simple task such as clicking on a button in Firefox, launching a new gnome-terminal window or clicking on the "Applications" menu at the top of the screen. The response time between clicking and the menu appearing for instance is anywhere from 2-5 seconds. There does not seem to be any quick fix for this which is what has me puzzled. If I close all of my applications, log out and log back in the problem "resets." Rebooting the system proves ineffective as well. I have tried various driver revisions, currently using 1.0.6629-r4, and several different kernels to no avail. I have tried both enabling and disabling the RenderAccel option in /etc/X11/xorg.conf and that does not appear to make any difference. Adjusting the NvAGP option does nothing nor does enabling the Composite option however the system seems more responsive when the Composite option is enabled. Switching to the "nv" driver resolves the problem and the system remains snappy with no immediate problems. Occasionally I will begin to get artifacts on the display with the nv driver and then the screen goes entirely white but switching to the console using ctrl + alt + F1 usually resolves this problem. I would appreciate any insight anyone could provide as to what I am overlooking. I have walked through the Gentoo Nvidia documentation numerous times and I have consulted the README document included with the nvidia driver. I am completely stumped. Currently I am using 2.6.9-gentoo-r9 for a kernel with the 1.0.6629-r4 version of the nvidia driver. As I said before I have tried several kernel and driver revisions to no avail. As a sidebar, 3D performance seems to be as it should be which puzzles me further. Again, I appreciate any advice anyone may offer. Please see the following links for the last xorg.conf I tried as well as my kernel config and make.conf http://pizon.org/xorg.conf http://pizon.org/kernel-config http://pizon.org/make.conf
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Any booby-traps with AMD64?
On 8/27/05, Alvin A ONeal Jr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > As regarding the partitioning, I would recommend using LVM2. Then no > matter how you might mess up your partitioning in the beginning you can > change it to suit your needs by resizing it on the fly - live - without > rebooting or even unmounting. > > Check the official guide as well as gentoo-wiki.com for more about LVM2. I'll second using LVM2. I had to read the documentation a couple times before I "got it" but it beats the "old" way of partitioning. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Recommend me a good PCMCIA wireless network card
On 7/24/05, Stroller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Jul 24, 2005, at 8:44 am, Greg Bur wrote: > > The Macintosh-compatible 802.11g card uses the same Broadcom chipset as > Apple's "Airport Extreme" products - I know, because I sold three of > these cards to another Mac-reseller last week. I believe that there are > no open-source drivers for this chipset, and have seen NDISwrapper > referred to in many forums articles relating to it. That answers my question of compatibility. > This is not a comment on the 802.11b 11MBPS card that your link points > to - for all I know that may use the excellently-supported Prism > chipset. I'm pretty sure it uses a supported chipset but I can't help but wonder if maybe Buffalo changed horses somewhere along the line and is now using Broadcom chipsets in all of their PC Cards. -- http://pizon.org -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Recommend me a good PCMCIA wireless network card
> Unfortunately, neither does anybody else on this list. This is because > manufacturers have a habit of changing chipsets without changing model > numbers. So lot #1234 can be atheros, while #1235 can be intersil, > #1236 can be, well you get the picture. > > The best is to buy from a store with a liberal return/exchange > policy...of course it always helps if it says "supports linux" on the box! > > -Richard This is exactly why I stick with Proxim or Buffalotech, they aren't the usual moving targets like some other vendors. It's also nice to have the ability to pick up the phone and talk to someone about the product. They are usually quite willing to help. Speaking of companies who are willing to help check out http://www.demarctech.com. They post right on their website whether or not a particular card has Linux drivers available and they cater primarily to small, independent WISPs. Good bunch of people to work with. I hope all of this information has helped rather than furthered your confusion. -- http://pizon.org -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Recommend me a good PCMCIA wireless network card
On 7/23/05, Ian K <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > My other laptop has a nice atheros wireless card, very painless to set > up. I dont know what > chipsets are on what cards, so perhaps you could give me a model name > and brand? I really > just want to be able to goto futureshop and pick one up.. :) > Thank you for understanding my dumbness. :) > Ian > http://tinyurl.com/9l9wl That should work well for you ;) I noticed on a previous page that they offer an 802.11g card for $30 but I'm not sure about driver compatibility. -- http://pizon.org -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Recommend me a good PCMCIA wireless network card
> > Just remember, if the laptop isn't going too far, a good length of Ye > Olde Cat5e is a much cheaper solution. That being said... Changes the possible security implications too... > > > Yeah, I picked up a great Orinoco (branded as Enterasys) at > Rokland.com last month for roughly $50. Atheros chipset, 802.11a/ > SuperA/b/b+/g/SuperG... very nice. It works in Windows (with the > driver CD), Mac OS X (with the shareware OrangeWare driver--totally > worth the $15 shareware fee) and, naturally, Linux (with MADWIFI). > It picks up Channels 1 through 14, and can put out up to 100 mW of > power (40 mW on A networks). I forgot about Enterasys and Atheros. The Orinoco-based cards have power output of around 24mW and the sensitivity is right around -83dB which I've found works well in most situations. I usually see about 3.5mbps of throughput when "connected" at 11mbps. Could be better but it gets the job done. Btw, I think YDI (Terabeam) still sells an Orinoco-based card. They've got really good support should you need it. > There's no antenna jack, though, but I hear most PCMCIA Orinocoes can > be modded to include some kind of external jack; I'm not that > desperate for power, but with dial-up at home, I might do that mod > and build a yagi antenna, get in my car, and... well, you get the > idea. :-) I've got three or four of the cards back from the days when they were still made by Lucent and with the proper pigtail you can connect an external antenna. In fact I used to use Orinoco PC cards with a PCI adapter to deliver high-speed access to folks around here and they worked quite well, then the telco showed up with DSL but that's another story. As for the newer cards, I believe the Proxim cards can be modded by opening the antenna housing on the card to get to the antenna connector. If you want to go to an external antenna check with YDI, I think they still make PC cards with external antenna connectors. > Still haven't had any luck with KisMAC (the OS X port of Kismet), > though. It finds my card but doesn't detect my wireless network... > I'll figure it out eventually. Maybe the drivers don't support monitor mode? That's what I ran into with Linux but that was only a kernel patch away and my experience with KisMAC is exactly zero... -- http://pizon.org -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Recommend me a good PCMCIA wireless network card
On 7/23/05, Ian K <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hi there, > I have an older laptop that I want to add to my network, > (its a 802.11B one) and I was wondering what brands/models > would work the best under Linux. Im fairly flexible, and would > really not like to tinker with too many drivers. Any good ideas? > Thanks! I've always had good luck with cards that use the Orinoco chipset and the only time I've had to tinder with drivers was when I wanted to get Kismet working with the card. You should be able to pick one up for under $50. Check out http://www.proxim.com or http://www.buffalotech.com for more details. -- http://pizon.org -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] photo management
On 6/6/05, Bob Sanders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > On Mon, 6 Jun 2005 01:17:22 -0400 > Greg Bur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > I use Eye of Gnome most of the time but I also like gThumb and earlier > > tonight I found an interesting app called Pornview which seems very > > full featured. All three of these apps integrate well with Gnome > > although I'm not sure if Pornview is in portage as I installed it on a > > Ubuntu system. > > > > For most viewing, I use ee (Electric Eyes) and rox. As to pornview, it works > ok, and is in portage, but it doesn't end well. I usually have to xkill it > as it won't > exit. I've noticed that about Pornview as well. It looks promising though. -- http://pizon.org -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] photo management
On 6/5/05, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > What do you guys use to manage your digital photos? > > - Grant > > -- > gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list > > I use Eye of Gnome most of the time but I also like gThumb and earlier tonight I found an interesting app called Pornview which seems very full featured. All three of these apps integrate well with Gnome although I'm not sure if Pornview is in portage as I installed it on a Ubuntu system. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] OT: customising nautilus desktop icon right-click menu
On 6/2/05, Iain Buchanan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Anybody know how to specify (if possible) what comes up in the > right-click menu for an object on the desktop? I'm not talking about > the existing ones like Trash or Computer, but say I create a new > launcher "foo" on my desktop, is there something I can put in the > appropriate ~/Desktop/foo.desktop file? > > I had a look on freedesktop.org, but it only seemed to reference > gnome-type menus (which apparently use .desktop files as well) and not > desktop menus. > > Any help greatly appreciated, > Thanks, > -- You can add custom scripts to $HOME/.gnome2/nautilus-scripts and this will add things to the right-click menu. For an example look here: http://tinyurl.com/c65va -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list