On Thursday 3 October 2024 12:33:46 BST Michael wrote:
> On Thursday 3 October 2024 10:37:44 BST Dale wrote:
> > Also, I figure I could set it to
> > delete after a few days or a week from the email provider.
>
> Usually this is a POP3 setting. Instead of deleting a message from the
> server onc
On Wednesday 2 October 2024 20:10:15 BST Wol wrote:
> Make sure you set everything up in the local config file - look at the
> global file that comes with dovecot, and at the end you'll see a pointer
> to a non-existent local file. Set that up, and then make sure your email
> client can see it. Mo
On Monday 30 September 2024 11:00:09 BST Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> Am Sun, Sep 29, 2024 at 03:20:06PM +0100 schrieb Peter Humphrey:
> > On Sunday 29 September 2024 13:03:04 BST Michael wrote:
> > > On Sunday 29 September 2024 12:11:13 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > &g
On Sunday 29 September 2024 13:03:04 BST Michael wrote:
> On Sunday 29 September 2024 12:11:13 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Sunday 29 September 2024 10:08:36 BST Wols Lists wrote:
> > > It's actually been like this a while - but my Thunderbird has lost its
> > >
On Sunday 29 September 2024 10:08:36 BST Wols Lists wrote:
> It's actually been like this a while - but my Thunderbird has lost its
> title bar. The top bars are the search bar, with the menu bar underneath
> it. So I have an "X" to close thunderbird with on the search bar, but
> that's it. The "v"
On Tuesday 24 September 2024 18:11:09 BST Michael wrote:
> I can't claim to understand this, but happy with the result all the same.
Best just to put it down to the vagaries of GTK2 in a plama environment.
:)
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Friday 20 September 2024 19:27:33 BST Michael wrote:
> On Friday 20 September 2024 14:38:53 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Friday 20 September 2024 13:53:13 BST Michael wrote:
> > > I understand there were some changes with KSMServer on Qt6, so the
> > > suggesti
On Friday 20 September 2024 13:53:13 BST Michael wrote:
> I understand there were some changes with KSMServer on Qt6, so the
> suggestion provided in the previous thread may or may not work. It may
> work with X11 (if you provide $XDISPLAY), but not with Wayland.
Quite so. That's why I was scrat
On Wednesday 18 September 2024 19:59:15 BST Dale wrote:
> Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Greetings,
> >
> > I maintain an ~amd64 system remotely over SSH (from downstairs), and that
> > includes rebooting it with, say, a new kernel. Sometimes the system is
> > runnin
Greetings,
I maintain an ~amd64 system remotely over SSH (from downstairs), and that
includes rebooting it with, say, a new kernel. Sometimes the system is running
a KDE/Plasma GUI, and I want to log out gracefully from it before rebooting,
so that my session is saved. The question is: how? Eve
Greetings,
I see that the latest version of portage has improved the handling of giant
packages. Today I had a few dozen kde-frameworks packages to install, together
with webkit-gtk. That job was near the top of the list, so it was started
before most of the kde ones. I have this in make.conf:
On Friday 13 September 2024 11:03:08 BST Dale wrote:
> I notice another KDE release is on the way. It's unstable when it hits
> the tree but I run unstable for KDE and friends. It may have some fixes
> as well. Introduce a new feature, get half a dozen bugs to fix. Fix
> those and then repeat.
On Thursday 12 September 2024 13:54:25 BST Dale wrote:
> This is fairly new and very consistent. It started a couple updates ago
> and I was hoping it was a bug and would be fixed. I'm starting to think
> it is a new feature. I've looked in preferences and can't find any
> setting related to th
Greetings,
A recent thread here reminded me of this utility, and I've run it on four
machines since the latest perl update. In three cases it all went swimmingly,
but on the fourth it tried its damnedest to remerge dbus with USE=systemd, and
so start converting the whole system to systemd. This
On Friday 6 September 2024 11:41:03 BST Michael wrote:
> You could have inadvertently cleaned this package from your
> /var/lib/portage/ world, or unmerged it for some reason.
No, nothing like that. The sources and config files were all present, but the
extra_firmware entries had been deleted.
On Friday 6 September 2024 10:10:47 BST Michael wrote:
> On Friday 6 September 2024 01:33:04 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Friday 6 September 2024 00:21:31 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > I think I know what it is: the kernel's list of firmware blobs is empty.
> &g
On Friday 6 September 2024 00:21:31 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> I think I know what it is: the kernel's list of firmware blobs is empty. I
> don't know where they all went, but it shouldn't be too hard to find them.
Indeed it was so. Now fixed and working fine.
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Thursday 5 September 2024 22:29:14 BST Michael wrote:
> At a simple level you can check this file for any obvious problem:
>
> ~/.local/share/sddm/wayland-session.log
>
> Your symptom could be related to software rendering used by the kwin
> compositor, as opposed to OpenGL. Mesa with approp
On Thursday 5 September 2024 15:43:00 BST Iwrote:
> On Thursday 5 September 2024 13:47:29 BST I wrote:
> > ... Perhaps I should start recompiling things...
>
> After an emerge -e1 kwayland plasma-workspace and a reboot, kwin_wayland is
> down to 20-60% CPU and plasma_shell is barely visible in /to
On Thursday 5 September 2024 07:32:21 BST I wrote:
> Has anyone else seen grossly excessive CPU load since adopting the new
> Wayland way of doing things? /Top/ is showing 1300% going on kwin_wayland
> and the whole of the rest going on plasmashell.
Another thing: the plasma system is not preserv
On Thursday 5 September 2024 13:47:29 BST I wrote:
> ... Perhaps I should start recompiling things...
After an emerge -e1 kwayland plasma-workspace and a reboot, kwin_wayland is
down to 20-60% CPU and plasma_shell is barely visible in /top/.
Much improved, but it still isn't right.
--
Regards
On Thursday 5 September 2024 08:50:39 BST Michael wrote:
> On Thursday 5 September 2024 07:32:21 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Greetings,
> >
> > Has anyone else seen grossly excessive CPU load since adopting the new
> > Wayland way of doing things? /Top/ is showing
Greetings,
Has anyone else seen grossly excessive CPU load since adopting the new Wayland
way of doing things? /Top/ is showing 1300% going on kwin_wayland and the
whole of the rest going on plasmashell.
I need hardly say this doesn't make a responsive system.
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Wednesday 4 September 2024 15:23:13 BST Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2024-09-04, Dale wrote:
> > I forgot to ask, is there anything else that bad memory could affect?
How long have you got? ;-)
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Wednesday 4 September 2024 12:21:19 BST Dale wrote:
> I wasn't planning to go to 128GBs yet but guess I am now.
I considered doubling up to 128GB a few months ago, but the technical help
people at Armari (the workstation builder) told me that I'd need to jump
through a few hoops. Not only wo
On Saturday, 31 August 2024 20:03:45 BST Dale wrote:
> I'm thinking about a PS/2 to USB adapter. Go back to my old keyboard.
> ;-) Just give it a good cleaning first.
It'll be the best fourpence-halfpenny you've ever spent...
:)
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Sunday, 25 August 2024 22:04:05 BST Michael wrote:
> Let's hope this is an MSI/CSM specific issue rather than a hardware fault.
I bought an MSI "gaming" monitor recently, and it seems not at all happy at
being connected through a KVM switch. I haven't looked into that yet.
--
Regards,
Peter
On Thursday, 22 August 2024 17:37:22 BST Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> It all seems to be working now, thanks!
You'd think that, software being nothing but 0s an 1s, not a trace of anything
in between or outside, and given stable hardware to keep it that way, there
would be not the faintest chance of
On Thursday, 22 August 2024 12:57:21 BST Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> Is there an easy way to persuade portage to download the ebuild for
> gentoo-sources 6.6.38? Why have I got 6.6.47 instead?
6.6.47 is the current stable version.
Can't help with your more immediate problem, I'm afraid, because I d
On Wednesday, 21 August 2024 16:22:18 BST Wol wrote:
> On 21/08/2024 14:49, Michael wrote:
> >> That would involve me learning how to make and handle a modular kernel,
> >> something I'd really rather not have to do.
> >
> > Well, there's nothing to it really. Just configure your kernel with the
Greetings,
I'm building a new ~amd64 system on a box with a Radeon Pro W5500, which has a
Navi 14 chipset.
Portage's instructions for fetching the AMD code want Radeon 20.40, but the
AMD site has nothing older than 22.x, as far as I can see. Are the ebuild
instructions wrong?
I've tried the
On Thursday, 8 August 2024 13:02:01 BST Michael wrote:
> Have you trying enabling hardware acceleration? Set USE="hwaccel", or go
> into about:config and flip "gfx.canvas.accelerated.force-enabled".
I already had hwaccel set, so I toggled that setting in FF. Looks promising so
far.
Thanks once
Greetings,
I'm sitting here, waiting for Firefox to finish its processing of a Facebook
page. It's been going for over a minute so far, so I doubt it'll ever finish.
Top shows 'GPU Process' using two to three cores. CTRL-K shows this as the
command line:
/usr/lib64/firefox/firefox -contentproc
On Monday, 5 August 2024 17:51:38 BST Waldo Lemmer wrote:
> Hi Peter,
>
> You seem to have misplaced a double-quote. It should be:
>
> EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="${EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS} --usepkg-exclude
> 'dev-lang/yasm"' emerge -1 yasm
Actually, your 'dev-lang/yasm"' should have been 'dev-lang/yasm'",
Greetings,
Today's update included dev-lang/yasm 1.3.0-r1 >1.3.0-r2. It failed because
the binpkg was not yet on the local mirror, so I tried this:
prh@cube ~ $ EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="${EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS} --usepkg-exclude
'dev-lang/yasm' emerge -1 yasm"
prh@cube ~ $
So you can't exclude a pac
On Monday, 29 July 2024 21:12:35 BST gen...@dhaller.de wrote:
> Hello,
>
> 29.07.2024 15:17:26 Peter Humphrey :
> > I'd like to be able to shut a KDE machine down from another room, over
> > SSH.
>
> https://superuser.com/questions/395820/how-to-properly-end-a-k
On Monday, 29 July 2024 16:10:10 BST Mark Knecht wrote:
> On Mon, Jul 29, 2024 at 6:42 AM Peter Humphrey
>
> wrote:
> > On Monday, 29 July 2024 14:32:24 BST Michael wrote:
> > > On Monday, 29 July 2024 14:27:03 BST Matt Connell wrote:
> > > > On Mon, 2024-
On Monday, 29 July 2024 14:32:24 BST Michael wrote:
> On Monday, 29 July 2024 14:27:03 BST Matt Connell wrote:
> > On Mon, 2024-07-29 at 14:17 +0100, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > Is there a way to pass a shutdown command to KDE over SSH? Google
> > > doesn't help me
Greetings,
I'd like to be able to shut a KDE machine down from another room, over SSH. If
I do that with a simple 'reboot' command, I lose all my desktop contents. Not
surprising, as KDE is not shutting itself down but having the rug yanked out
from under it.
Is there a way to pass a shutdown
Hello list,
Is it possible to get CUPS to report the serial number of a network-connected
printer?
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Tuesday, 16 July 2024 09:50:00 BST Michael wrote:
> I recall having some trouble with bytemark in the past.
Now you mention it, so do I, but I've been using it for quite a while now with
no problems.
I suppose servers come and go...
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Monday, 15 July 2024 10:54:37 BST J. Aho wrote:
> The main issue is that you aren't syncing portage towards the bin
> server, which makes things out of sync and those you will be building a
> lot of the packages instead of fetching the binary files when they are
> built. One way to come around
On Sunday, 14 July 2024 13:22:14 BST Wols Lists wrote:
> On 14/07/2024 13:04, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > It doesn't do that here. It tries to fetch the binary and bombs out when
> > it can't be found. Then I have to edit make.conf to update Gentoo, then
> > put it bac
On Sunday, 14 July 2024 07:05:04 BST Eli Schwartz wrote:
> As a matter of curiosity, why do you need to do any such thing at all?
>
> If there is no binary package available for portage yet, then portage
> will automatically build it from source instead, which is exactly what
> setting -getbinpkg
On Saturday, 13 July 2024 15:49:00 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Saturday, 13 July 2024 14:18:09 BST Arve Barsnes wrote:
--->8
> > I don't know what you're doing wrong, but FEATURES is an additive
> > variable, so adding the ${FEATURES} in there is not necessary.
>
On Saturday, 13 July 2024 14:18:09 BST Arve Barsnes wrote:
> On Sat, 13 Jul 2024 at 14:42, Peter Humphrey
wrote:
> > Hello list,
> >
> > Where I live, updates to portage itself usually take longer to appear as a
> > binary package than as source, so I can't
Hello list,
Where I live, updates to portage itself usually take longer to appear as a
binary package than as source, so I can't 'getbinpkg'. Therefore I've set:
# cat /etc/portage/env/nobinpkg.conf
FEATURES="${FEATURES} -getbinpkg"
# cat /etc/portage/package.env
sys-apps/portage nobinpkg.conf
On Monday 8 July 2024 10:56:44 BST Michael wrote:
> The rule of thumb is to come as close as possible to the TV screen until you
> start seeing different pixels. Then you back off a little bit and plonk
> your armchair there.
Correction: That's A rule of thumb. It's not what's recommended by TV
On Monday 8 July 2024 13:59:27 BST Wol wrote:
> On 08/07/2024 13:27, Dale wrote:
> > I don't know about cell phones but if using the youtube app, I'd think
> > it would know what you are using and the resolution too.
>
> BBC iPlayer, ITVx. Along with the other Freeview apps for Channels 4 and 5.
On Saturday, 6 July 2024 17:31:08 BST Dale wrote:
> Hope those files help.
Thank you Dale. In fact my problem turned out to be an invisible typo in a
bash script. You know, the sort that isn't there until the umpteenth time you
look, and there it is after all. :)
--
Regards,
Peter.
Hello list,
Would someone please either post the new bashrc file here or send me a copy,
in which genfun_has_readline is defined? I seem to have lost mine altogether. I
think portage may be being too clever in remembering config files that I've not
allowed it to update previously, and so not of
Hello list,
The monitor on this box is connected via a KVM switch, which may not be set to
this machine at boot time. Then I get a default VT screen size which is too
tall - it can't show the last three lines or so.
The kernel documents show that an EDID data file can be read from
/lib/firmwar
Hello list,
Can someone please tell me what the official cure is for the error "unsafe
permissions on homedir '/etc/portage/gnupg' ? I even get it if I remove that
directory altogether and then run 'getuto' .
If getuto can't create the directory with safe permissions, what chance do I
have?
-
On Sunday, 30 June 2024 16:56:56 BST I wrote:
> I'm seeing this every time I chroot into my rescue system:
>
> # chroot /mnt/rescue /bin/bash
> bash: genfun_has_readline: command not found
--->8
> The same thing happened when I started a new build from stage-3, when I
> chrooted into the nascent s
On Sunday, 30 June 2024 18:51:20 BST David M. Fellows wrote:
> >Hello list,
> >
> >I'm seeing this every time I chroot into my rescue system:
> >
> ># chroot /mnt/rescue /bin/bash
> >bash: genfun_has_readline: command not found
> >
> >Google results suggest that the genfun is defined in the new ver
Hello list,
I'm seeing this every time I chroot into my rescue system:
# chroot /mnt/rescue /bin/bash
bash: genfun_has_readline: command not found
Google results suggest that the genfun is defined in the new version of bashrc,
but it isn't on any of my systems, even one ~amd64.
The same thing
On Friday, 28 June 2024 20:32:11 BST Tsukasa Mcp_Reznor wrote:
> Remove the date.so it becomes
> /etc/portage/savedconfig/sys-kernel/linux-firmware then it applies to all
> of them and not the specified version.
>
> Hope that helps
It certainly does. I wish I'd known that years ago: it would
On Friday, 28 June 2024 08:32:44 BST Dale wrote:
> I did a major upgrade and found out I had a lot of config files to
> update. I performed those updates, while losing some of my settings.
> Anyway, I figured out how to set the alias variables. Simple enough.
> Create a file and list them in t
On Monday, 24 June 2024 15:29:21 BST Dale wrote:
> If a person is trying to copy another install and runs into a failure in
> a package to compile, skip ahead and deal with the locale section first
> then come back.
Yes, I've been doing that for some time now, having tripped over something as
yo
On Friday, 21 June 2024 03:59:52 BST Duncan wrote:
> Peter Humphrey posted on Thu, 20 Jun 2024 16:42:38 +0100 as excerpted:
> > Is it possible to build KDE/Plasma on my Gentoo boxes, without noto
> > fonts?
>
> Short answer yes! =:^) Much (much!) longer discussion below.
[Sn
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 20:06:17 BST Eli Schwartz wrote:
> On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On interrupting one such hang, I found that 32 install jobs had been
> > waiting to run; is this limit hard coded? I also saw "too many jobs" or
> > something,
Hello,
Is it possible to build KDE/Plasma on my Gentoo boxes, without noto fonts?
Disk space may be cheap, but still, 2100 fonts lying around do get in the way.
Provided that DejaVu fonts remain available, I shall never use noto.
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:40:12 BST Michael wrote:
> On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:27:18 BST Jack wrote:
> > On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm
> > > finding the system stalling be
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 14:27:18 BST Jack wrote:
> On 6/20/24 8:46 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Hello list,
> >
> > While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm
> > finding the system stalling because it can't handle all
Hello list,
While building a new KDE system (see my post a few minutes ago), I'm finding
the system stalling because it can't handle all its install jobs. I have this
set:
$ grep '\-j' /etc/portage/make.conf
EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--jobs --load-average=30 [...]"
MAKEOPTS="-j16 -l16"
The CPU has
On Thursday, 20 June 2024 08:01:54 BST jdm wrote:
> I decided to uninstall, then do a sync and then install again but now
> getting lots of soft blocks. Think I'll wait until it's not in testing.
I had just started building a new KDE system on my Ryzen M9 box, starting with
no USE flags set, and
On Monday, 17 June 2024 13:39:35 BST Wols Lists wrote:
> On 17/06/2024 12:17, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> > Sadly, the FBR never made it into commercial deployment.
>
> Was that the one with the heavy water moderator? So a thermal runaway
> was impossible because you'd have no moderator left?
No, tha
On Sunday, 16 June 2024 20:39:52 BST Wol wrote:
> ... Back in the ancient days, you had a switch panel you toggled to put in
> the boot code.
I remember that. It was 1974. 24 key switches and lots of buttons. You set an
address on the key switches and hit SET, then ditto its contents and STORE.
On Sunday, 16 June 2024 14:35:34 BST Dale wrote:
> I mentioned I found the correct drivers for the CPU and other temps
> sensors but needed to reboot.
What sensors are you using now? I just rely on what gkrellm finds; where it
shows more than one CPU or GPU temp I choose the highest one.
--
Re
On Saturday, 15 June 2024 23:00:07 BST Jack wrote:
> A bit of searching found the wiki page for dispatch-conf, which
> includes:
>
> Before running dispatch-conf for the first time, the settings in
> /etc/dispatch-conf.conf should be edited, and the archive directory
> specified in /etc/dispatch-
On Saturday, 15 June 2024 17:55:17 BST Michael wrote:
--->8
Thanks, but I'll stick to what I know if you don't mind.
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Friday, 14 June 2024 18:33:57 BST Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> Are these files freely available, anywhere, perhaps?
Your backup from last week? :)
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Friday, 14 June 2024 16:16:09 BST Michael wrote:
> Liquid cooling would have made it as quiet as a church mouse. ;-)
I have a machine here with liquid cooling, and over its few years it's become
deafening under full load (24 simultaneous floating-point physics
applications). It is quiet whe
On Saturday, 15 June 2024 07:53:06 BST Dale wrote:
> Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Here's the output of parted -l on my main NVMe disk in case it helps:
> >
> > Model: Samsung SSD 970 EVO Plus 250GB (nvme)
> > Disk /dev/nvme1n1: 250GB
> > Sector size (logical/ph
On Friday, 14 June 2024 13:55:49 BST William Kenworthy wrote:
> I have a (now quite old) MSsurface-pro4 with an I5 - it runs about
> 50-60c on normal use but compiling (for example) webkit-gtk and
> Libreoffice causes the temp to go way too high. I have a script checking
> the cpu temps - at somet
Hello list,
Today I got this :
* Java-utils-2 eclass must not be inherited directly
That asterisk was red. I got the message for both media-libs/opencv and app-
office/libreoffice.
This was in a large update, triggered largely by perl going from 5.38.2 to
5.40.0. I had to change three USE fla
On Saturday, 8 June 2024 16:24:03 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> I've found it. /etc/profile.d had two suspect files: vte-2.91.csh &
> vte-2.91.sh.
>
> I don't know where they came from - perhaps another system of mine. I'll get
> rid of them and all should be w
On Saturday, 8 June 2024 14:45:54 BST Michael wrote:
> On Saturday, 8 June 2024 14:40:50 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Saturday, 8 June 2024 14:27:03 BST Michael wrote:
> > > I'm not sure the missing file in your error message is related to python
> > > -
>
On Saturday, 8 June 2024 14:27:03 BST Michael wrote:
> I'm not sure the missing file in your error message is related to python -
> VTE is a GTK+3 widget used by some Gnome based terminal emulators and in
> particular Tilix. Could this be related to your LiveUSB, instead of your
> chrooted fs? I
On Saturday, 8 June 2024 13:53:16 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> I'm installing a new system on an i3 NUC box, following the handbook, and
> I'm having trouble. After chrooting in, every command I issue is met with
> "bash: / usr/libexec/vte-urlencode-
Hello list,
I'm installing a new system on an i3 NUC box, following the handbook, and I'm
having trouble. After chrooting in, every command I issue is met with "bash: /
usr/libexec/vte-urlencode-cwd: No such file or directory". Everything from and
including the first '. /etc/profile' is affected
On Sunday, 2 June 2024 16:11:38 BST Dale wrote:
> My plan, given it is a 1TB, use maybe 300GBs of it. Leave the rest
> blank. Have the /boot, EFI directory, root and maybe put /var on a
> separate partition. I figure for the boot stuff, 3GBs would be plenty
> for all combined. Make them large
On Sunday, 2 June 2024 14:27:57 BST Dale wrote:
> Got the manual. It says 128GB. That sounds more like what I was
> expecting anyway. I kinda thought 256GB was a bit much.
I bought my machine from Armari a few years ago; they supply high-performance
workstations to City finance and investment
On Sunday, 2 June 2024 01:54:08 BST Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2024-06-01, Wol wrote:
> > I've got news for you, there are quite a few weirdos on the list,
>
> Hey! I resemble that remark.
Hey! Are you pinching my joke?
--
Regards,
Peter.
signature.asc
Description: This is a digitally signed
On Tuesday, 28 May 2024 15:52:35 BST Dale wrote:
> Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Sunday, 21 April 2024 23:58:04 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> >> On Sunday, 21 April 2024 23:30:54 BST Wol wrote:
> >>> Any chance you can document those steps?
> >>
> >>
On Sunday, 21 April 2024 23:58:04 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Sunday, 21 April 2024 23:30:54 BST Wol wrote:
> > Any chance you can document those steps?
>
> Yes, I ought to do that. I just need to remember... ;-)
I think there's only one thing for me to say: whatever
On Thursday, 23 May 2024 20:13:27 BST Michael wrote:
> On Thursday, 23 May 2024 14:07:16 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Hello list,
> >
> > On this box I have this:
> >
> > # grep '\-j' /etc/portage/make.conf
> > EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="
Hello list,
On this box I have this:
# grep '\-j' /etc/portage/make.conf
EMERGE_DEFAULT_OPTS="--jobs --load-average=4 [...] "
MAKEOPTS="-j4 -l4"
That seems to work well, except for a 20s period at the beginning of emerging
qtwebengine, during which CPU load goes to 100%, according to gkrellm.
On Wednesday, 15 May 2024 15:23:47 BST Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> So I'm looking at getting an AMD Ryzen 7 7700X processor, and using its
> inbuilt graphics rather than buying a distinct graphics card.
>
> But in the doc on wiki.gentoo.org, I can't find any mention of inbuilt
> graphics; all referen
On Wednesday, 15 May 2024 14:37:22 BST Michael wrote:
> There are 3 'cliboards', known as selections, I know of:
>
> 1. Primary - you select some text by holding down your left mouse button (or
> Shift+arrow) and you paste it with your middle button (or Shift+Insert -
> depending on application).
On Wednesday, 15 May 2024 08:42:14 BST Wols Lists wrote:
> On 02/05/2024 11:46, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > When I started using Linux, the received wisdom was to keep a separate
> > /boot, and leave it unmounted during normal operation. The idea was that
> > a succes
On Thursday, 2 May 2024 13:55:42 BST Jorge Almeida wrote:
> I have
> /var/lib/bin
> in my $PATH (both as root and as normal user)
>
> That directory does not exist. Should it exist!?
> What could be setting this?
> (grep /var/lib/bin /etc/conf.d/* returns nothing)
>
> Anyone with the same problem
On Thursday, 2 May 2024 00:45:29 BST Dale wrote:
> Grant Edwards wrote:
> > OK, so 'boot' is for the Linux /boot directory. I was just curious
> > since I had never used one.
When I started using Linux, the received wisdom was to keep a separate /boot,
and leave it unmounted during normal operat
On Monday, 29 April 2024 16:11:31 BST Dale wrote:
> Only bad side of IPv6, it's a lot of typing for all that. o_O
There's a worse aspect: you have to undersand what you're doing. Or you can
just tell your firewall not to allow any IPv6 packets in or out at all.
--
Regards,
Peter.
On Sunday, 21 April 2024 23:30:54 BST Wol wrote:
> On 19/04/2024 17:02, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> >
> > Just reporting back.
> >
> > I built a new system - using NetworkManager (after all I've said about
> > it!) - now that it's so much quicker using bi
On Tuesday, 9 April 2024 14:23:31 BST I wrote:
> I want to move my Intel i5 NUC box to a place where Ethernet is not
> available, nor like to become so. That means I have to get WiFi working,
> but I've had no success so far. The wiki pages are many, confusing and
> contradictory, so I'd like the
On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 16:29:09 BST Eli Schwartz wrote:
[Big snip]
Never mind. I've solved the problem by removing sci-misc/boinc and its 40-odd
dependencies. The machine was only barely capable of running it anyway.
--
Regards,
Peter.
(Rearranged in chronological order...)
On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 15:08:33 BST Waldo Lemmer wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 16, 2024, 15:43 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Monday, 15 April 2024 12:19:02 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
--->8
> > I'm still mystified by these Gentoo binary
On Monday, 15 April 2024 12:19:02 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
Hello list,
[Big snip]
I'm still mystified by these Gentoo binary packages. I assume that they're
generated using the default USE flags in the profile version (whence the need
to
specify it in gentoobinhost.conf).
So why
On Monday, 15 April 2024 13:24:59 BST Waldo Lemmer wrote:
> I'd like to understand your confusion. Where did you get 27 from?
>From ref 1, viz:
"The architecture and profile targets within the sync-uri value do matter and
should align to the respective computer architecture (amd64 in this case)
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