hey hi to all and thanks for rplying hi henry sorry got late in replying anyway it will be a great help if u could send me the stuff lets see how it works.thanks in advanceOn 5/9/06,
Henry christenson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
On 5/8/06, Jeremy Byron <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:> himanshu pahuja
On 5/14/06, Leo Peschier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Apologies for not mentioning that (when I wrote the reply, I realized I
should have tested that before).
However, turning off optimization flags did not solve the problem. I did
some more search on the subject and found there has been some deba
Dan Nicholson wrote:
You could have said that before!
#1 rule of compiling: If something breaks, turn off the optimization
flags!
Apologies for not mentioning that (when I wrote the reply, I realized I
should have tested that before).
However, turning off optimization flags did not solve the
I'm trying to compile detex-2.7,
http://www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/trinkle/detex/
but it's throwing up on me:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] /tmp/detex/detex-2.7 $ make
sed -f states.sed detex.l > xxx.l
lex xxx.l
rm -f xxx.l
mv lex.yy.c detex.c
cc -O-c -o detex.o detex.c
lex.yy.c:796: error: synta
On 5/13/06, Justin R. Knierim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
hops:justin ~/tmp $ md5sum *
f93f3e68ec5b53ec1a776df73a1def60 cdrdao-1.2.1.tar.bz2
Someone must have forgotten to set it. I get the same as you.
Fixed now. Thanks for the report, Thomas.
--
Dan
--
http://linuxfromscratch.org/mailman
On 5/5/06, David BOURIAUD <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi all !
I can't install KDE 3.5.2 on my laptop, and I stuck still with it. I've
David,
In another thread, someone identified that the switch
--enable-fast-malloc=full was causing segfaults. That's now been
dropped from the book for all the
Hi,
My apologies for having used blfs-dev before and sorry for having used it a
second time, maybe I should just stop using computers...
I have difficulties compiling koffice-1.5.0. It exits with an error, some
undefined reference to std::char_traits from pythonextension.cpp. I do not
have any
Archaic wrote:
On Sat, May 13, 2006 at 07:53:05PM +0200, juras256 wrote:
I know, the answer is, it depends what you want to accomplish.
The only time you need xinetd (which is preferred over inetd) is when
you want to run a daemon that requires it. sshd is not one of those
daemons, and