Francesco Pietra wrote:
PS: You did not comment whether the pipe' command that I use to verify
grub has a general validity. As far as I could use it, I found it
equivalent to examining each disk, one at a time.
It was clever! It was definitely in the spirit of the Unix
philosophy. At the
Francesco Pietra wrote:
I hope not to bother beyond the limit, but the security of mirror raid is
something of utmost importance, at least in my work of biochemist, with
very limited ability in recovering from disk failures.
I must express concern. While RAID is very useful to keeping a
Francesco Pietra wrote:
I forgot asking naively how to boot safely to the grub menu.
Press a key on the keyboard before the 5 second count down timer
counts all of the way down. Pressing a key stops the timer and causes
it to stay on the menu waiting for keyboard input.
Bob
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Francesco Pietra wrote:
Thanks so much. I am also using raid1 since I met Debian, so many years
ago. However the poor way I described. I'll do what you suggest as soon
time permits, although the cables to the HDs in the old server are
difficultly accessible. And, in the meantime, I would be at
Francesco Pietra wrote:
Bob Proulx wrote:
After installing simply run the grub install script against both
disks manually and then you will be assured that it has been
installed on both disks.
I had problems with that methodology and was unable to detect my error.
From a thread
Francesco Pietra wrote:
Did you use a recent version of the installer? What I would like to know -
before reinstalling everything on my servers - is whether the option to set
grub on both disks of raid 0 has now been introduced.
I recall that it has been added with Wheezy. But let me put
Francesco Pietra wrote:
Alexandru Cardaniuc wrote:
Did I miss something during the debian installation? Why wasn't grub
automatically installed on both disks?
Seems like it should have been. I would file a bug against the
debian-installer or installation-reports.
I started this
Alexandru Cardaniuc wrote:
I just did 2 reinstalls in the last two weeks (upgrade from sqeeze to
wheezy screwed up my grub config and then my 6 year old drives started
failing - so much fun :), but basically during both reinstalls and
creating MD devices with debian installer (md0/md1/md2)
Francesco Pietra wrote:
Is any official (= working) advice on getting java at work with wheezy
(specifically in amd64, if relevant)?
http://wiki.debian.org/Java
What should be installed/reconfigured/uninstalled other than the packages
obtained from wheezy desktop install, followed by
Francesco Pietra wrote:
Thanks so much for this manual. Unfortunately, I have no more the
initial situation (one HD replaced) because I was hurried by an editor
to provide computational data from my CUDA server. I did not want to
run the server before all my data were backed up. Therefore I
Francesco Pietra wrote:
Bob Proulx wrote:
Francesco Pietra wrote:
Thanks so much for this manual. Unfortunately, I have no more the
initial situation (one HD replaced) because I was hurried by an editor
to provide computational data from my CUDA server. I did not want to
run the server
Hi Francesco,
As far as I can determine reading this thread you have had a RAID1
with two disks sda and sdb. The disk sda failed. But grub was only
installed on the failed sda. The disk sdb contains a mirror of
everything but does not boot.
Earlier in the thread Lennart gave an excellent
James Brown wrote:
I have a laptop Acer TravelMate 3043WTMi under Lenny AMD64 with 4GD RAM.
But the system see only 3GB:
dmesg |grep Memory
[0.004000] Memory: 3081184k/3136000k available (2225k kernel code, 54428k
reserved, 1080k data, 392k init)
Hmm... I recommend installing
James Brown wrote:
Bob Proulx wrote:
Hmm... I recommend installing memtest86+ and then seeing how much
memory it detects at boot time.
apt-get install memtest86+
This should automatically install a grub boot entry and be very easy
to boot into afterward. I am thinking it might
James Brown wrote:
Bob Proulx wrote:
apt-get install memtest86+
It see only 3GB, not 4GB.
I looked up the Acer TravelMate 3040 series and supposedly it has two
200-pin sodimm slots. This is an obvious question but are you sure
your two slots both have a 2G dimm in them? Is it possible
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a running critical production server, running Debian Sarge 32 Bits
version.
If it is critical then don't touch it.
I would like to migrate to Debian-AMD64 system,
There is no easy way to change architectures without reinstalling.
how can I do it, without
Jo Shields wrote:
For reasons I've yet to hear fully explained, the Packages file on the
AMD64 mirror for Sarge non-free is empty. You either need to download
and dpkg -i the relevant packages by hand, or (temporarily) use another
release (etch, sid) to install nvidia-glx.
Today I noticed
Chris Wakefield wrote:
I screwed things up even worse, as I copied over apt-get and dpkg
from another install and I have a big mess now. You are right, I
have to fix the original problem first, but I can't fix without
apt-get dpkg working right, so gotta do a reinstall I think.
You may have
Chris Wakefield wrote:
My system is sick. For a month now, I haven't been able to successfully
update or upgrade, now I can't install anything at all now:
Can anyone suggest some kind of fix?
...
Preparing to replace bzip2 1.0.2-8 (using .../bzip2_1.0.2-8_amd64.deb) ...
Joost Kraaijeveld wrote:
On Sat, 2005-08-20 at 11:56 -0300, Angel Claudio Alvarez wrote:
El sáb, 20-08-2005 a las 14:11 +0200, Joost Kraaijeveld escribió:
Is it possible to develop J2EE applications on an AMD64 using a
(non)free 64 bit environment?
Yes, it is
If so, is there a
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
$ apt-cache dumpavail | sed -e '/^Package:/!d ; s/^Package: \(.*\)/\1/'
amd64_debian_avail_list.txt
I find grep-dctrl is better suited for this:
apt-cache dumpavail | grep-dctrl -n -s Package
You can save a small amount of typing by using grep-available.
Monty wrote:
The problem is that my apt-get will not seam to update/upgrade any of my
packages even though I know there are new packages available by looking in
/var/lib/dpkg/available.
As an example, I currently have lynx V2.8.5REL1 installed but my
/var/lib/dpkg/available file indicates
Nigel Ridley wrote:
Grahame White wrote:
Unpacking replacement libc6 ...
dpkg: error processing /var/cache/apt/archives/libc6_2.3.5-3_amd64.deb
(--unpack):
trying to overwrite `/usr/lib64', which is also in package xmms-kde
This seems like a very strange thing to see here. I think the
Jens Vogel wrote:
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.nl.debian.org/debian-amd64/debian/pool/main/p/perlftlib/fttools_1.2-14_all.deb
MD5Sum mismatch
Failed to fetch
http://ftp.nl.debian.org/debian-amd64/debian/pool/main/x/xprint/xprt-xprintorg_0.1.0.alpha1-10_all.deb
MD5Sum mismatch
This
Turbo Fredriksson wrote:
I'm still stuck on/in woody on all my systems. Can't change just
yet (I'm working on it), but in the meantime I'm trying to
create packages that's true amd64.
But there is no woody amd64. So your statement is confusing. If you
are talking about woody do you mean x86
Van Laere Benjamin wrote:
I have a chroot in wich I would like to be able to run
graphic-intensive stuff (mupen64). My driver works fine in the 64bit
environment, but when I run glxgears in the chroot, I get this:
Xlib: extension XFree86-DRI missing on display :0.0.
Inside your
David Wood wrote:
On Wed, 6 Jul 2005, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
Go to snapshot.debian.net and fish out the right library versions
suse/rh uses, install them, install the same packages (inetd/xinetd)
suse/rh uses and voila. Compatibility.
Even if libraries were the only issue, aren't there
Thomas Steffen wrote:
The better way to do it is to have three (sub)packages: i386, x86_64
and shared. That is a bit like -common and -bin, but the packages
differ only in architecture, not in the name. Imho that is the way to
go.
However, if you look closer, you find that both approaches
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bob Proulx) writes:
This has been a long standing behavior of rpm that is now
exploited for use in biarch.
That sounds like there is no special biarch support at all in rpm but
just the support to have multiple versions of a package installed
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
Hugo Mills [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
How? You can't install your two multiarch versions of libvorbis
without a hacked package manager that understands how to do it.
You name packages lib32foo and lib64foo or something non
conflicting. Or you use the
Adam Stiles wrote:
As I've said before, binary compatibility is irrelevant.
[...]
Source compatibility is all that really matters, and there are
enough examples around to show that this is entirely achievable.
[...]
The only reason why you would ever want to be able to run a binary
not
Zachary Rizer wrote:
--- Thomas Steffen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Yes, you can. The chroot may have a different file
system, but it sees exactly the same network.
Agreed. This works fine.
The server doesn't seem to want to run in the chroot,
or if it's running, I can't get to it from
Rik Theys wrote:
I've followed the instructions in the AMD64 howto to setup a chroot jail to
run 32 apps.
When my home directories are available as regular directories under /home
(and /home is bind mounted into the chroot), the users can launch programs
like openoffice.org in the chroot
Bernie Betlach wrote:
I hope someone can give me a simple answer. Will 32 bit applications
run on Sarge AMD64
If you also install a 32-bit environment in addition to the 64-bit
environment then yes they will. There are two typical methods for
installing a 32-bit environment. One is
Nicholas P. Mueller wrote:
I am also writing to ask for any criticism or pointers of things I
have done wrong.
Since you asked *and* you replied to _my_ message I am compelled to
reply. I posted a follow-up message with a subject Simple
Question... 32bit compatibility. You took that message
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
Adam Stiles writes:
Most current 64 bit Linux distributions are not pure 64-bit but
contain both 32 and 64 bit libraries. In other words, they are
multi-arch.
Not multiarch but biarch. Not quite the same thing.
No. They have ia32-libs preinstalled.
Thomas Steffen wrote:
Multiarch is something that goes way beyond what other
amd64 distributions have.
Maybe, but the RedHat package management does support two different
architectures, and it does it now.
Technically that is biarch. That is different than multiarch.
Red Hat has
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
Bob Proulx writes:
Red Hat has implemented special case biarch support. Debian has not
implemented either but the goal is to implement multiarch.
So under red hat you can actualy do: [whatever dpkg's -i is for rpm]
rpm -i libfoo_i386.rpm
rpm -i libfoo_amd64
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
Thomas Steffen writes:
That is the theory, and I do believe in theory... until something more
practical comes along. I use Openoffice, Acrobat Reader, Partimage,
Mplayer, a bit of Wine, Oracle and sometimes Matlab for Linux. That
makes seven applications that
Martin Kuball wrote:
failed. Some packages among it libc6 could not be installed because:
/var/lib/dpkg/tmp.ci/preinst: line 126: /dev/null: Permission denied
/var/lib/dpkg/tmp.ci/preinst: line 131: /dev/null: Permission denied
/var/lib/dpkg/tmp.ci/preinst: line 1: /dev/null: Permission
Adam Stiles wrote:
Ah, Pine. The one where the source is too open for its own good.
:-)
And I don't see why there can't be a .deb package which contains the
source code and patches, depends on the compiler and toolchain
There is. But it is in the non-free section due to the license
Alexander Fieroch wrote:
Bob Proulx wrote:
Have all of your 'dchroot' calls used -d? Does it work without -d?
Then I get the following error:
$ dchroot -c ia32 glxgears
(ia32) glxgears
Must be connected to a terminal.
dchroot: Child exited non-zero.
dchroot: Operation failed.
Any
Tollef Fog Heen wrote:
* Adam Lackorzynski
| The mismatches come from an incorrect resync after the archive move. The
| contents of the files itself were actually ok.
| To fix the archive I've placed a little script in the root directory
| that wgets the corresponding files as rsync won't
Ed Tomlinson wrote:
Bob Proulx wrote:
What is the output of this command?
apt-cache policy bind9-host
grover:/home/ed# apt-cache policy bind9-host
bind9-host:
Installed: 1:9.3.1-2
Candidate: 1:9.3.1-2
Version Table:
1:9.3.1-2 0
500 http://amd64.debian.net sid
Alexander Fieroch wrote:
I also can chroot to my chroot-path as root and switch to the user. Then
I can start every programm.
The thing that's not working is dchroot as user. As root it's working too.
Have all of your 'dchroot' calls used -d? Does it work without -d?
The above makes me think
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I went to check for updates using Synaptic just now and found that I have two
broken packages (libc6-dev and locales). According to synaptic, the solution
for this seems to be to upgrade libc6. However, when I do apt-get upgrade
libc6 I get a complaint containing the
Ed Tomlinson wrote:
Looks like the bind9-host package is sticky...
Or has two different sources.
grover:/home/ed# aptitude update
...
grover:/home/ed# aptitude upgrade
...
The following packages will be upgraded:
bind9-host
...
grover:/home/ed# aptitude upgrade
...
The following
Bob Proulx wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
libc6-dev: Depends: libc6 (= 2.3.2.ds1-22) but 2.3.2.ds1-21 is installed
locales: Depends: glibc-2.3.2.ds1-22
But 2.3.2.ds1-21 is current in sid in the amd64 archive. Check your
/etc/apt/sources.list file and determine where you are getting
Harald Dunkel wrote:
Since the migration to gcc4 the Emacs key bindings in
Thunderbird's compose window seem to be gone. Is this
just me?
I ran into that some months ago too. But it has nothing to do with
gcc4. This is true on all architectures. I found this solution on
the firefox site. I
Harald Dunkel wrote:
Is it possible to set this stuff somewhere in /etc for all
users?
Bob Proulx wrote:
# /etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc
Uhm, yes, in /etc/gtk-2.0/gtkrc. :-)
I wonder why the default has changed for amd64, but not for i386.
It affected me on i386 too.
Bob
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Alexander Fieroch wrote:
$ dchroot -c ia32 -d openoffice
(ia32) openoffice
No shell
dchroot: Child exited non-zero.
dchroot: Operation failed.
In google I've found the same problem with this answer:
Literally that looks like you have no shell. Check your password
field entry in your
While walking through my list of things needed for amd64 I found that
'pinfo' still is not fixed. The 'pinfo' package is not installable on
amd64 at this time.
Previous discussion of this problem is here:
http://lists.debian.org/debian-amd64/2005/01/msg00155.html
It was determined at the
Stephan Seitz wrote:
On Wed, May 04, 2005 at 03:31:58PM +0200, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
ftp://amd64.debian.net/debian work too. Is correct to use it?
If you must. Http is prefered by almost everyone as it doesn't require
makeing a new connection for every file and is thus faster and
Brett Viren wrote:
Looking at my mirror logs I see this as well. Judging by the oldest
log I keep around, it's been happening since at least last Friday.
It looks like someone has renamed the module to debian-pure64:
The rsync module change may have been recent. But the depot renaming
was
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
The problem with ISPs with transparent proxies is that many of them
are broken. Broken to a point that you can't fix it.
Agreed. I am currently working behind such a broken proxy. It gives
me no end of trouble! It is one of the reasons that I really must
maintain
Bob Proulx wrote:
I switched to using socks and rsync as the transport protocol with
debmirror to avoid the bad behavior of rsync. That solved most of my
^ http proxy
s/bad behavior of rsync/bad behavior of http proxy/
Drat. I hate it when I do
In the debian-amd64.alioth.debian.org/debian-pure64 archive:
Current output from debmirror:
pool/main/r/rpl/rpl_1.5.1_all.deb failed md5sum check
pool/non-free/p/php4-dbase/php4-dbase_4.3.4+rcfinal-3.diff.gz failed md5sum
check
Could some check and correct those?
Thanks
Bob
Aaron M. Ucko wrote:
Goswin von Brederlow [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
What's broken? How is it broken? Sounds like the package just need a
rebuild. Is that correct?
ttcn-el.info.gz somehow wound up with no content, breaking the call to
install-info in the postinst. This may have be due to
Lennart Sorensen wrote:
Dr Gavin Seddon wrote:
I have followed instructions on chrooting, when I try and use 'dchroot'
I get
'/usr/bin/dchroot -c ia32 -d openoffice
(ia32) openoffice
No shell
dchroot: Child exited non-zero.
dchroot: Operation failed.'
What have I done wrong?
Alexander Rapp wrote:
Tong wrote:
Say my i386 Debian Sarge is mounted on /os/deb32. Then, having configured
the ldconfig, just launch ooffice (or any other tools not available in
amd64 yet) as /os/deb32/usr/bin/ooffice -- no bind mount, no dchroot, no
various sym-links.
Running ooffice
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
the owner [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I used the above sources.list with this image:
sid-amd64-netinst.iso11-Feb-2005 09:01 193M
I can't figure that one out:
apt-cache policy libc6 libc6-dev
libc6:
2.3.2.ds1-20 0
1001
I just hit lsb-core version 2.0-1 which causes me problems. I have
not updated for a while. Testing using the latest debian-pure64.
* Depend on ia32-libs on amd64. (Closes: #259976)
But I am not using ia32-libs. I am using an ia32 chroot. But now I
am required to use ia32-libs if I want
I would like to configure a 32-bit base system, use a amd64-k8 kernel
such as the kernel-image-2.6.8-10-amd64-k8-smp kernel, and set up a
64-bit chroot on the machine. This mostly works. But I am missing
something. I am trying to follow the ia32 chroot howto in reverse to
install an amd64
Kurt Roeckx wrote:
Bob Proulx wrote:
I installed this symlink:
/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2 - /emul/amd64-linux/lib/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2
You should create that in /lib64 and not in /lib.
That was it!
In my case since I am wanting to manage the files in my chroot and
access them through
Sven Krahn wrote:
On Wed, 19 Jan 2005 15:30:55 +, Pat C [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
So my debian system is awesome. I'm using KDE and I love the new KDE 3.3
setup. However, I can't seem to be able to change the graphical login when
the computer starts up. It's this plain drab Debian
Sven Krahn wrote:
On Thu, 20 Jan 2005 03:35:59 -0700, Bob Proulx [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sven Krahn wrote:
apt-get remove xdm twm
apt-get install kdm
This is what I would expect as well. However, at least my installation
wants to remove all KDE packages when just doing 'apt-get
Pat C wrote:
David Sawyer wrote:
Pat C wrote:
do it. When I go to configure it manually to see if it works, I put in
all the information and then the system goes blank.
What do you do to configure it manually. Did you edit the
/etc/network/interfaces file, or just type ifconfig
Sebastian Kuegler wrote:
Works, indeed. The following (suggested to me in private email) does also
work:
exec dchroot -c ia32 -d $(basename $0) -- $@
Very good! I like that best because it preserves the arguments
exactly. Can someone with commit rights to the howto please make this
update?
Christian Thalinger wrote:
But with openoffice the library can be found:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~/ts2_client_rc2_2032$
ldd /usr/lib/openoffice/program/soffice.bin |grep pthread
libpthread.so.0 = /emul/ia32-linux/usr/lib/libpthread.so.0
(0x55674000)
Anyone an idea?
The ia32-libs
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
Lourens Steenkamp [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I decide (dangerous move ...) that it had something to do with the link
mentioned above so I move the /emul/ia32-linux/lib/ld-linux.so.2 link to
something else and did the ln -s /var/chroot/sid-ia32/lib/ld-2.3.2.so
Alexandru Cabuz wrote:
do, I might suggest that you try sarge instead of sid to avoid the
My chroot IS sarge. My main amd64 system is sid of course, since sarge
has not been ported to amd64.
I am sorry, I must have missed that. However it means I have no idea
what to suggest next that
Alexandru Cabuz wrote:
That's pretty strange. Has anybody seen or heard anything like this
before? I could also try to put this up on one of the openoffice.org
lists...
That is pretty strange.
I don't have anything really useful to add except to say that it is
working great for me. I did not
packagename.rpm
dpkg --info packagename.deb
To query installed packages by name.
rpm -qi packagename
dpkg --status packagename
Bob
Any reply would be much appreciated.
Best regards
Nils Valentin
On Tuesday 30 November 2004 02:47, Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bob
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
The problem is that many programs have data files in /usr/share or
/usr/lib/package or even config in /etc/. All those files will be
inside the chroot ...
Yes.
... instead of outside when you run the program outside.
Any program that needs to be *installed* will
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
You can use /emul/ia32-linux/lib (as the ia32-libs, ia32-libs-dev
and ia32-libs-openoffice.org packages already do). The drawback of
this method is that you can't just apt-get install foobar to
install a 32bit package.
But if 'dchroot' is configured with the
Phil Warrick wrote:
I'm going with the chroot approach then.
Following the AMD64 HOWTO in section Running applications inside the
chroot, I followed the instructions and then I wanted to try to run a
32-bit program.
First I wanted to try to run some X-based program so I tried
Alvin James wrote:
I am trying to use the cu command to connect to a CISCO 2900 managed
switch does anyone know the full command or command options necessary to
connect via the serial port?
The 'cu' command rides along on top of and in conjunction with uucp.
So the first thing you need to do
Goswin von Brederlow wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Bob Proulx) writes:
But if 'dchroot' is configured with the ia32-linux chroot then you can
just say dchroot apt-get install foobar to install a 32bit package.
dchroot will only work if you have a chroot.
Yes. In particular it won't work
Jared Burke wrote:
I can tell you that if you're planning on using the latest nvidia
module, you'll need gcc-3.4.
You only need to compile the module with gcc-3.4 because the kernel in
pure64 was also compiled that way. I am using the latest nvidia
module with /pure64. Assuming you are using
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I only have a 10Gb HD (for the moment, I'm saving to get another), so I
don't find it really attractive to install the full 64bits system, and
then install lots of 32bits libraries (and maybe other binaries) in a
chroot jail just to run, say, doom3, or openoffice.org.
Artimus Dink wrote:
One thing I've found is that if I do a 'modprobe
psmouse' prior to 'startx', then X will start straight
away and the mouse works fine... any ideas?
I am guessing that either hotplug or discover or something else is
installed on my machine and loading that module
Gasper Zejn wrote:
I've apt-get installed an official kernel-image-9-2.6.8-k8 package and
rebooted, and i get an no init found error, while -k7 kernels work
with no problem.
You say kernel-image-9-2.6.8-k8 but then you also say:
The grub lines (i've added init=/sbin/init with no luck):
Gasper Zejn wrote:
Hello!
Oh yes, I forgot to say, the list address has been changed. Please
note the new address.
debian-amd64@lists.debian.org
Bob
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature
Artimus Dink wrote:
(**) Option Device /dev/psaux
(EE) xf86OpenSerial: Cannot open device /dev/psaux
No such device.
(EE) Configured Mouse: cannot open input device
(EE) PreInit failed for input device Configured Mouse
[...]
(**) Option Device /dev/input/mice
(EE) xf86OpenSerial:
Kiyotaka ATSUMI wrote:
Please tell me a mirror site of
http://debian-amd64.alioth.debian.org/
in Japan.
I am not aware of any mirrors in Japan.
If it isn't exist, I want to
build it in Japan. Is it good?
If you decide to mirror the archive then the following script using
debmirror
Johan Groth wrote:
Kurt Roeckx wrote:
Jan Houstek wrote:
Kurt Roeckx wrote:
We will atleast have a released version of the sarge repository, with
updates if there are, and security updates.
That's good news. Any chance this port will become a part of the official
stable in some future
Alex Perry wrote:
hardware clock). Once the clock is close, by using this method, the ntp
will always be able to keep it on time from then onwards.
Agreed.
To check if ntp is in a happy state, use the 'ntpq -p' command.
ntpq -p
Look for low fractional jitter numbers and low offset
You replied to my last message Boot from SATA + Network but have
stolen the thread for a different topic. Please don't do that.
Please start a *new* message when starting a new topic. See how your
message is hiding in the other thread?
Michael Vang wrote:
Hmm... What am I doing wrong?
k8:~# modprobe cpufreq-userspace
k8:~# modprobe powernow-k8
FATAL: Error inserting powernow_k8
(/lib/modules/2.6.9-9-amd64-k8/kernel/arch/x86_64/kernel/cpufreq/powernow-k8.ko):
No such device
The No such device message means the
Richard Wohlstadter wrote:
I installed amd64 of a few of our blades a month ago and noticed at that
time the autofs packages were still broken(needed a header change to
work with 64bit). I compiled autofs seperately outside of the dpkg
system and moved on. Just wondering if this has been
Jonas Diemer wrote:
PS: Please CC me in your replies, I am not subscribed to the list.
I get a kernelpanic, saying that the root filesys couldn't be mounted. I
guess this is because the sata driver (I believe it is sata_nv) is
compiled as a module. Am I correct?
Almost certainly.
What
Jan-Benedict Glaw wrote:
You must run ldconfig after making the symlinks.
Normally, this should be done automatically at the time you install the
.deb package...
ldconfig sets symlinks according to configuration in /etc/ld.so.conf.
If this is done in a chroot then it configures it
Christian T. Steigies wrote:
On Tue, Nov 02, 2004 at 05:37:05PM -0500, Eric Sharkey wrote:
So, what I would like to know is, does bumprace sound ok on your
ASUS K8N-E Deluxe, or does it sound like crap?
As I said, I am not using that machine, but I guess I can sneak into the
office and
A. P. Kennedy wrote:
New to chroot game but wanted to know if I could use
/emul/ia32-linux/ directory as my chroot directory?
Should I setup a completely different chroot directory.
Yes, that works fine. I do that all of the time. That is how I
maintain the ia32 libraries. I just
Harald Dunkel wrote:
pbuilder seems to be missing. There were no updates in the
amd64(gcc-3.4) pool for some days, anyway.
Of course if the gcc-3.4 archive has a problem it needs to be fixed.
But your note suggests that you are just looking for a good pbuilder
package. So I will comment on
Today the following files are missing from the Alioth pure64 archive.
404 Not Found Download of
pool/unstable/main/source/p/pyopenal/pyopenal_0.1.4-5.dsc
Bob
Koef wrote:
On Thu, Oct 28, 2004 at 10:01:11AM -0400, Lennart Sorensen wrote:
On Tue, Oct 26, 2004 at 12:33:49AM +0200, corerix wrote:
find debian -type d | xargs rmdir -p --ignore-fail-on-non-empty
rmdir: zu wenige Argumente
What does that mean ^ ?
based on an educated guess
Steffen Schwigon wrote:
[ I'm new to 64bit, but read amd64 HOWTO and the like ]
Excellent!
I want to setup a Debian/Sarge-like system on my Athlon64fx. I tried
an install of sarge with a Debian-Installer-CD. The install itself
looked good, but it couldn't write a correct boot loader, neither
Peter Nelson wrote:
I've been playing around with the /emul/ia32-linux area a bit lately and
I finally got tired of pulling down library packages debs and extracting
them into that area manually.
Agreed. That does sound tedious. The kind of work that robots will
be doing in the future. Oh
Peter Nelson wrote:
I've decided to share it. You can download a tar.bz with
instructions on how to use it from my site here:
http://rufus.hackish.org/wiki/I386Chroot
One thing that you don't mention in your wiki that I think would be
very useful is dchroot. I love it. It really makes
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