Re: static compile unable to find gnutls dev files

2010-08-28 Thread Bob Proulx
Jordon Bedwell wrote: I was wondering if anybody could help me figure out a problem with static compiling: The problem is that the archive library doesn't contain the same symbols as the shared library. I think that is probably a bug. But mostly for things like that the shared library is

static compile unable to find gnutls dev files

2010-08-23 Thread Jordon Bedwell
I was wondering if anybody could help me figure out a problem with static compiling: -- srv01:/usr/src/msmtp-1.4.21#

Re: Who does makes USB dev files ?

2008-11-07 Thread Osamu Aoki
On Fri, Nov 07, 2008 at 10:38:19AM +0900, J.H.Kim wrote: Hi, everyone I'm looking for routines which make dev files (for example, /dev/usb/lp0 for usb printer) of USB character devices. udev Is it udev or kernel driver module? udev loads kernel driver module required to support device

Who does makes USB dev files ?

2008-11-06 Thread J.H.Kim
Hi, everyone I'm looking for routines which make dev files (for example, /dev/usb/lp0 for usb printer) of USB character devices. Is it udev or kernel driver module? If it is udev, how does it determine the major and minor number of the device? The uevent message from kernel for usb

Re: Who does makes USB dev files ?

2008-11-06 Thread Ron Johnson
On 11/06/08 19:38, J.H.Kim wrote: Hi, everyone I'm looking for routines which make dev files (for example, /dev/usb/lp0 for usb printer) of USB character devices. Is it udev or kernel driver module? If it is udev, how does it determine the major and minor number of the device? The uevent

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-23 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006.06.23.0454 +0200]: My conclusion is that it seems from a security standpoint, and from an ease-of-administration standpoint, pam_console is the clear winner over both of the other proposed solutions. So yes, when I said pam_console was nice, I

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-23 Thread Derek Martin
On Fri, Jun 23, 2006 at 10:16:26AM +0200, martin f krafft wrote: also sprach Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006.06.23.0454 +0200]: My conclusion is that it seems from a security standpoint, and from an ease-of-administration standpoint, pam_console is the clear winner over both of the

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-23 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006.06.23.1403 +0200]: Why should I not make such statements? If Debian is not meeting the needs of people who want to use it, why should the Debian community not strive to meet those needs? Is the Debian community not open to change for the

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-23 Thread Derek Martin
On Fri, Jun 23, 2006 at 02:27:19PM +0200, martin f krafft wrote: also sprach Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006.06.23.1403 +0200]: Why should I not make such statements? If Debian is not meeting the needs of people who want to use it, why should the Debian community not strive to meet

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-23 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006.06.23.1527 +0200]: Sure, for the better. In this case, however, you are the only one who thinks it's better. Given that, as you say, there are numerous discussions on the net about it, that obviously can't be true. In this case it is, or

group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-22 Thread Derek Martin
ownership of the necessary devices to that group. Sounds simple, doesn't it? Except that Debian seems to have some mechanism which, at boot time, resets the group ownership of /dev files. Worse yet, there seems to be more than one of them... I found /etc/init.d/makdev AND REMOVED IT, but despite

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-22 Thread James Westby
On (22/06/06 16:56), Derek Martin wrote: Hi folks, If there's a more appropriate place to ask this, please let me know. I manage a large number of workstations which run Debian. Everyone in my organization need to be able to access any of these workstations, and they expect basic

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-22 Thread martin f krafft
time, resets the group ownership of /dev files. You are probably using udev which creates them after boot. dpkg -l udev Anyone know how I can make this stop? Or alternately, know a different way to solve this which I have not already discussed? You could help with modularisation of makedev

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-22 Thread Steve Kemp
On Thu, Jun 22, 2006 at 04:56:13PM -0400, Derek Martin wrote: Red Hat has a nice PAM library that lets people access, say, the sound devices when they log in on the console. Thus anyone who logs in automatically has access to the sound devices. However, this facility appears to be lacking

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-22 Thread Derek Martin
On Thu, Jun 22, 2006 at 11:07:37PM +0200, martin f krafft wrote: [pam_console] devices when they log in on the console. Thus anyone who logs in automatically has access to the sound devices. However, this facility appears to be lacking in Sarge. by choice, yes.

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-22 Thread martin f krafft
also sprach Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006.06.23.0017 +0200]: Thanks for the tip... this may work, though at a quick glance, again, I don't see how this is better than pam_console. It does not mess with the filesystem for a start. And no, it won't get rid of the security issues. You

Re: group ownership of /dev files

2006-06-22 Thread Derek Martin
On Fri, Jun 23, 2006 at 12:41:51AM +0200, martin f krafft wrote: also sprach Derek Martin [EMAIL PROTECTED] [2006.06.23.0017 +0200]: Thanks for the tip... this may work, though at a quick glance, again, I don't see how this is better than pam_console. It does not mess with the filesystem

/dev/ files

2005-11-09 Thread Paras pradhan
hi: my debian machine has /dev folder and has only around 160 files... and there is also a /dev/.static folder inside which all the expected files are sitting inside i have udev installed.. confused.. due this my ide-scsi emulation is not working and have many problems.. how to fix this

Re: /dev/ files

2005-11-09 Thread Ron Johnson
On Wed, 2005-11-09 at 22:06 +0545, Paras pradhan wrote: hi: my debian machine has /dev folder and has only around 160 files... and there is also a /dev/.static folder inside which all the expected files are sitting inside i have udev installed.. That's why there are so few files in

Re: /dev/ files

2005-11-09 Thread Paras pradhan
yes i need scsi emulation of cd drives need /dev/scd0 , sr0 which is not present now..and my cdrecorder is not working. what sud i do? Paras. On 11/10/05, Ron Johnson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On Wed, 2005-11-09 at 22:06 +0545, Paras pradhan wrote: hi: my debian machine has /dev

Re: /dev/ files

2005-11-09 Thread Ron Johnson
On Thu, 2005-11-10 at 11:17 +0545, Paras pradhan wrote: yes i need scsi emulation of cd drives need /dev/scd0 , sr0 which is not present now..and my cdrecorder is not working. Yes, but, unless you are still using a 2.4 kernel, why use the SCSI layer? Why not use the ATAPI layer? It works

Re: /dev/ files

2005-11-09 Thread Paras pradhan
hi: it not only the matter of scsci emulation.. i dont have many files... like: sda, sda1, sdb etc.it sud contain around 1600 files.. but in my system only 160 files inside /dev. i am confused why the files are lying inside /dev/.static/dev instead of /dev/ Paras. On 11/10/05, Ron

Re: /dev/ files

2005-11-09 Thread Paul Scott
Paras pradhan wrote: hi: it not only the matter of scsci emulation.. i dont have many files... like: sda, sda1, sdb etc.it sud contain around 1600 files.. but in my system only 160 files inside /dev. Do you have more than 160 devices on your machine? i am confused why the files are

Re: /dev/ files

2005-11-09 Thread Gene Heskett
On Thursday 10 November 2005 00:32, Paras pradhan wrote: yes i need scsi emulation of cd drives need /dev/scd0 , sr0 which is not present now..and my cdrecorder is not working. what sud i do? Generally speaking, cd and dvd drives have had full, including writing, support, within the regular

Re: /dev/ files

2005-11-09 Thread Zachary Wu
Paras pradhan 写道: hi: it not only the matter of scsci emulation.. i dont have many files... like: sda, sda1, sdb etc.it sud contain around 1600 files.. but in my system only 160 files inside /dev. i am confused why the files are lying inside /dev/.static/dev instead of /dev/ Paras.

udev or hotplug problem: fail to create /dev files for USB storage device

2005-09-16 Thread Eddie Cao
Hi, all I have a USB external disk, which works fine under windows as well as Ubuntu Linux. When I plug it to my debian box (Debian Testing, uptodate, self-made 2.6.13), it does not create the /dev file and I cannot mount it, although it does recognize the virtual SCSI device according to the

Can't install both gtk and qt dev files?

2003-09-26 Thread Loren M Lang
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Recently, I tried to compile and install an application that uses libqt3 and ran into this: # apt-get install libqt3-dev Reading Package Lists... Done Building Dependency Tree... Done The following extra packages will be installed: libpng-dev The

Re: some dev files disappeared, mouse doesn't work, no hostname

2003-07-10 Thread Kent West
Kent West wrote: The other day I shut down my Sid box and left if off for several days. Then when I came back to it tonight, I'm seeing some weird behaviour. For example, the mouse doesn't work, via gpm in console. I can't start X via startx; it complains about no /dev/tty0 device. And sure

some dev files disappeared, mouse doesn't work, no hostname

2003-07-08 Thread Kent West
The other day I shut down my Sid box and left if off for several days. Then when I came back to it tonight, I'm seeing some weird behaviour. For example, the mouse doesn't work, via gpm in console. I can't start X via startx; it complains about no /dev/tty0 device. And sure enough, it doesn't,

Kernel 2.4.13 has no /dev files or info with lspci

2001-10-24 Thread Hanasaki JiJi
lspci only gives the board numbers. no descriptions show up /dev does not have my hdaxx partitions thus i cannot mount them any help would be appreciated. Thanks

Re: Kernel 2.4.13 has no /dev files or info with lspci

2001-10-24 Thread Debian User Jean-Baptiste Note
On Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 12:18:43PM -0500, Hanasaki JiJi wrote: lspci only gives the board numbers. no descriptions show up OK, i think this is because you don't have PCI device name database compiled into the kernel. Try to add it. This is in General Setup section. /dev does not have my

Re: Kernel 2.4.13 has no /dev files or info with lspci

2001-10-24 Thread Viktor Rosenfeld
Hi Hanasaki, Hanasaki JiJi wrote: lspci only gives the board numbers. no descriptions show up Can't help you on that. I'm still compiling 2.4.13 and won't install until tomorrow. /dev does not have my hdaxx partitions thus i cannot mount them Do you use devfs? If not, then `cd /dev

Re: Kernel 2.4.13 has no /dev files or info with lspci

2001-10-24 Thread Hanasaki JiJi
The Problem with /dev was that somehow devfs crawled into tthe kernel. I swear I didn't to it :) - Took it out and the devices are in fine now. Thanks, Debian User Jean-Baptiste Note wrote: On Wed, Oct 24, 2001 at 12:18:43PM -0500, Hanasaki JiJi wrote: lspci only gives the board numbers.

Where can I find info on all those /dev files?

2000-09-13 Thread csj
is this little red button supposed to do?) doc that can tell me which device each of the /dev files in my system works with? All I need is a simple list like: /dev/hd? -- IDE hard disk /dev/sg? -- cdwriter

RE: Where can I find info on all those /dev files?

2000-09-13 Thread Sean 'Shaleh' Perry
Question: Is there a more scientific way to go about finding the proper /dev for my devices? Is there a HOWTO, or rather a WHATIS (as in, What is this little red button supposed to do?) doc that can tell me which device each of the /dev files in my system works with? in the kernel source

Re: Where can I find info on all those /dev files?

2000-09-13 Thread kmself
which device each of the /dev files in my system works with? /usr/src/linux/Documentation/devices.txt -- Karsten M. Self kmself@ix.netcom.com http://www.netcom.com/~kmself Evangelist, Opensales, Inc.http://www.opensales.org What part of Gestalt don't you understand

Re: /dev files

1997-10-16 Thread Shaul Karl.
Is there a list explaining what each /dev file is used for? I was looking to cut down on my inode use by trimming /dev down some. I am using Debian as a home workstation so I figured some of it wsa superfluous. The Documentation/devices.txt under the linux src tree might help. -- TO

/dev files

1997-10-14 Thread Shaleh
Is there a list explaining what each /dev file is used for? I was looking to cut down on my inode use by trimming /dev down some. I am using Debian as a home workstation so I figured some of it wsa superfluous. -- TO UNSUBSCRIBE FROM THIS MAILING LIST: e-mail the word unsubscribe to [EMAIL

Re: /dev files

1997-10-14 Thread stick
Howdy! There are a couple of places you can reference to learn more about the devices: man {devinfo,MAKEDEV,makedev.cfg} #Assuming you have installed /usr/doc/makedev#the binary MAKEDEV package. source-code Is there a list explaining what