Alle 21:51, martedì 13 giugno 2006, Ryan Tandy ha scritto:
Mauro Arnoldi wrote:
My ati drivers doesn't want to compile:
#emerge -pv ati-drivers
These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
Calculating dependencies... done!
[blocks B ] =x11-base/xorg-server-1.0.99 (is
On 14 June 2006 05:25, Justin R Findlay wrote:
On Wed, Jun 14, 2006 at 03:14:57AM +, b.n. wrote:
JimD wrote:
I was hoping there were tools/editors for PDF/PS. What the heck do
book writers use? I hope not a word processor. I am only working with
small books and it is a pain to
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
checking for gcc... gcc
checking whether the C compiler (gcc -O2 -march=pentium4
-fomit-frame-pointer -pipe -mfpmath=sse -msse2 -mmmx -fPIC -Wl,-O1
-ldl-Wl,-O1) works... no
configure: error: installation or configuration problem: C compiler
cannot create executables.
Hello. Sorry for my English if there is a more correct way of saying Star
map. By Star Map I mean something that shows the position of starts, as
well as brightness. The more like photo, the better.
Star moves in the sky all the time:
1) the star map in 20:00 is different from 21:00
2) the star
alsa-driver is compiled into kernel, and emerge alsa-driver complains because of it and exits.On 6/11/06, Yun Xupeng
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:maybe you didn't compile drivers thatyour soundcard uses.
try emerge alsa-drivers again...
2006/6/12, Strake [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
-- I like Python Linux.
when I compiled my kernel, I only selected Sound card support,but
didn't select any module that is supported by the kernel(Alas or oss),
then I emerge alsa-driver, and it works well.
ps:my english is poor,sorry :)
Strake wrote:
alsa-driver is compiled into kernel, and emerge alsa-driver
I did an emerge --sync on my main machine, followed by
emerge --ask --deep --update --world --fetchonly. It spent several
minutes at Calculating world dependencies, with the spinner very
slowly moving. Eventually it ran. Subsequent calls to emerge ran at
the usual speed I'm accustomed to. My
Walter Dnes wrote:
I did an emerge --sync on my main machine, followed by
emerge --ask --deep --update --world --fetchonly. It spent
several minutes at Calculating world dependencies, with the
spinner very slowly moving. Eventually it ran. Subsequent
calls to emerge ran at the usual
Hi
according to revdep-rebuild, quite a few libraries on my system are broken.
But at the end of revdep-rebuild, it tells me, my system was consistent.
I think some libraries are really broken, because the sound of my vlc
player stutters sometimes lately.
I had some problems with the arts-daemon
KStars (http://edu.kde.org/kstars/) has a command line mode for image
generation.
It should not be difficult to script that to generate an image, then
set it as the background.
dcm
On 6/14/06, 张 �|武 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hello. Sorry for my English if there is a more correct way of saying
according to revdep-rebuild, quite a few libraries on my system are broken. But at the end of revdep-rebuild, it tells me, my system was consistent.This means the broken libraries don't belong to any package. Something touched/altered them (probably fix libtool script when updating gcc) so they
Norman Rieß wrote:
broken /usr/kde/3.4/lib/kde3/kfileaudiopreview.la (requires
/usr/kde/3.4/lib/libqtmcop.la)
You have upgraded to KDE-3.5.* ? Then 'rm -r /usr/kde/3.4'.
broken /usr/lib/avifile-0.7/ac3pass.la (requires
/usr/lib/libaviplayavformat.la)
The avi stuff is obsolete. Remove
according to revdep-rebuild, quite a few libraries on my system are
broken.
But at the end of revdep-rebuild, it tells me, my system was consistent.
This means the broken libraries don't belong to any package. Something
touched/altered them (probably fix libtool script when updating gcc) so
Norman Rieß wrote:
broken /usr/kde/3.4/lib/kde3/kfileaudiopreview.la (requires
/usr/kde/3.4/lib/libqtmcop.la)
You have upgraded to KDE-3.5.* ? Then 'rm -r /usr/kde/3.4'.
broken /usr/lib/avifile-0.7/ac3pass.la (requires
/usr/lib/libaviplayavformat.la)
The avi stuff is obsolete.
On 6/13/06, anand kumar [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I recently changed to Gentoo. I have a keyboard from hp with all
the new multimedia keys on it. I tried configuring them but showkey
doesnt recognise some of the keys. Is there any way to resolve this.
Previously these keys were getting
Hello. This might be OT but I am pretty interested in this and being
unlucky not able to find a real in-depth explanation of pipe on the
Internet.
How does pipe actually work? I mean, when there is a pipe like this:
$ appA | appB
What happen if appA produced output when appB is still busy
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 14:51:59 +0200 (CEST), Norman Rieß wrote:
But why wasn´t this deleted by a emerge --depclean world or the unmerge
in the update-process of that packages.
Because the files' datestamps and/or checksums had changed since they
were installed. Portage won't remove a file that
张�|武 wrote: Hello. This might be OT but I am pretty interested in this and being unlucky not able to find a real in-depth explanation of pipe on the Internet. I think man 7 pipe gives quite precise explanation for this.
How does pipe actually work? I mean, when there is a pipe like this: $ appA |
On 6/13/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 6/13/06, Kevin O'Gorman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Something about this is just not clicking with me.I restored my backup to an empty directory, chrooted to that directory, ran quickpkg on some of the
packages I've been trying to re-emerge, and
On 6/14/06, Daniel Drake [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
checking for gcc... gcc
checking whether the C compiler (gcc -O2 -march=pentium4
-fomit-frame-pointer -pipe -mfpmath=sse -msse2 -mmmx -fPIC -Wl,-O1
-ldl-Wl,-O1) works... no
configure: error: installation or
On 6/13/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 6/13/06, Kevin O'Gorman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Start digging. It completed just fine.
Ok, do this and send me the result.
# emerge --debug =dev-libs/glib-1.2.10-r5 ~/glib-merge.txt 21
-Richard
PS. Please post further replies in
Neil Bothwick schrieb:
These files are owned by nothing and used by nothing. all they do is take
up a small amount of disk space. They won't start to think for themselves
unless you have skynet in your USE flags.
No, but my flags contain USE=hive-mind. Any problems with that?
--
Norman Rieß wrote:
Hi
according to revdep-rebuild, quite a few libraries on my system are broken.
But at the end of revdep-rebuild, it tells me, my system was consistent.
I think some libraries are really broken, because the sound of my vlc
player stutters sometimes lately.
I had some
On Tue, 13 Jun 2006 22:26:44 +0200
Benno Schulenberg [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Arnau Bria wrote:
That's it! kdelibs! I can't figure why equery does not show it...
It appears to have been fixed in gentoolkit-0.2.2. After a sync and
an upgrade:
$ equery depends fam
[ Searching for
On 14 June 2006 14:12, 张韡武 wrote:
Hello. This might be OT but I am pretty interested in this and being
unlucky not able to find a real in-depth explanation of pipe on the
Internet.
How does pipe actually work? I mean, when there is a pipe like this:
$ appA | appB
What happen if appA
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 07:42:43 -0700, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
treat dev-libs # emerge -avk =glib-1.2.10-r5
These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
Calculating dependencies -
emerge: there are no ebuilds to satisfy virtual/glibc.
(dependency required by
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 17:25:11 +0200, Norman Rieß wrote:
No, but my flags contain USE=hive-mind. Any problems with that?
Not if you're a Windows user ;-)
--
Neil Bothwick
I will always cherish the initial misconceptions I had about you.
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Description: PGP signature
This morning I noticed that gam_server was eating 80 90% of cpu... I'm trying to find who installed gamin in my system, the dependency, but I found nothing... ('equery depends gamin' shows nothing, with -a,
equery breaks)Got inotify enabled in your kernel? See
On 6/14/06, Kevin O'Gorman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Done. Results attached. Sorry about the HTML. I hadn't noticed it
was turned on. And I generally oppose HTML mail.
Hmm, the problem first shows up here:
+ append-ldflags -ldl
+ [[ -z -ldl ]]
+ export 'LDFLAGS=-Wl,-O1 -ldl'
+
On 6/14/06, Neil Bothwick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 07:42:43 -0700, Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
treat dev-libs # emerge -avk =glib-1.2.10-r5
These are the packages that would be merged, in order:
Calculating dependencies -
emerge: there are no ebuilds to satisfy
On Wednesday 14 June 2006 08:12, 张韡武 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
about '[gentoo-user] how does a pipe work? Which process wait for which
one, or they don't actually wait each other?':
How does pipe actually work? I mean, when there is a pipe like this:
$ appA | appB
What happen if appA produced
On 6/14/06, Neil Bothwick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
up a small amount of disk space. They won't start to think for themselves
unless you have skynet in your USE flags.
Damn, and I was _so_ hoping that was really a valid USE flag! :-
That would have to be the coolest flag ever...we must find an
Le mercredi 14 juin 2006 à 17:30 +0800, 张 韡武 a écrit :
Hello. Sorry for my English if there is a more correct way of saying Star
map. By Star Map I mean something that shows the position of starts, as
well as brightness. The more like photo, the better.
I think the keyword to google at is
On Wed, 14 Jun 2006 09:39:51 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
Damn, and I was _so_ hoping that was really a valid USE flag! :-
That would have to be the coolest flag ever...
Nah! The coolest, froopiest ever would be USE=towel :)
--
Neil Bothwick
I'd prefer the non-smoking lifeboat, please.
Devon Miller wrote:
KStars (http://edu.kde.org/kstars/) has a command line mode for image
generation.
It should not be difficult to script that to generate an image, then
set it as the background.
dcm
You can do the scripting using DCOP to change the background.
Here's an intro:
On Wed, Jun 14, 2006 at 05:30:04PM +0800, Penguin Lover ??? ?? squawked:
Hello. Sorry for my English if there is a more correct way of saying Star
map. By Star Map I mean something that shows the position of starts, as
well as brightness. The more like photo, the better.
The word you are
Devon Miller wrote:
KStars (http://edu.kde.org/kstars/) has a command line mode for image
generation.
It should not be difficult to script that to generate an image, then
set it as the background.
I always hoped for Celestia to have this functionality. It would be
wonderful to follow, let's
I use for my webcam the latest spca5xx driver. everything work well
until i want to test my webcam. When i try this thing
mplayer tv:// -tv
driver=v4l:width=352:height=288:outfmt=rgb24:device=/dev/video0:noaudio
-flip
91 audio 208 video codecs
Playing tv://.
Selected driver: v4l
name:
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Roy Wright wrote:
Devon Miller wrote:
KStars (http://edu.kde.org/kstars/) has a command line mode for image
generation.
It should not be difficult to script that to generate an image, then
set it as the background.
dcm
You can do the
Caster wrote:
[and snipped an attribution]
Equery should detect that gamin provides a virtual, and then
check for the dependents of that. Are you any good at Python?
:)
You don't need. [...] Seems there is a bug... but kinda dead -
http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=101420
Sure.
I've just tried to install google earth and got the following:
Calculating dependencies ... done!
Emerging (1 of 1) x11-misc/googleearth-4_beta to /
checking ebuild checksums ;-)
checking auxfile checksums ;-)
checking miscfile checksums ;-)
checking GoogleEarthLinux.bin ;-)
Unpacking
1. Has anyone noticed if programs compiled with the latest gcc (4.1.1, I
believe) are any faster than those compiled with 3.4.6-r1? Also, is there any
difference in the required time to compile? Any other issues I should know
about with upgrading from 3.4.6-r1 to 4.1.1? (I use a pre-Prescott P4
On Tue, 2006-06-13 at 20:37 -0500, Teresa and Dale wrote:
Ow Mun Heng wrote:
Hi guys,
Am here in the US. Would like to purchase a Gentoo Branded sweatshirt.
There's one I found on Cafepress @29.99 which is hooded. Anyone knows of
one which does not have a hood?
Preferably
On 6/14/06, Jesse Hannah [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
1. Has anyone noticed if programs compiled with the latest gcc (4.1.1, I
believe) are any faster than those compiled with 3.4.6-r1? Also, is there any
difference in the required time to compile? Any other issues I should know
about with upgrading
If I want to take full advantage of the new splitdebug feature. Should I then
emerge -e world? I don't think the backtraces doc [1] answers that.
[1] http://www.gentoo.org/proj/en/qa/backtraces.xml
--
Bo Andresen
pgpvq828oGjCZ.pgp
Description: PGP signature
On 6/14/06, Bo Ørsted Andresen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
If I want to take full advantage of the new splitdebug feature. Should I then
emerge -e world? I don't think the backtraces doc [1] answers that.
For full advantage, yes, you would need to emerge -e world, since
otherwise the debugging
On 6/14/06, Daniel da Veiga [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 6/14/06, Jesse Hannah [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
2. If I want to upgrade and rebuild my entire system (using a new gcc), is:
emerge -u gcc
emerge -e world
the right thing to do? Am I missing anything there?
On Wednesday 14 June 2006 23:28, Richard Fish wrote:
For full advantage, yes, you would need to emerge -e world, since
otherwise the debugging information will only be generated for new
merges. And of course, any binary packages won't get debug symbols in
any case.
Thanks. Good to know.
On 14/06/06, Iain Buchanan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion, unfortunately different encodings didn't make
much difference. However, I did notice this when I started firefox from
the command line:
$ firefox
No running windows found
Warning: Cannot convert string
Awesome tidbit, I'll be sure to file that one away. Also, if you're
configuring for a netboot, the definitive place to look is in the
kernel tree itself. I would especially recommend
Documentation/initrd.txt, which is great for netbooting something
that's not going to be a diskless thinclient.
Just built a system and all was going great, first time I have tried
Linux in a very long time. After finishing up the build all worked fine
till I was trying to get sound in place, followed the instructions for
alsa in the handbook.
Anyway, finished up, restarted the system, and now the
Everytime I boot my system I see this message:
==
/dev/cdrom: open failed: No medium found
==
Everytime I shut down my system I see these (those two lines were repeated 23
times during last shutdown):
On 6/14/06, Sean [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just built a system and all was going great, first time I have tried
Linux in a very long time. After finishing up the build all worked fine
till I was trying to get sound in place, followed the instructions for
alsa in the handbook.
Anyway, finished
On Thu, 15 Jun 2006 01:18:34 +0200, Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
/dev/cdrom: open failed: No medium found
Attempt to close device: '/dev/cdrom' which is not open.
/dev/cdrom: open failed: No medium found
Attempt to close device: '/dev/cdrom' which is not open.
Are you using LVM?
--
Neil
On Thursday 15 June 2006 01:31, Neil Bothwick wrote:
Are you using LVM?
Sure. So it's because of this?
# grep ^\ *filter /etc/lvm/lvm.conf
filter = [ a/.*/ ]
Thanks for the pointer. I forgot to change that when I reinstalled after my
old
James Ausmus wrote:
On 6/14/06, Sean [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just built a system and all was going great, first time I have tried
Linux in a very long time. After finishing up the build all worked fine
till I was trying to get sound in place, followed the instructions for
alsa in the handbook.
On 6/14/06, Bo Ørsted Andresen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Like this:
# emerge -ep kontact kmail knode akregator | awk '$1~/ebuild/{print $4}' | \
sed -e 's/\-[0-9][A-Za-z0-9._-]*$//' | grep lib | xargs emerge -vp
This will merge all of system. I was thinking more like:
ldd `which
On 6/14/06, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 6/14/06, Kevin O'Gorman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Done. Results attached. Sorry about the HTML. I hadn't noticed it
was turned on. And I generally oppose HTML mail.
Hmm, the problem first shows up here:
+ append-ldflags -ldl
+ [[ -z
No problem-
May have just been a /etc/pam.d/* file that hadn't updated properly in
the first emerge of shadow.
Enjoy your new system (and Welcome to Gentoo, it sounds like!)
:)
-James
On 6/14/06, Sean [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
James Ausmus wrote:
On 6/14/06, Sean [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thursday 15 June 2006 02:01, Richard Fish wrote:
I was thinking more like:
ldd `which kontact kmail knode akregator` | grep '=' | awk '{print $3}' \
| sort | uniq | xargs equery belongs | grep '/' | sort | uniq \
| xargs printf =%s\n | xargs emerge -p --oneshot
(Ok people, have
Just in case others are interested I ended out with this script:
===
#/bin/bash
for arg in $@; do
if [[ ${arg} =~ ^\- ]]; then
EMERGE_ARGS=${EMERGE_ARGS} ${arg}
else
BINARIES=${BINARIES} ${arg}
fi
On 6/14/06, Kevin O'Gorman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would guess you're out of ideas then, except in desperation, I tried
looking for just part
of that: -W1 and came up with some stuff I hope will further inspire you:
Nope, all of that is normal...
But before you go breaking a braincell on
On 6/14/06, Bo Ørsted Andresen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Just in case others are interested I ended out with this script:
Very nice!
-Richard
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Trying to setup my system to support my nvidia vid card.
Per instructions I am supposed to enable agpgart in the kernel, which is
under device drivers---
character devices---
--- /dev/agpgart (agp support)
As you can see above my system does not allow anything to be done for
Sean wrote:
Trying to setup my system to support my nvidia vid card.
Per instructions I am supposed to enable agpgart in the kernel, which is
under device drivers---
character devices---
--- /dev/agpgart (agp support)
As you can see above my system does not allow anything to be done
James Ausmus wrote:
No problem-
May have just been a /etc/pam.d/* file that hadn't updated properly in
the first emerge of shadow.
Enjoy your new system (and Welcome to Gentoo, it sounds like!)
:)
-James
Thanks, looking forward to trying it out.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Thursday 15 June 2006 04:24, Sean wrote:
Trying to setup my system to support my nvidia vid card.
Per instructions I am supposed to enable agpgart in the kernel, which is
under device drivers---
character devices---
--- /dev/agpgart (agp support)
As you can see above my
Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote:
On Thursday 15 June 2006 04:24, Sean wrote:
Trying to setup my system to support my nvidia vid card.
Per instructions I am supposed to enable agpgart in the kernel, which is
under device drivers---
character devices---
--- /dev/agpgart (agp support)
Sean wrote:
How do I enable this in the kernel towards getting my nvidia card
working?
--- means it's enabled (another part of your kernel wants it built-in)
Additional, when I run the glxinfo | grep direct, the reponse I get is
Error: unable to open display (null)
You need to run
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
On Thursday 15 June 2006 01:31, Neil Bothwick wrote:
Are you using LVM?
Sure. So it's because of this?
Yup. Remove the cdrom and then:
# lvchange -a y
--
Norberto Bensa
Cel: 011-5654-9539
Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Argentina
pgpISnWleCM4m.pgp
Description: PGP
A few minutes ago, I discovered that I can't log into my firewall
If I try SSH from inside, it gives me my login banner and immediately
disconnects, without prompting for a password. This suggested to me that
when trying to clean up the mess left by upgrading the shadow package
yesterday (and
On Wed, 2006-06-14 at 22:21 +, Mick wrote:
On 14/06/06, Iain Buchanan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Thanks for the suggestion, unfortunately different encodings didn't make
much difference. However, I did notice this when I started firefox from
the command line:
$ firefox
No running
On Tue, 2006-06-13 at 22:25 -0600, Justin R Findlay wrote:
LaTeX is awesome if you're not going to be diverging from the builtin
document layout styles too much. If you are then you're likely going to
be editing raw TeX to get things done,
I don't agree. The LaTeX Companion[1] documents
As Mr. Norberto Bensa wrote: --- means it's enabled (another part of your
kernel
wants it built-in)
Additionally the help about this feature reads:
#9474; Symbol: AGP [=n]
#9474; Prompt: /dev/agpgart (AGP Support)
#9474; Defined at drivers/char/agp/Kconfig:1
#9474; Depends on:
Hi,
in my laptop I use linux and windows. Sometimes when I'm using
windows I need to access data from my linux ext3 partition. So I tried
to use Explore2fs application. It detects my two ext3 (hda3 and hda4)
partitions, but when I click to explore the hda3 partition (root
partition) I got the
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