Statux,
Thanks!
=== On Monday 18 December 2006 02:44, Statux wrote: ===
...
If you want to use EM64T, it's amd64 and -march=nocona in the CFLAGS.
But If I don't want to use EMT64 but have CPU with EM64T (say, it is
Pentium D) - am I forced to use 'amd64' artch? Or - can I use 'x86' with
On Monday 18 December 2006 09:58, Andrew Gaydenko wrote:
Statux,
Thanks!
=== On Monday 18 December 2006 02:44, Statux wrote: ===
...
If you want to use EM64T, it's amd64 and -march=nocona in the
CFLAGS.
But If I don't want to use EMT64 but have CPU with EM64T (say, it is
On Sun, 17 Dec 2006 23:48:37 -0700, Richard Fish wrote:
Since .config contains # CONFIG_BRIDGE is not set I do believe I
know the cause of _this_ problem. Just to be sure, my next (newbie)
question is Is bridged networking the the right option to choose?
I'm not sure...I don't have
On Sat, 16 Dec 2006 09:57:05 -0800
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
I'm up-to-date on stable ebuilds.
I've tried to view a cute youTube Code Monkey video, but get the
complaint my flash Player plugin is obsolete (or I'm blocking
Javascript, which is false). It's
at
Hi,
for starters: what do your /etc/X11/xorg.conf and /var/log/Xorg.0.log
look like? What version of ati-drivers do you use? Have you tried
another version?
-Roman
Hello,
I first set the card up using the radeon open source drivers. The sceen
clarity
was not very good. The AMD64 system
On Monday 18 December 2006 06:34, David Relson wrote:
Running insmod for vmmon and vmnet gets them installed and output
from /etc/init.d/vmware start indicated success. However
running .../vmware status immediately afterwards says vmware
has stopped. Looking at dmesg I suspect the following
Neil Bothwick wrote
What does ls -l /dev/usb/lp0 show?
Answer:
ls: /dev/usb/lp0: No such file or directory
Hmm! Well done, Neil. Checked in the /dev/ directory and sure enough,
there is no /dev/usb but there is /dev/bus/usb/
Tried ls /dev/bus/usb/lp0 and /dev/bus/usb/004/lp0 all with the
Hello,
I'm using Reto Glauser's mkstage4 script for backup. Reading
in the 'Small Footprint Gentoo USB HOWTO' about a stage4 made
me ask myself:
Is it possible to quickly/comfortably put the backup stage4
on a USB Stick, such that it behaves just like the same system
just backed up while the
I have squirrelmail-1.4.8 installed and working on my server, and
portage wants to install 1.4.9a in a new slot. How will the slots
work in this context?
- Grant
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers. Is it all in my head? I
personally still love Gentoo.
- Grant
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Grant wrote:
I have squirrelmail-1.4.8 installed and working on my server, and
portage wants to install 1.4.9a in a new slot. How will the slots
work in this context?
- Grant
Hi,
Just checked and don't see any SLOTS in squirrelmail, even a SLOT var.
HTH.Rumen
smime.p7s
Description: S/MIME
On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 06:44:45 -0800, Grant wrote:
I have squirrelmail-1.4.8 installed and working on my server, and
portage wants to install 1.4.9a in a new slot. How will the slots
work in this context?
Do you have the vhosts USE flag set? If so, after emerging the new
version you'll have to
Roman Zilka rzilka at gvid.cz writes:
for starters: what do your /etc/X11/xorg.conf and /var/log/Xorg.0.log
look like? What version of ati-drivers do you use? Have you tried
another version?
Hello Roman,
The last few lines of the log file:
(II) Setting vga for screen 0.
(II) fglrx(0): ===
On 12/18/06, Neil Bothwick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 06:44:45 -0800, Grant wrote:
I have squirrelmail-1.4.8 installed and working on my server, and
portage wants to install 1.4.9a in a new slot. How will the slots
work in this context?
Do you have the vhosts USE flag
On Monday 18 December 2006 20:17, Grant wrote:
I
personally still love Gentoo.
What's the problem then? :)
--
Mrugesh Karnik
GPG Key 0xBA6F1DA8
Public key on http://wwwkeys.pgp.net
pgpmSykqzP83h.pgp
Roman Zilka rzilka at gvid.cz writes:
Hello Roman,
I changed the default color depth from 16 to 24; xorg
now works. Bzflag will not run, but, with all of the
changes, I'm just going to recompile bzflag and see
what that does.
James
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
I
personally still love Gentoo.
What's the problem then? :)
bugs.gentoo.org :)
Do you think Gentoo is waning? Is Debian the only similar distro out there?
- Grant
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
On Monday 18 December 2006 20:17, Grant wrote:
I
personally still love Gentoo.
What's the problem then? :)
Another question would be, how many of us have made healthy progress in our
general knowledge of
Linux all thanks to the gentoo user guides/howto(s) and the time spent
installing
I was wondering about that, how would you volunteer to assist with
porting new software to the portage tree?
I see that some software packages I would like to install (RT,
dotProject) are masked.
So I was wondering if anybody needed some assistance maintaining the
ports, or if
On Monday 18 December 2006 15:47, Grant wrote:
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers. Is it all in my head? I
personally still love Gentoo.
there are always several phases in the life of a distri.
Beginning, when it becomes
I was wondering about that, how would you volunteer to assist with
porting new software to the portage tree?
I see that some software packages I would like to install (RT,
dotProject) are masked.
So I was wondering if anybody needed some assistance maintaining the
ports, or if
On Monday 18 December 2006 19:17, Danyelle Gragsone wrote:
I just stepped back into gentoo after a long too long jump to ubuntu.
I had no time to do all the tinkering of things that is required in
gentoo sometimes. My ability to do things deminished greatly!. I am
back in the gentoo seat to
On Monday 18 December 2006 15:47, Grant wrote:
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers. Is it all in my head? I
personally still love Gentoo.
Once again I'll refer to the blog [1] of kloeri, Lead of the Gentoo Developer
Relations
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers. Is it all in my head? I
personally still love Gentoo.
Once again I'll refer to the blog [1] of kloeri, Lead of the Gentoo Developer
Relations project (devrel) and a member of the Gentoo
I just stepped back into gentoo after a long too long jump to ubuntu.
I had no time to do all the tinkering of things that is required in
gentoo sometimes. My ability to do things deminished greatly!. I am
back in the gentoo seat to remember long lost skills. I totally did
not like the
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers. Is it all in my head? I
personally still love Gentoo.
there are always several phases in the life of a distri.
Beginning, when it becomes 'cool' and a sudden surge in users, some time of
On Tuesday 19 December 2006 00:24, Grant wrote:
I'm thinking this over a bit more, and it seems like the best thing
for Gentoo (or any distro) is a lot of users. More users must mean
more active developers, and more active developers must mean an
increased rate of growth for the software.
I
On 12/18/06, Grant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers. Is it all in my head? I
personally still love Gentoo.
there are always several phases in the life of a distri.
Beginning, when it becomes
+1
You have stealed my thoughts!
All I can add, I'd want to Gentoo aim be a better Gentoo :-)
=== On Monday 18 December 2006 22:12, Mrugesh Karnik wrote: ===
...
I don't think the goal of Gentoo was to become a Desktop Distro for the people
migrating from M$ land. I don't care about
I had a new piece of hardware installed this morning, and I need to know
what I need to modprobe/alter kernel config for to use the new hardware:
05:01.0 Communication controller: Motorola Wildcard X100P
Subsystem: Motorola Unknown device
Flags: bus master, medium devsel,
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers. Is it all in my head? I
personally still love Gentoo.
there are always several phases in the life of a distri.
Beginning, when it becomes 'cool' and a sudden surge in users,
Hi Mark,
Mark Knecht wrote:
That appears to be a testing version of udev. Do you always run testing?
As for the mixer message please try removing /etc/asound.state and
then restarting Alsa. You will probably need to set mixer levels using
alsamixer or whatever mixer is appropriate for this
On Mon, Dec 18, 2006 at 11:58:26AM -0800, Grant wrote:
Every user does add to the distro because they make it more popular,
and, generally, a more popular distro will have more active developers
than an unpopular distro. Active developers make the distro. For
example, I submitted this bug
061219 Mrugesh Karnik wrote:
On Tuesday 19 December 2006 00:24, Grant wrote:
It seems like the best thing for Gentoo is a lot of users.
More users must mean more active developers
and an increased rate of growth for the software.
Methinks, Gentoo should stay focused.
I don't think the goal
On Tuesday 19 December 2006 00:24, Grant wrote:
It seems like the best thing for Gentoo is a lot of users.
More users must mean more active developers
and an increased rate of growth for the software.
Methinks, Gentoo should stay focused.
I don't think the goal of Gentoo was to
On 12/18/06, Arend von der Lieth [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi Mark,
Mark Knecht wrote:
That appears to be a testing version of udev. Do you always run testing?
As for the mixer message please try removing /etc/asound.state and
then restarting Alsa. You will probably need to set mixer levels
On Monday 18 December 2006 19:54, Grant wrote:
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers. Is it all in my head? I
personally still love Gentoo.
there are always several phases in the life of a distri.
Beginning, when it
Roman Naumann wrote:
I find Sabayon linux very useful, it offers a complete pre-installation, you
can modify it afterwards. The perfect os with a rapid beginning. :-)
Sabayon creates such a horribly broken system it takes hours for an
experienced Gentoo user to sort out a simple emerge -uavD
On Sunday 17 December 2006 14:28, Luigi Pinna wrote:
gpgkeys: HTTP fetch error 6: Couldn't resolve host 'subkeys.pgp.net'
Hi!
How can I burn a 8.5 GByte iso? I tried with k3b and I receive an error
and growisofs failed at 99.9% with input/output error.
I searched in portage but I didn't find
This is what I am getting:
=
# iwconfig
eth0 no wireless extensions.
lono wireless extensions.
dummy0no wireless extensions.
wmaster0 IEEE 802.11g Frequency:2.437 GHz
RTS thr:off Fragment thr=2346 B
On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 20:49:56 +1000, Carl Adams wrote:
What does ls -l /dev/usb/lp0 show?
ls: /dev/usb/lp0: No such file or directory
Run tail -f /var/log/messages and connect the printer. the output
should tell you where the printer appears, then you can change the CUPS
config
On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 15:26:07 -0500, Brandon Edens wrote:
As for your bug, I guess I would have liked to have typed,
$ equery comments mod_perl
and seen information about that bug you posted.
emerge gentoo-bugger
bugger --keyword mod_perl
bugger --show 157239
--
Neil Bothwick
With 5
On Mon, Dec 18, 2006 at 10:54:06AM -0800, Grant wrote:
I've caught a whiff or two lately that Gentoo is declining in
popularity amongst users and developers. Is it all in my head? I
personally still love Gentoo.
there are always several phases in the life of a distri.
Beginning, when
On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 22:07:54 +0100, Roman Naumann wrote:
People who're new to Linux, especially naturally unexperienced teens
will have a rough time if they try gentoo linux. Even if they learn
fast.. especially the fact that you need a whole day to have a running
installation kills
On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 10:54:06 -0800, Grant wrote:
I'm thinking this over a bit more, and it seems like the best thing
for Gentoo (or any distro) is a lot of users. More users must mean
more active developers, and more active developers must mean an
increased rate of growth for the software.
On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 11:58:26 -0800, Grant wrote:
Every user does add to the distro because they make it more popular,
and, generally, a more popular distro will have more active developers
than an unpopular distro.
It may, but you are confusing cause and effect. A distro with more
developers
On Mon, 2006-12-18 at 10:51 +0100, Arnau Bria wrote:
On Sat, 16 Dec 2006 09:57:05 -0800
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
I'm up-to-date on stable ebuilds.
I've tried to view a cute youTube Code Monkey video, but get the
complaint my flash Player plugin is obsolete (or I'm blocking
Javascript,
Hi all,
I have a strage problem, some month ago I bougth a new laptop (Core2duo 1,83
Ghz + Geforce 7600).
The first thing I did was installing gentoo, and after X was finished I
installed the nvidia-driver an run glxgears to see the difference between my
old desktop and my new laptop.
I got
Mick wrote:
# iwlist wlan0 scan
wlan0 Scan completed :
Cell 01 - Address: 00:0C:20:03:3B:C5
ESSID:The Cairngorm Hotel
Mode:Master
Frequency:2.437 GHz
Encryption key:off
On Tuesday, 19 December 2006 9:42, Jakob wrote:
Hi all,
I have a strage problem, some month ago I bougth a new laptop (Core2duo
1,83 Ghz + Geforce 7600).
The first thing I did was installing gentoo, and after X was finished I
installed the nvidia-driver an run glxgears to see the difference
On Mon, 2006-12-18 at 22:27 +0100, Hemmann, Volker Armin wrote:
On Monday 18 December 2006 19:54, Grant wrote:
I'm thinking this over a bit more, and it seems like the best thing
for Gentoo (or any distro) is a lot of users. More users must mean
more active developers, and more active
On 18/12/06, John J. Foster [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, Dec 18, 2006 at 10:37:10PM +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Mon, 18 Dec 2006 11:58:26 -0800, Grant wrote:
It may, but you are confusing cause and effect. A distro with more
developers should be a better distro, and should have more
I think I have asterisk set up correctly, but it won't answer the phone.
I have a Motorolola X100P card. ztcfg outputs the correct stuff:
camille asterisk # ztcfg -vv
Zaptel Configuration
==
Channel map:
Channel 01: FXS Kewlstart (Default) (Slaves: 01)
1 channels
061218 Neil Bothwick wrote:
Do we really need yet another easy to use distro?
Gentoo is for those who want maximum control over their systems
and are prepared to make the effort to achieve this.
Ubuntu ilk are supermarkets, where crowds shop for branded groceries.
Gentoo is a garden, where
On 12/18/06, Iain Buchanan [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 2006-12-18 at 10:51 +0100, Arnau Bria wrote:
On Sat, 16 Dec 2006 09:57:05 -0800
Kevin O'Gorman wrote:
I'm up-to-date on stable ebuilds.
I've tried to view a cute youTube Code Monkey video, but get the
complaint my flash Player
A friend of mine built this Python script, I'm sure he doesn't mind ;)
#!/usr/bin/env python
# by Andre Bocchini
import sys
import os
import string
import getopt
import Image
import ImageFilter
import ImageStat
def usage():
Displays information on how to use the program.
print
All,
This thread caused me to go back to the website and reread the
social contract that Gentoo has posted. The contract lists a core set
of values that the distribution keeps as a whole. I feel that Gentoo is
healthy based on this regard. Of course, there are other things to
factor
Hello,
I have bzflag working on several systems(yea, it's the new rage
around the office and with the kids in the hood).
But, for some reason it just dies on a amd64 with an ATI-1900 XT
card. I just got the ati-drivers happy on this system. When I fire
up bzflag, it takes control of the screen
Hi,
I'm doing updates to my dad's Gentoo machine 350 miles away. It
pretty much hasn't been touched in about a year as per his request.
However we agreed it was time to move forward so I've done the
gcc-4.1.1 upgrade and rebuilt the machine completely. At the command
line from here things look
On AD 2006 December 19 Tuesday 01:37:50 AM + +, James wrote:
I have bzflag working on several systems(yea, it's the new rage
around the office and with the kids in the hood).
But, for some reason it just dies on a amd64 with an ATI-1900 XT
card. I just got the ati-drivers happy on
Justin Findlay justin at jfindlay.us writes:
But, for some reason it just dies on a amd64 with an ATI-1900 XT
card. I just got the ati-drivers happy on this system. When I fire
up bzflag, it takes control of the screen for a fraction of a second.
Have you made sure you enabled/disabled
On Monday 18 December 2006 21:52, Mark Knecht wrote:
The commands are unclear to me in the sense that I may need to
rebuild the kernel, or not, after running them. I cannot tell. Any
idea?
Well, before running make oldconfig, you should copy the .config file from the
kernel you used just
On Monday 18 December 2006 21:44, Statux [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote
about 'Re: [gentoo-user] WHAT IS Gentoo architecture forPentium4
Prescott-2M':
However, I had always been told to not use x86_64 (CHOST) unless it was
an Itanium. (Can anyone else add to this?).
You're just plain
Arend von der Lieth wrote:
Hi Carl,
I do not know if that helps, but I had a similar problem with my parallel
printer recently (after upgrading to udev-103). I could solve the problem by
directly integrating the (important) corresponding parts of the kernel
(according to:
On Monday 18 December 2006 21:47, Michael Sullivan wrote:
I had a new piece of hardware installed this morning, and I need to
know what I need to modprobe/alter kernel config for to use the new
hardware:
05:01.0 Communication controller: Motorola Wildcard X100P
Subsystem: Motorola
On Monday 18 December 2006 20:35, Grant wrote:
Thanks for everyone's input thus far. I've been meaning to build and
maintain an ebuild for interchange (icdevgroup.org) for a while now.
I've never built an ebuild before, my programming skills are limited,
and at least two other developers have
On 19 December 2006 00:23, Bryan Østergaard wrote:
Gentoo started with the stated goal of providing a metadistribution.
This basically means providing the best possible foundation for others
to tinker with any way they like. Be it building embedded applications,
making the next 'Ubuntu' or
On Monday 18 December 2006 20:54, Grant wrote:
I believe the great benefit of Gentoo is its flexibility, and
flexibility is like a meta-benefit because it makes possible any
other benefit. What do you think makes Ubuntu the distro of the
moment? Is it ease-of-use? If Gentoo focused more on
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