Allan Gottlieb wrote:
>
>
> Did you try emerge --update --newuse --deep --with-bdeps=y world
> as hinted at by the above msg?
>
> allan
>
>
>
Yep, I had to add that option to mine a while back for --depclean to
work. Add that and it should run cleanly afterwards. You could also
--oneshot those
Dominic Kexel wrote:
> That's right, i totaly agree. If you buy a HP-printer, you (almost) can't do
> something wrong. I am using a HP Deskjet F2180 (40€). Printing and scanning
> both work without problems.
>
> On Wed, 3 Dec 2008 22:00:28 -0800
> "Manuel McLure" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
Am Dienstag, den 02.12.2008, 01:15 +0100 schrieb ext AJ Spagnoletti:
> I have finally reached the point where I use enough USB media
> (external hard drives and flash drives) that I would like to set up a
> system to automount the media devices for me. I have read in the past
> about hal + ivman an
Am Donnerstag, den 04.12.2008, 07:10 + schrieb ext Mick:
> Almost every time I split a large file >1G into say 200k chunks, then ftp it
> to a server and then:
>
> cat 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 > completefile ; md5sum -c completefile
>
> if fails. Checking the split files in turn I often find 1 or two
Am Mittwoch, den 03.12.2008, 20:29 -0800 schrieb ext Mark Knecht:
> Thanks for the idea. I'd not heard of them.
TurboPrint is actually a port of an old Amiga software. They already
were ahead of time in the printing area back then.
OTOH, there was this article on german Heise Online (english vers
Almost every time I split a large file >1G into say 200k chunks, then ftp it
to a server and then:
cat 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 > completefile ; md5sum -c completefile
if fails. Checking the split files in turn I often find 1 or two chunks that
fail on their own md5 checks. Despite that the concatenate
On Thursday 04 December 2008 02:42:34 Willie Wong wrote:
> On Thu, Dec 04, 2008 at 12:58:28AM +0530, Penguin Lover Rajat Vig squawked:
> > The Builds are Live CVS Builds.
> > The default is to use the Snapshot builds which are getting pulled in.
> >
> > -Rajat
>
> Okay, a better question then
On Thu, Dec 4, 2008 at 12:19 AM, Iain Buchanan <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> How about the gnome-volume-manager? (If you use Gnome)...
>
Or thunar-volman? (If you use Xfce)...
--
Do you know how to read?
http://www.alienetworks.com/srtest.cfm
Do you know how to write?
http://garbl.home.comcast.n
That's right, i totaly agree. If you buy a HP-printer, you (almost) can't do
something wrong. I am using a HP Deskjet F2180 (40€). Printing and scanning
both work without problems.
On Wed, 3 Dec 2008 22:00:28 -0800
"Manuel McLure" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 7:44 PM, Mar
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 7:44 PM, Mark Knecht <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Does anyone have a good way of figuring out what printers that you can
> actually buy in the retail market place actually have support in
> Linux? I sure don't.
Almost all HP printers are well-supported in Linux using the hpl
On Donnerstag 04 Dezember 2008, Mark Knecht wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 8:16 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
>
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Donnerstag 04 Dezember 2008, Mark Knecht wrote:
> >> Does anyone have a good way of figuring out what printers that you can
> >> actually buy in the retail
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 9:44 PM, Mark Knecht <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Does anyone have a good way of figuring out what printers that you can
> actually buy in the retail market place actually have support in
> Linux? I sure don't.
>
> Over the past 10 years I've gone the route of looking at the
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 8:16 PM, Volker Armin Hemmann
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Donnerstag 04 Dezember 2008, Mark Knecht wrote:
>> Does anyone have a good way of figuring out what printers that you can
>> actually buy in the retail market place actually have support in
>> Linux? I sure don't.
On Donnerstag 04 Dezember 2008, Mark Knecht wrote:
> Does anyone have a good way of figuring out what printers that you can
> actually buy in the retail market place actually have support in
> Linux? I sure don't.
>
forget the 'opensource' printers, and buy a turboprint licence. It rocks. It
reall
Does anyone have a good way of figuring out what printers that you can
actually buy in the retail market place actually have support in
Linux? I sure don't.
Over the past 10 years I've gone the route of looking at the ads,
finding printers in the right price range and then looking at
http://www.li
On Mon, Dec 01, 2008 at 06:27:54PM +0100, Daniel Pielmeier wrote:
> Michael George schrieb am 30.11.2008 11:33:
> > I updated audacious and audacious-plugins from 1.4.6 and .5 to 1.4.1-r1 and
> > r3,
> > respectively. It comes up and seems to operate fine, but it won't play
> > my ogg files. It
I noticed the same thing on my host several weeks ago.
I strongly suggest removing root access to your ssh, root is probably being
tried by more than 50% of all login attempts... the other trials are
semi-intelligent random usernames (ie, users that might really well exists, like
'apache' etc
On Thu, Dec 04, 2008 at 12:58:28AM +0530, Penguin Lover Rajat Vig squawked:
> The Builds are Live CVS Builds.
> The default is to use the Snapshot builds which are getting pulled in.
>
> -Rajat
>
Okay, a better question then is: how does
> > case ${EKEY_STATE:-${E_STATE}} in
> >rel
Dmitry S. Makovey wrote:
>> Erm - surely I either need to set up my client to port-knock... which
>> is a faff I'd rather avoid... in order to use the technique.
> nope. just start connection. wait a minute. cancel. start another one. wait a
> minute. cancel. start new one - voila! :)
>
Eeew...
At Wed, 03 Dec 2008 18:32:24 -0500 "Michael P. Soulier" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ emerge --pretend --depclean
>
> *** WARNING *** Depclean may break link level dependencies. Thus, it is
> *** WARNING *** recommended to use a tool such as `revdep-rebuild` (from
> *** WAR
On December 3, 2008, Steve wrote:
> Paul Hartman wrote:
> > I think using Dmitry's idea of rejecting the first 2 connections, but
> > then allowing it as normal on the third attempt would satisfy your
> > requirements for being on the normal port, allowing all IPs and
> > requiring no special setup
Paul Hartman wrote:
> I think using Dmitry's idea of rejecting the first 2 connections, but
> then allowing it as normal on the third attempt would satisfy your
> requirements for being on the normal port, allowing all IPs and
> requiring no special setup on the client end (other than knowing they
On December 3, 2008, Paul Hartman wrote:
> Of course, this is assuming the botnet stops after rejected connections...
oh no, not rejected - dropped ;) let them go through pains of timing out
without knowing if anything is actually listening on the other side ;)
--
Dmitry Makovey
Web Systems Adm
[EMAIL PROTECTED]:~$ emerge --pretend --depclean
*** WARNING *** Depclean may break link level dependencies. Thus, it is
*** WARNING *** recommended to use a tool such as `revdep-rebuild` (from
*** WARNING *** app-portage/gentoolkit) in order to detect such breakage.
*** WARNING ***
*** WARN
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 4:55 PM, Steve <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Dmitry S. Makovey wrote:
>> P.S. I actually don't do any of the above. It was just a surge of creative
>> paranoia
>> in response to initial request :)
> All good ideas - except selling the blacklist... I'd be happiest to
> share m
AJ Spagnoletti wrote:
I have finally reached the point where I use enough USB media
(external hard drives and flash drives) that I would like to set up a
system to automount the media devices for me. I have read in the past
about hal + ivman and a bit of googling has brought up AutoFS as well.
I
Dmitry S. Makovey wrote:
> P.S. I actually don't do any of the above. It was just a surge of creative
> paranoia
> in response to initial request :)
All good ideas - except selling the blacklist... I'd be happiest to
share my blacklist for free... my objective is to minimise exposure to
botnets -
> I previously used denyhosts - but (I can't remember why) it became
> preferable to block with IPtables rather than with
> tcpwrappers... which
> prompted me to dump it in favour of a bespoke script based upon
> blacklist.py (http://blinkeye.ch/mediawiki/index.php/SSH_Blocking) -
> though, now, I'
On Sat, Nov 29, 2008 at 9:07 AM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> I am looking for a ogg/mp3 editing softwarei (gui), which is able to
> cut/append such streams without loss due to reencoding.
>
> What software is worth trying ?
Hi,
I don't think there is an ebuild, but you can try Mpcut:
On December 3, 2008, Steve wrote:
> I have, in the past, used DSA only keys - but this was frustrating on
> several occasions when I wanted access to my server and didn't have my
> SSH keys available to me... I almost always connect using a key pair
> rather than a password - but the password optio
There is media-sound/mp3splt-gtk [1], but it's for splitting only: "a
GTK+ based utility to split mp3 and ogg files without decoding." Never
managed to get it working, though.
I would suggest that you raise the question on a more specialised ML,
for example the Audacity ML. Perhaps they'd suggest
Thanks for all the replies so far... I'll reply once to these... (Oh,
and when I said "ports" in my original post, I meant "addresses" - my
typing fingers just ignored my brain...)
I'm against a 'novel port' approach - as I am against port-knocking (for
my server) because these may prove challengi
On December 3, 2008, Steve wrote:
> Sure, I could use IPtables to block all these bad ports... or... I could
> disable password authentication entirely... but I keep thinking that
> there has to be something better I can do... any suggestions? Is there
> a simple way to integrate a block-list of k
On Wednesday 03 December 2008 22:02:43 Steve wrote:
> I've recently discovered a curious pattern emerging in my system log
> with failed login attempts via ssh.
>
> Previously, I noticed dictionary attacks launched - which were easy to
> detect... and I've a process to block the IP address of any h
Paul Hartman wrote:
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 2:16 PM, Nikos Chantziaras <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Steve wrote:
[...]
Sure, I could use IPtables to block all these bad ports... or... I could
disable password authentication entirely... but I keep thinking that
there has to be something better I ca
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 2:16 PM, Nikos Chantziaras <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Steve wrote:
>>
>> [...]
>> Sure, I could use IPtables to block all these bad ports... or... I could
>> disable password authentication entirely... but I keep thinking that
>> there has to be something better I can do...
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 2:02 PM, Steve <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I've recently discovered a curious pattern emerging in my system log
> with failed login attempts via ssh.
>
> Previously, I noticed dictionary attacks launched - which were easy to
> detect... and I've a process to block the IP add
You could try sshguard or denyhosts.
Steve wrote:
[...]
Sure, I could use IPtables to block all these bad ports... or... I could
disable password authentication entirely... but I keep thinking that
there has to be something better I can do... any suggestions?
I'm using DenyHosts to battle this. It adds the IPs to /etc/hosts.deny
I've recently discovered a curious pattern emerging in my system log
with failed login attempts via ssh.
Previously, I noticed dictionary attacks launched - which were easy to
detect... and I've a process to block the IP address of any host that
repeatedly fails to authenticate.
What I see now is
On Monday 01 December 2008, John Blinka wrote:
> I recently switched to at&t from another isp. At that other isp,
> my ssmtp setup worked perfectly. With at&t, a similar ssmtp setup
> (modified appropriately to point to at&t's smtp server) does not
> work at all.
>
> AT&T told me to use the serve
The Builds are Live CVS Builds.
The default is to use the Snapshot builds which are getting pulled in.
-Rajat
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 8:29 PM, Willie Wong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Dec 03, 2008 at 09:37:45AM -0500, Penguin Lover Willie Wong
> squawked:
> > emerge --update --deep
On Fri, Nov 28, 2008 at 10:09 AM, Joshua Murphy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 28, 2008 at 6:46 AM, Alan McKinnon <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Friday 28 November 2008 13:14:42 Dale wrote:
>>> If this is a little high, what would be the best way to defrag it?
>>
>> By not defragging it
Zhang Le schrieb:
> On 10:34 Wed 03 Dec , Justin wrote:
>
>> Zhang Le schrieb:
>>
>>> If you need to find package name from file name, try e-file:
>>> http://li2z.cn/category/e-file/
>>>
>>>
>> The link is broken, I always love to promote this site:
>>
>
> the site is tempor
On Wed, Dec 03, 2008 at 09:37:45AM -0500, Penguin Lover Willie Wong squawked:
> emerge --update --deep --pretend world is pulling in
> x11-wm/enlightenment-0.16.999.050
>
> I currently have
> x11-wm/enlightenment-0.16.8.14
> installed, and was given to understand that the *.999 branch is the
emerge --update --deep --pretend world is pulling in
x11-wm/enlightenment-0.16.999.050
I currently have
x11-wm/enlightenment-0.16.8.14
installed, and was given to understand that the *.999 branch is the
devel branch. Looking at the ebuilds show that 0.16.8.14 has
KEYWORDS="alpha amd64 arm
Helmut Jarausch schrieb:
Hi,
some packages need gtk-sharp, others glade-sharp and
mono-tools needs both.
But gtk-sharp-2.12.6-r1 has a negative dependency on
glade-sharp.
So, one cannot install both.
Who cuts this Gordian knot?
Helmut.
gtk-sharp-2.10 doesn't block glade-sharp.
simply do:
Zhang Le wrote:
[...]
But, AFAIK, they can only query packages already installed in your system.
Aren't they? :)
Oops, you're right, forgot about that.
On Wednesday 03 December 2008 14:04:41 Dale wrote:
> Since I am on dial-up, I hate the ones that have HUGE video clips
> attached. I have had to sign in via webmail and just delete the email
> without ever even seeing it. Don't you love it? Maybe I shouldn't
> mention that since it may give some
On 13:40 Wed 03 Dec , Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> Zhang Le wrote:
>> On 10:34 Wed 03 Dec , Justin wrote:
>>> Zhang Le schrieb:
If you need to find package name from file name, try e-file:
http://li2z.cn/category/e-file/
>>> The link is broken, I always love to promote this sit
Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On Wednesday 03 December 2008 13:10:26 Dale wrote:
>
>> Mine should be text. I have Seamonkey set to send text only to anything
>> gentoo.org or kde.org.
>>
>> I can't check myself since gmail doesn't send me a copy back. Is gmail
>> overriding my local setting? Tell me
on Wednesday 12/03/2008 Du Zhongdong([EMAIL PROTECTED]) wrote
> Hi, all.
>
> I've setup gentoo on my Vmware, everything's ok.
> Now I want to re-check my kernel config,
>
> #cd /usr/src/linux
> [Wed Dec 03, 11:38 AM] axdu@ linux$ make menuconfig
> *** Unable to find the ncurses librarie
Zhang Le wrote:
On 10:34 Wed 03 Dec , Justin wrote:
Zhang Le schrieb:
If you need to find package name from file name, try e-file:
http://li2z.cn/category/e-file/
The link is broken, I always love to promote this site:
the site is temporarily down. unfornately it is not mine.
http://p
On 10:34 Wed 03 Dec , Justin wrote:
> Zhang Le schrieb:
> > If you need to find package name from file name, try e-file:
> > http://li2z.cn/category/e-file/
> >
> The link is broken, I always love to promote this site:
the site is temporarily down. unfornately it is not mine.
> http://portage
On Wednesday 03 December 2008 13:10:26 Dale wrote:
> Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > On Wednesday 03 December 2008 12:51:19 Dale wrote:
> >>> As for the guy who suggested a form of "sanitized HTML for email",
> >>> maybe you would like
> >>> "enriched text"
> >>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enriched_text
Alan McKinnon wrote:
> On Wednesday 03 December 2008 12:51:19 Dale wrote:
>
>>> As for the guy who suggested a form of "sanitized HTML for email",
>>> maybe you would like
>>> "enriched text"
>>> http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enriched_text
>>>
>>>
>>>
>> Someone who put it better than I
On Wednesday 03 December 2008 12:51:19 Dale wrote:
> > As for the guy who suggested a form of "sanitized HTML for email",
> > maybe you would like
> > "enriched text"
> > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enriched_text
> >
> >
>
> Someone who put it better than I could. I use HTML elsewhere but out o
Jorge Peixoto de Morais Neto wrote:
> In general, html email is mostly a "solution" in search of a problem,
> and it ends up causing trouble and being overall worse than the
> simple, efficient, easy, working, universally adopted technology that
> preceded it. Besides all the problems already liste
On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 8:02 AM, Dale <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Stroller wrote:
>>
>> I've been wondering for a while why no alternative has been proposed.
>> HTML was originally considered poor because it wasted bandwidth, HTML
>> messages being *at least* twice the size of the plain text, but o
Stroller wrote:
>
> I've been wondering for a while why no alternative has been proposed.
> HTML was originally considered poor because it wasted bandwidth, HTML
> messages being *at least* twice the size of the plain text, but often
> several times as large. I wonder if console-based mail-readers
On Wed, 3 Dec 2008 00:28:54 +
Stroller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On 2 Dec 2008, at 13:13, Wolfgang Liebich wrote:
> > ...
> > My experience with NTFS is somewhat more balanced (maybe). In about
> > 12 years I experienced one damaged NTFS instance. This was caused
> > by a crash during an
Zhang Le schrieb:
> On 11:43 Wed 03 Dec , Du Zhongdong wrote:
>
>> [Wed Dec 03, 11:40 AM] axdu@ linux$ sudo emerge ncurses-devel
>> Calculating dependencies |
>> emerge: there are no ebuilds to satisfy "ncurses-devel".
>>
>
> Generally speaking, there is no packages like 'foo-devel' in
Du Zhongdong schrieb:
> Thanks, all
>
> I already have sys-libs/ncurses installed on my gentoo, and, the real
> problem is: the Linux kernel source-tree's owner is root, and I ran
> make menuconfig as my normal user. a silly mistake.
>
> thanks anyway
>
> On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 11:52 AM, Douglas An
Albert Hopkins schrieb:
> On Tue, 2008-12-02 at 23:38 +0100, Michele Schiavo wrote:
>
>> on me, it aet 413.9 of virtual and 44.9 of resident..
>>
>>
>
> Ok, here's is what I found. Both my 32-bit GNOME boxes show about
> 70-80MB VIRT for gnome-panel.
>
> My x64 box shows 303MB. Moreov
Ricardo Saffi Marques schrieb:
> Justin wrote:
> > Justin schrieb:
> >> Take a look into the INSTALL.txt. Is written there what to do and which
> >> deps are requiered. Additionally fill a ebuild request bug at b.g.o.
> >> Next saturday it is bugday, I will try to get time to solve it then.
> >>
>
Du Zhongdong schrieb:
> Thanks, all
>
> I already have sys-libs/ncurses installed on my gentoo, and, the real
> problem is: the Linux kernel source-tree's owner is root, and I ran
> make menuconfig as my normal user. a silly mistake.
>
> thanks anyway
>
> On Wed, Dec 3, 2008 at 11:52 AM, Douglas An
Hi,
some packages need gtk-sharp, others glade-sharp and
mono-tools needs both.
But gtk-sharp-2.12.6-r1 has a negative dependency on
glade-sharp.
So, one cannot install both.
Who cuts this Gordian knot?
Helmut.
--
Helmut Jarausch
Lehrstuhl fuer Numerische Mathematik
RWTH - Aachen University
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