2013/8/14 东方巽雷 :
> Hello everyone!hostapd1.1 work well in my system,but when I upgrade to
> 2.0,it doesn't work any more.And I have found that 1.1 is no longer in the
> gentoo portage.What should I do?
Simple, grab a copy of the 1.1 ebuild and its accompanying files (if
necessary) from Internet an
2013/8/14 Helmut Jarausch :
> Why not compute it yourself?
>
> Do cat /proc/cpuinfo on all machines and compute the intersection of all
> "flags"
> Then enter something like the following into /etc/portage/make.conf
>
> CFLAGS="-O3 -pipe -msse -msse2 -msse3 -msse4a -m3dnow"
Or even better, dire
On 08/14/2013 07:18:41 AM, Pandu Poluan wrote:
Hello list!
My company has 2 HP DL585 G5 servers and 5 Dell R... something
servers. All
using AMD processors. They currently are acting as XenServer hosts.
How do I determine the 'least common denominator' for Gentoo VMs
(running
as XenServer
Samuli Suominen wrote:
> On 11/08/13 20:12, Dale wrote:
>> I notice this starts but never does anything. I end up doing a ctrl c
>> to stop it. I tried with two different versions of portage so I don't
>> think it is portage itself.
>
> But it is. It's either Portage, or Python it's using itsel
On 14/08/2013 01:45, Mateusz Kowalczyk wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> I had a rather large update yesterday and after restarting my emacs
> today (I haven't restarted since the update), I found an annoying
> arrow-like button at the corner of the window. The only thing I can do
> with it is to double cli
Pandu.
I don't have the link handy. But there is a list of safe CFLAGS. Pick the one
for the older CPU.
That should be safe.
--
Joost
Pandu Poluan wrote:
>Hello list!
>
>My company has 2 HP DL585 G5 servers and 5 Dell R... something servers.
>All
>using AMD processors. They currently are actin
On 08/14/13 09:18, Pandu Poluan wrote:
Hello list!
My company has 2 HP DL585 G5 servers and 5 Dell R... something servers.
All using AMD processors. They currently are acting as XenServer hosts.
How do I determine the 'least common denominator' for Gentoo VMs
(running as XenServer guests), espe
Hello list!
My company has 2 HP DL585 G5 servers and 5 Dell R... something servers. All
using AMD processors. They currently are acting as XenServer hosts.
How do I determine the 'least common denominator' for Gentoo VMs (running
as XenServer guests), especially for gcc flags?
I know that the (t
Hello everyone!hostapd1.1 work well in my system,but when I upgrade to
2.0,it doesn't work any more.And I have found that 1.1 is no longer in the
gentoo portage.What should I do?
Greetings,
I had a rather large update yesterday and after restarting my emacs
today (I haven't restarted since the update), I found an annoying
arrow-like button at the corner of the window. The only thing I can do
with it is to double click to close the window (I use a tiling WM so
it's useless
On Tue, Aug 13, 2013 at 4:08 AM, Alessio Ababilov
wrote:
> Hi!
Hi Alessio.
> I wrote a script that allows /usr merge in Gentoo without changes to
> ebuilds.
>
> I described it in an article
> http://aababilov.wordpress.com/2013/07/17/usr-merge-in-gentoo/
>
> Are there any volunteers to test it?
2013/8/13 the
> The site doesn't describe any real problems.
>
Well, it is a question to discuss.
I am not going to begin a holy war, I would like just to provide a
possibility to perform a harmless /usr merge for those who share
FreeDesktop's opinion.
>
> Also I don't see how the current dir tr
On 08/13/13 18:05, Alessio Ababilov wrote:
"/usr merge" is the process of making /bin, /sbin, and /lib to be
symlinks to corresponding directories in /usr. It is done in Fedora and
several other distros now, and also in Solaris 15 years ago.
Benefits from /usr merge are described here:
http://www
On 2013-08-13 16:05, Alessio Ababilov wrote:
> "/usr merge" is the process of making /bin, /sbin, and /lib to be symlinks
> to corresponding directories in /usr. It is done in Fedora and several
> other distros now, and also in Solaris 15 years ago.
> Benefits from /usr merge are described here:
>
"/usr merge" is the process of making /bin, /sbin, and /lib to be symlinks
to corresponding directories in /usr. It is done in Fedora and several
other distros now, and also in Solaris 15 years ago.
Benefits from /usr merge are described here:
http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/systemd/TheCas
more information?
2013/8/13 Alessio Ababilov
> Hi!
>
> I wrote a script that allows /usr merge in Gentoo without changes to
> ebuilds.
>
> I described it in an article
> http://aababilov.wordpress.com/2013/07/17/usr-merge-in-gentoo/
>
> Are there any volunteers to test it? I use it on my comput
Hi!
I wrote a script that allows /usr merge in Gentoo without changes to
ebuilds.
I described it in an article
http://aababilov.wordpress.com/2013/07/17/usr-merge-in-gentoo/
Are there any volunteers to test it? I use it on my computers for two
months.
Alessio Ababilov
Senior Software Engineer
G
On 13/08/2013 08:31, gevisz wrote:
> 2013/8/12 Alan McKinnon :
>> On 12/08/2013 09:13, gevisz wrote:
>>> The response of the first router contained an error that prevented all the
>>> other applications to use it, the system knew about it (for example from
>>> the output of the host utility) but, n
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