On 01/09/2018 01:52 AM, Neil Bothwick wrote:
You can usually add extra configure items by creating, in your case
/etc/portage/env/x11-terms/xterm containing
EXTRA_ECONF="--enable-blah..."
I created the /etc/portage/env/x11-terms directory and added the xterm
file with the following
On 01/14/2018 02:39 PM, Quico Jurado wrote:
> Hello,
>
> After doing doing the upgrade to my 17.0 profile
> (`default/linux/amd64/17.0/desktop'), and recompiling all my packages
> I ran into a problem while installing clisp. Basically is bailing out
> on the configure stage, this is the relevant
Hello,
After doing doing the upgrade to my 17.0 profile
(`default/linux/amd64/17.0/desktop'), and recompiling all my packages I ran
into a problem while installing clisp. Basically is bailing out on the
configure stage, this is the relevant output of the configure script
(suppressed some output
On 2018-01-14 18:50, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
> And: I dont want to start a flame war here. Yoy asked and tried
> to give a answer, which may be useful onlu to explain my own point
> of view.
Yes, it is very useful, many thanks. Exactly what I asked for.
--
Please don't Cc: me privately on
Thank a lot Mike. My problem is resolved after removing bindist use flag.
On Jan 14, 2018 10:47 AM, "Mike Gilbert" wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 9:51 AM, Hung Dang wrote:
> > I cannot emerge gnome in a fresh build ~amd64 system. Basically, if I
>
On 2018.01.14 13:23, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Sun, 14 Jan 2018 13:01:23 -0500, Jack wrote:
> Chromium frequently takes over 24 hours to compile on my system,
> although the last two emerges were about 11 hours each. My last
> firefox emerge was just under two hours, with the last ten or so all
On Sun, 14 Jan 2018 13:01:23 -0500, Jack wrote:
> Chromium frequently takes over 24 hours to compile on my system,
> although the last two emerges were about 11 hours each. My last
> firefox emerge was just under two hours, with the last ten or so all
> taking under three and a half hours.
Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 12:53 PM, Dale wrote:
>> Yea, keep in mind, I didn't want a init thingy at all.
> Could have fooled us...
>
That's either a touch of sarcasm or you missed my messages. ;-)
Dale
:-) :-)
On 2018.01.14 01:51, victor romanchuk wrote:
On 01/14/2018 07:17 AM, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
Is it posible to use Firefox wihout pulseaudio installed? If "yes"
-- how can I acchieche this?
Yes it is possible; to achieve that you just have to use
www-client/firefox, e.g compile it from
On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 12:53 PM, Dale wrote:
>
> Yea, keep in mind, I didn't want a init thingy at all.
Could have fooled us...
--
Rich
Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Sat, 13 Jan 2018 20:59:56 -0600, Dale wrote:
>
>> Yea, it used to be recommended and in a way it can still be a good
>> idea. I use LVM for example and I can increase /usr, /var, /home or
>> whatever without having to redo my drive setup. The only thing I can't
>>
On 01/14 08:54, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> On 2018-01-14 05:49, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
>
> > I tried Palemoon some time ago. I checked its security and privacy
> > feature with certain sites on the internet, which provide such
> > services and found some issues, which I wanted to discuss on their
> >
On 2018-01-14 05:49, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
> I tried Palemoon some time ago. I checked its security and privacy
> feature with certain sites on the internet, which provide such
> services and found some issues, which I wanted to discuss on their
> forum. The answer was not to believe such sites
On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 9:51 AM, Hung Dang wrote:
> I cannot emerge gnome in a fresh build ~amd64 system. Basically, if I enable
> bindist use flag for openssl then emerge will ask me to disable it. However,
> if I disable bindist flag for openssl then it will ask me to enable
I cannot emerge gnome in a fresh build ~amd64 system. Basically, if I
enable bindist use flag for openssl then emerge will ask me to disable
it. However, if I disable bindist flag for openssl then it will ask me
to enable it. How can I break this dependency loop?
Thanks,
Hung
Below is the
On 14/01/18 06:17, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
Hi,
Is it posible to use Firefox wihout pulseaudio installed?
If "yes" -- how can I acchieche this?
Thanks a lot for any help in advance!
Add this to /etc/portage/profile/package.provided:
media-sound/pulseaudio-11.1
This will tell portage to
Hello,
On Sun, 14 Jan 2018, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
>thanks a lot for all the input.
>
>I disabled pulseaudio via USE flag and recompiled the whole stuff.
>And VOILA! : Sound without apulse and pulseaudio! NICE!
BTW: I just rechecked, and it doesn't use an integrated copy too, I
think:
$ cd
On 01/14 12:11, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Sun, 14 Jan 2018 11:36:23 +, Mick wrote:
>
> > With each job taking up to 1.2G of RAM you can quickly exhaust
> > available memory on older PCs and swapping can start grinding the box
> > to a halt. Since the move to profile 17.0 I found my old
On Sun, 14 Jan 2018 11:36:23 +, Mick wrote:
> With each job taking up to 1.2G of RAM you can quickly exhaust
> available memory on older PCs and swapping can start grinding the box
> to a halt. Since the move to profile 17.0 I found my old laptop comes
> to its knees on compiling larger
On Sat, 13 Jan 2018 20:59:56 -0600, Dale wrote:
> Yea, it used to be recommended and in a way it can still be a good
> idea. I use LVM for example and I can increase /usr, /var, /home or
> whatever without having to redo my drive setup. The only thing I can't
> change is / which is a regular
On Sun, 14 Jan 2018 11:15:51 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > You need an initramfs and a separate /usr to experience this problem.
> > You have neither so you have avoided it twice, well done :-)
>
> I'm an engineer, so I don't add unneeded things that serve no purpose
> and no benefit :-)
>
Hi Andrew,
On Sun, 14 Jan 2018 12:06:23 +0100
Andrew Barchuk wrote:
Thanks everyone, I've nailed it \o/ A more detailed story follows.
Thank you for your conclusion and that you share your solution which
will certainly have some benefit for future readers.
Well done,
On Sunday, 14 January 2018 05:51:57 GMT tu...@posteo.de wrote:
> On 01/13 11:39, Dale wrote:
> > tu...@posteo.de wrote:
> > > Hi Dale,
> > >
> > > one problem here is, that I am using firefox-bin, because compiling
> > > firefox gave me compile errors in the past.
> > >
> > > One dependency of
Thanks everyone, I've nailed it \o/ A more detailed story follows.
After taking the approach of offloading / and /usr checks to Dracut I've
disabled fsck for those partitions in /etc/fstab so OpenRC fsck wouldn't
attempt to check /usr (and fail) by setting passno (the last column to
0). It
On 14/01/2018 01:36, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Sat, 13 Jan 2018 23:16:19 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
>> On 13/01/2018 23:16, Neil Bothwick wrote:
>>> On Sat, 13 Jan 2018 14:57:59 -0600, John Johnson wrote:
>>>
Shouldn't that be taken care of by the "/etc/fstab" entries?
>>>
>>> Those
Hello,
On Sun, 14 Jan 2018, tu...@posteo.de wrote:
>Is it posible to use Firefox wihout pulseaudio installed?
>If "yes" -- how can I acchieche this?
Just compile with USE="-pulseaudio". Apparently, since 57.x, FF can be
built directly against alsa again.
I have neither apulse nor pulseaudio
Hello,
On Sat, 13 Jan 2018, Andrew Barchuk wrote:
[..]
>My fstab:
>
>/dev/MacVg/gentoo-root / ext4defaults0 1
>/dev/MacVg/gentoo-usr /usrext4defaults0 2
[..]
>Any ideas what is going on and how do I make the fsck check succeed?
Try changing
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