Michael wrote:
> On Saturday, 27 April 2024 17:53:25 BST Dale wrote:
>> Howdy,
>>
>> I'm installing Gentoo on another old box. To be consistent I like to
>> use cgdisk, GPT I think it is called, to partition all my drives,
>> regardless of size.
> GPT is the partition table structure, which is
Michael wrote:
> On Saturday, 27 April 2024 23:30:46 BST Dale wrote:
>> Howdy,
>>
>> I finally got Gentoo on the old rig I had laying around. This is not
>> the one I usually refer to as NAS box. I named this one NAS2. LOL I
>> got one problem that is confusing me. I've compared it to my main
On 4/27/24 15:30, Dale wrote:
Howdy,
I finally got Gentoo on the old rig I had laying around. This is not
the one I usually refer to as NAS box. I named this one NAS2. LOL I
got one problem that is confusing me. I've compared it to my main rig
and the install guide and I think I got
On Saturday, 27 April 2024 23:30:46 BST Dale wrote:
> Howdy,
>
> I finally got Gentoo on the old rig I had laying around. This is not
> the one I usually refer to as NAS box. I named this one NAS2. LOL I
> got one problem that is confusing me. I've compared it to my main rig
> and the
On 4/27/24 15:30, Dale wrote:
Howdy,
I finally got Gentoo on the old rig I had laying around. This is not
the one I usually refer to as NAS box. I named this one NAS2. LOL I
got one problem that is confusing me. I've compared it to my main rig
and the install guide and I think I got
Howdy,
I finally got Gentoo on the old rig I had laying around. This is not
the one I usually refer to as NAS box. I named this one NAS2. LOL I
got one problem that is confusing me. I've compared it to my main rig
and the install guide and I think I got everything right but maybe I
have a
On 27/04/2024 17:53, Dale wrote:
Howdy,
I'm installing Gentoo on another old box. To be consistent I like to
use cgdisk, GPT I think it is called, to partition all my drives,
regardless of size. Thing is, Grub works differently with GPT than it
does with the old DOS or whatever it is called,
On Saturday, 27 April 2024 17:53:25 BST Dale wrote:
> Howdy,
>
> I'm installing Gentoo on another old box. To be consistent I like to
> use cgdisk, GPT I think it is called, to partition all my drives,
> regardless of size.
GPT is the partition table structure, which is more advanced than the
On Sat, Apr 27, 2024 at 9:53 AM Dale wrote:
>
> Howdy,
>
> I'm installing Gentoo on another old box. To be consistent I like to
> use cgdisk, GPT I think it is called, to partition all my drives,
> regardless of size. Thing is, Grub works differently with GPT than it
> does with the old DOS or
On Sat, 27 Apr 2024 11:53:25 -0500
Dale wrote:
> Howdy,
>
> I'm installing Gentoo on another old box. To be consistent I like to
> use cgdisk, GPT I think it is called, to partition all my drives,
> regardless of size. Thing is, Grub works differently with GPT than it
> does with the old DOS
Howdy,
I'm installing Gentoo on another old box. To be consistent I like to
use cgdisk, GPT I think it is called, to partition all my drives,
regardless of size. Thing is, Grub works differently with GPT than it
does with the old DOS or whatever it is called, like fdisk does in the
old days. I
Hello,
after a recent world update nullmailer stopped working.
/var/log/nullmailer/nullmailer.log shows for every message send attempt:
"smtp: Failed: Error completing TLS handshake: The encryption algorithm
is not supported."
Downgrading gnutls to 3.8.3 fixed the issue for me. I opened a
On Friday, 26 April 2024 10:23:28 BST Wojciech Kuzyszyn wrote:
> On Fri, 26 Apr 2024 09:40:54 +0100
>
> Michael wrote:
> > [*] Hibernation (aka 'suspend to disk')
> > [*] Userspace snapshot device
> > (/dev/sdb6)Default resume partition
>
> My swap partition is /dev/nvme0n1p2 - this would
On Fri, 26 Apr 2024 09:40:54 +0100
Michael wrote:
> [*] Hibernation (aka 'suspend to disk')
> [*] Userspace snapshot device
> (/dev/sdb6)Default resume partition
My swap partition is /dev/nvme0n1p2 - this would work I assume, right?
> However, if you are using RAM heavily when you try
On Thursday, 25 April 2024 22:29:01 BST Wojciech Kuzyszyn wrote:
> Hello!
>
> Quick question: is it possible to use hibernation (suspend to disk)
> with no initramfs?
Yes.
> I don't have one and don't want to have one. So I'd
> rather disable hibernate in kernel (so I won't do this by accident)
Hello!
Quick question: is it possible to use hibernation (suspend to disk)
with no initramfs? I don't have one and don't want to have one. So I'd
rather disable hibernate in kernel (so I won't do this by accident) or
leave it to use it happily when needed.
--
xWK
pgpeMbvAVQkat.pgp
Some machines (e.g. my laptop) experience problems when building the
package x11-libs/libxcb
=
Traceback (most recent call last):
File
"/var/tmp/portage/x11-libs/libxcb-1.16.1/work/libxcb-1.16.1/src/c_client.py",
line 3395,
Michael wrote:
> Hi Dale,
>
> On Sunday, 21 April 2024 03:32:32 BST Dale wrote:
>
>> OK. I did my weekend OS updates on my main rig, fireball. That
>> involves me switching to boot runlevel and back again. When the network
>> started, no message about going to default. It just showed it
On Sunday, 21 April 2024 20:36:56 BST J. Roeleveld wrote:
> On Friday, 19 April 2024 16:05:47 CEST Dale wrote:
> > Howdy,
> >
> > I'm playing around with my NAS box again. I ran into a network issue.
> > I sorta forgot I unplugged the network cable so obviously, it made it
> > difficult to ssh
On Sunday, 21 April 2024 23:30:54 BST Wol wrote:
> On 19/04/2024 17:02, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> >
> > Just reporting back.
> >
> > I built a new system - using NetworkManager (after all I've said about
> > it!) - now that it's so much quicker using binpkgs.
> >
> > It all went fairly smoothly,
On 19/04/2024 17:02, Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Tuesday, 9 April 2024 14:23:31 BST I wrote:
Just reporting back.
I built a new system - using NetworkManager (after all I've said about it!) -
now that it's so much quicker using binpkgs.
It all went fairly smoothly, taking one step at a time
On Friday, 19 April 2024 16:05:47 CEST Dale wrote:
> Howdy,
>
> I'm playing around with my NAS box again. I ran into a network issue.
> I sorta forgot I unplugged the network cable so obviously, it made it
> difficult to ssh into the thing from my main rig. After hooking up a
> monitor and
Hi Dale,
On Sunday, 21 April 2024 03:32:32 BST Dale wrote:
> OK. I did my weekend OS updates on my main rig, fireball. That
> involves me switching to boot runlevel and back again. When the network
> started, no message about going to default. It just showed it starting
> up and using DHCP.
Michael wrote:
> On Friday, 19 April 2024 18:04:57 BST Dale wrote:
>
>> I'm missing something.
> I don't think you are. Shutdown your main rig. Pull the ethernet cable.
> Reboot. If the main rig's config is the same as the old rig,
>
> AND
>
> the router addressing is analogous on both PCs,
>
On Friday, 19 April 2024 18:04:57 BST Dale wrote:
> I'm missing something.
I don't think you are. Shutdown your main rig. Pull the ethernet cable.
Reboot. If the main rig's config is the same as the old rig,
AND
the router addressing is analogous on both PCs,
THEN
their behaviour and
Michael wrote:
> On Friday, 19 April 2024 17:20:44 BST Dale wrote:
>> Matt Connell wrote:
>>> On Fri, 2024-04-19 at 09:05 -0500, Dale wrote:
Basically, I want to be able to start/stop/restart enp3s0 as a
service and have it in a runlevel.
>>> You should just need to create a symlink at
On Fri, 2024-04-19 at 17:34 +0100, Michael wrote:
> Configure static IP addresses for all your LAN devices on your home
> router. Then set your devices to use DHCP to obtain an address from
> the router when they come up. With a large number of devices which
> often change (e.g. guests in a
On Friday, 19 April 2024 17:20:44 BST Dale wrote:
> Matt Connell wrote:
> > On Fri, 2024-04-19 at 09:05 -0500, Dale wrote:
> >> Basically, I want to be able to start/stop/restart enp3s0 as a
> >> service and have it in a runlevel.
> >
> > You should just need to create a symlink at
On Friday, 19 April 2024 17:26:43 BST Dale wrote:
> Michael wrote:
> > On Friday, 19 April 2024 15:05:47 BST Dale wrote:
> >> Anyway, while investigating this, I realized the network setup is not
> >> like on my old rig. Heck, I couldn't even figure out how to restart it
> >> other than switching
Michael wrote:
> On Friday, 19 April 2024 15:05:47 BST Dale wrote:
>
>> Anyway, while investigating this, I realized the network setup is not
>> like on my old rig. Heck, I couldn't even figure out how to restart it
>> other than switching to the boot runlevel and back to default, or
>>
Matt Connell wrote:
> On Fri, 2024-04-19 at 09:05 -0500, Dale wrote:
>> Basically, I want to be able to start/stop/restart enp3s0 as a
>> service and have it in a runlevel.
> You should just need to create a symlink at /etc/init.d/net.enp3s0 that
> points to /etc/init.d/net.lo and then you can do
On Tuesday, 9 April 2024 14:23:31 BST I wrote:
> I want to move my Intel i5 NUC box to a place where Ethernet is not
> available, nor like to become so. That means I have to get WiFi working,
> but I've had no success so far. The wiki pages are many, confusing and
> contradictory, so I'd like the
On Friday, 19 April 2024 15:05:47 BST Dale wrote:
> Anyway, while investigating this, I realized the network setup is not
> like on my old rig. Heck, I couldn't even figure out how to restart it
> other than switching to the boot runlevel and back to default, or
> rebooting. After a bit, I
On Fri, 2024-04-19 at 09:05 -0500, Dale wrote:
> Basically, I want to be able to start/stop/restart enp3s0 as a
> service and have it in a runlevel.
You should just need to create a symlink at /etc/init.d/net.enp3s0 that
points to /etc/init.d/net.lo and then you can do the usual rc-service
stuff
Howdy,
I'm playing around with my NAS box again. I ran into a network issue.
I sorta forgot I unplugged the network cable so obviously, it made it
difficult to ssh into the thing from my main rig. After hooking up a
monitor and keyboard, I found the problem and plugged the network cable
back
Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> Am Thu, Apr 18, 2024 at 07:26:30AM -0500 schrieb Dale:
>
>> If you don't play games, then definitely get integrated graphics.
>>> I'd add to this, you could still play many games, especially older games
>>> using
>>> a modern APU. The integrated graphics
On 18/04/2024 13:26, Dale wrote:
The biggest reason I like a separate video card, I can upgrade if
needed. Built in video means a new mobo.
Having a motherboard that supports an apu doesn't preclude adding a
separate graphics card later if required (viz a lot of laptops that come
so
Am Thu, Apr 18, 2024 at 07:26:30AM -0500 schrieb Dale:
> If you don't play games, then definitely get integrated graphics.
> > I'd add to this, you could still play many games, especially older games
> > using
> > a modern APU. The integrated graphics capability is broadly comparable
> >
Michael wrote:
> On Wednesday, 17 April 2024 23:13:40 BST Dale wrote:
>> Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
>>> Am Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 01:18:39PM -0400 schrieb Rich Freeman:
On Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 9:33 AM Dale wrote:
> Rich Freeman wrote:
>
If you don't play games, then definitely get
On Wednesday, 17 April 2024 23:13:40 BST Dale wrote:
> Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> > Am Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 01:18:39PM -0400 schrieb Rich Freeman:
> >> On Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 9:33 AM Dale wrote:
> >>> Rich Freeman wrote:
> All AM5 CPUs have GPUs, but in general motherboards with video
Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2024-04-17, Dale wrote:
>
>> I still use Nvidia and use nvidia drivers. I to run into problems
>> on occasion with drivers and kernels. When you switched from
>> Nvidia, what did you switch too? Do you still use drivers you
>> install or kernel drivers?
> All in-tree
Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> Am Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 01:18:39PM -0400 schrieb Rich Freeman:
>> On Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 9:33 AM Dale wrote:
>>> Rich Freeman wrote:
>>>
All AM5 CPUs have GPUs, but in general motherboards with video outputs
do not require the CPU to have a GPU built in.
Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 9:33 AM Dale wrote:
>> Rich Freeman wrote:
>>
>>> All AM5 CPUs have GPUs, but in general motherboards with video outputs
>>> do not require the CPU to have a GPU built in. The ports just don't
>>> do anything if this is lacking, and you would need a
On 2024-04-17, Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
>> If you don't play games, then definitely get integrated graphics.
>> Even if the CPU costs a tiny bit more, it will give you a free empty
>> 16x PCIe slot at whatever speed the CPU supports (v5 in this case -
>> which is as good as you can get right
On 2024-04-17, Dale wrote:
> I still use Nvidia and use nvidia drivers. I to run into problems
> on occasion with drivers and kernels. When you switched from
> Nvidia, what did you switch too? Do you still use drivers you
> install or kernel drivers?
All in-tree kernel drivers for integrated
Meik Frischke wrote:
> Am 2024-04-17 12:33, schrieb Dale:
>> I found a benchmark website that compares the two. Link below. It
>> claims about 80% faster. In some ways, twice as fast. Sometimes those
>> bench tests don't reflect the real world to well. Most of them seem to
>> test gaming
Am Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 01:18:39PM -0400 schrieb Rich Freeman:
> On Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 9:33 AM Dale wrote:
> >
> > Rich Freeman wrote:
> >
> > > All AM5 CPUs have GPUs, but in general motherboards with video outputs
> > > do not require the CPU to have a GPU built in. The ports just don't
> >
Grant Edwards wrote:
>
> 2) Lack of support for old hardware when running a newer kernels.
>
> I used to run into this when running nvidia-drivers.
> Gentoo-sources would mark a new kernel stable, but my video board
> would not be supported by nvidia-drivers versions that were
>
On 2024-04-17, Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> Grant,
>
> On Wednesday, 2024-04-17 14:11:21 -, you wrote:
>
>> ...
>> If what you want is access to all upstream longeterm kernel versions,
>> then you should be using sys-kernel/vanilla-sources.
>
> I was not aware of this package. Excatly what
On 17/04/2024 10:10, Michael wrote:
I am not sure the assumption "... aging hardware possibly can less and less
cope with newer and newer kernels" is correct. As already mentioned newer
kernels have both security and bug fixes. As long as you stick with stable
gentoo-sources you'll have these
Am 2024-04-17 12:33, schrieb Dale:
I found a benchmark website that compares the two. Link below. It
claims about 80% faster. In some ways, twice as fast. Sometimes those
bench tests don't reflect the real world to well. Most of them seem to
test gaming speeds which isn't of much use anyway
On Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 9:33 AM Dale wrote:
>
> Rich Freeman wrote:
>
> > All AM5 CPUs have GPUs, but in general motherboards with video outputs
> > do not require the CPU to have a GPU built in. The ports just don't
> > do anything if this is lacking, and you would need a dedicated GPU.
> >
>
>
Grant,
On Wednesday, 2024-04-17 14:11:21 -, you wrote:
> ...
> If what you want is access to all upstream longeterm kernel versions,
> then you should be using sys-kernel/vanilla-sources.
I was not aware of this package. Excatly what could come in handy, if
everything else fails. Thank
Michael,
On Wednesday, 2024-04-17 10:10:56 +0100, you wrote:
> On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 20:26:25 BST Grant Edwards wrote:
> > On 2024-04-16, Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> > ...
> > > But, to get back to the beginning of this discussion: if there is a
> > > risk that my aging hardware possibly can
On 2024-04-17, Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> Grant,
>
> On Tuesday, 2024-04-16 19:26:25 -, you wrote:
>
>> ...
>> That means that all gentoo-sources stable kernels are "longterm"
>> kernel versions on kernel.org. It does not mean that all "longterm"
>> kernel versions from kernel.org are
On 2024-04-17, Michael wrote:
>> > But, to get back to the beginning of this discussion: if there is a
>> > risk that my aging hardware possibly can less and less cope with
>> > newer and newer kernels, should I put something like
>> >
>> >>=sys-kernel/gentoo-sources-6.7.0
>> >
>> > into
Rich Freeman wrote:
> On Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 6:33 AM Dale wrote:
>> On the AM5 link, I found a mobo that I kinda like. I still wish it had
>> more PCIe slots tho.
> AM5 has 28 PCIe lanes. Anything above that comes from a switch on the
> motherboard.
>
> 0.1% of the population cares about
On Wed, Apr 17, 2024 at 6:33 AM Dale wrote:
>
> On the AM5 link, I found a mobo that I kinda like. I still wish it had
> more PCIe slots tho.
AM5 has 28 PCIe lanes. Anything above that comes from a switch on the
motherboard.
0.1% of the population cares about having anything on their
On Wednesday, 17 April 2024 11:37:04 BST Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> Grant,
>
> On Tuesday, 2024-04-16 19:26:25 -, you wrote:
> > ...
> > That means that all gentoo-sources stable kernels are "longterm"
> > kernel versions on kernel.org. It does not mean that all "longterm"
> > kernel versions
On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 16:29:09 BST Eli Schwartz wrote:
[Big snip]
Never mind. I've solved the problem by removing sci-misc/boinc and its 40-odd
dependencies. The machine was only barely capable of running it anyway.
--
Regards,
Peter.
Grant,
On Tuesday, 2024-04-16 19:26:25 -, you wrote:
> ...
> That means that all gentoo-sources stable kernels are "longterm"
> kernel versions on kernel.org. It does not mean that all "longterm"
> kernel versions from kernel.org are available as "stable" in
> gentoo-sources.
>
> It is a
Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> Am Mon, Apr 15, 2024 at 08:04:15AM -0500 schrieb Dale:
>
>
>> I've seen some server type mobos that have SAS connectors which gives
>> several options. Some of them tend to have more PCIe slots which some
>> regular mobos don't anymore. Then there is that ECC memory
On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 20:26:25 BST Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2024-04-16, Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> > Arve,
> >
> > On Tuesday, 2024-04-16 15:53:48 +0200, you wrote:
> >> ...
> >> Only LTS kernels get stabilised, so this information is readily
> >> available.
> >
> > I'm sure I don't
On 2024-04-16, Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> Arve,
>
> On Tuesday, 2024-04-16 15:53:48 +0200, you wrote:
>
>> ...
>> Only LTS kernels get stabilised, so this information is readily available.
>
> I'm sure I don't understand this: According to "https://www.kernel.org/;
> kernel 6.6.27 is "longterm",
Arve,
On Tuesday, 2024-04-16 15:53:48 +0200, you wrote:
> ...
> Only LTS kernels get stabilised, so this information is readily available.
I'm sure I don't understand this: According to "https://www.kernel.org/;
kernel 6.6.27 is "longterm", but according to "eix" the most recent
6.6.*
On April 16, 2024 10:44:55 AM EDT, Peter Humphrey wrote:
>
>This is what I get after this morning's update:
>
>
>Dependency resolution took 16.03 s (backtrack: 0/20).
>
>[ebuild N ] gui-libs/gtk-4.12.5:4::gentoo USE="X cups gstreamer
>introspection wayland (-aqua) -broadway
On 2024-04-16, Dale wrote:
> I've never understood what is supported long term either. I use
> gentoo-sources. I've never figured out just how to pick a kernel that
> is supposed to be stable for the larger version. In other words, only
> security and bug fixes, no new hardware. Right now,
Grant Edwards wrote:
> On 2024-04-16, Arve Barsnes wrote:
>> On Tue, 16 Apr 2024 at 15:29, Dr Rainer Woitok
>> wrote:
My understanding is the gentoo-sources kernels are aligned with the LTS
upstream releases.
>>> Right, they use the same version numbers. But you can't see from just
Arve Barsnes wrote:
> On Tue, 16 Apr 2024 at 15:29, Dr Rainer Woitok
> wrote:
>>> My understanding is the gentoo-sources kernels are aligned with the LTS
>>> upstream releases.
>> Right, they use the same version numbers. But you can't see from just
>> looking at the available
On 2024-04-16, Arve Barsnes wrote:
> On Tue, 16 Apr 2024 at 15:29, Dr Rainer Woitok
> wrote:
>> > My understanding is the gentoo-sources kernels are aligned with the LTS
>> > upstream releases.
>>
>> Right, they use the same version numbers. But you can't see from just
>> looking at the
(Rearranged in chronological order...)
On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 15:08:33 BST Waldo Lemmer wrote:
> On Tue, Apr 16, 2024, 15:43 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > On Monday, 15 April 2024 12:19:02 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
--->8
> > I'm still mystified by these Gentoo binary packages. I assume that
On 4/16/24 7:15 AM, Michael wrote:
On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 11:55:20 BST Dale wrote:
If you update often, it shouldn't take long answer the questions. If
you do like me and don't update often, it may take longer but no more
time than it would if you updated often and added all the time
If you add --ask --verbose, Portage should tell you why it's falling back
to the source package.
Does your emerge command include --getbinpkg, or -g?
On Tue, Apr 16, 2024, 15:43 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Monday, 15 April 2024 12:19:02 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
>
> Hello list,
>
> [Big snip]
>
On Tue, 16 Apr 2024 at 15:43, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> I'm still mystified by these Gentoo binary packages. I assume that they're
> generated using the default USE flags in the profile version (whence the need
> to
> specify it in gentoobinhost.conf).
>
> So why is portage not fetching webkit-gtk
On Tue, 16 Apr 2024 at 15:29, Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> > My understanding is the gentoo-sources kernels are aligned with the LTS
> > upstream releases.
>
> Right, they use the same version numbers. But you can't see from just
> looking at the available "gentoo-sources" which one is LTS and
On Monday, 15 April 2024 12:19:02 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
Hello list,
[Big snip]
I'm still mystified by these Gentoo binary packages. I assume that they're
generated using the default USE flags in the profile version (whence the need
to
specify it in gentoobinhost.conf).
So why is portage
Michael,
On Tuesday, 2024-04-16 11:15:07 +0100, you wrote:
> ...
> > But this brings up two related questions:
> >
> > 1. Why does Gentoo not somehow mark LTS kernels either in the version
> >number or in the slot name? This would make it easier to prevent the
> >installation of too
Michael wrote:
> On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 11:55:20 BST Dale wrote:
>
>> If you update often, it shouldn't take long answer the questions. If
>> you do like me and don't update often, it may take longer but no more
>> time than it would if you updated often and added all the time
>> together. As
On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 11:55:20 BST Dale wrote:
> If you update often, it shouldn't take long answer the questions. If
> you do like me and don't update often, it may take longer but no more
> time than it would if you updated often and added all the time
> together. As far as I know, if one
Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> Michael,
>
> On Monday, 2024-04-15 12:48:34 +0100, you wrote:
>
>> ...
>> Why have you set your /boot to be mounted at boot?
> Well, I think, I then just followed the Gentoo Handbook. But I see your
> point of saving time which could be better used to successfully
On Tuesday, 16 April 2024 10:04:43 BST Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> Michael,
>
> On Monday, 2024-04-15 12:48:34 +0100, you wrote:
> > ...
> > Why have you set your /boot to be mounted at boot?
>
> Well, I think, I then just followed the Gentoo Handbook. But I see your
> point of saving time which
Michael,
On Monday, 2024-04-15 12:48:34 +0100, you wrote:
> ...
> Why have you set your /boot to be mounted at boot?
Well, I think, I then just followed the Gentoo Handbook. But I see your
point of saving time which could be better used to successfully unmount
the "/home/" partition. I'll
Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> Am Mon, Apr 15, 2024 at 08:04:15AM -0500 schrieb Dale:
>
>>> The physical connector is called M.2. The dimensions of the “sticks” are
>>> given in a number such as 2280, meaning 22 mm wide and 80 mm long. There
>>> are
>>> different lengths available from 30 to 110
Hi Peter,
"Profile version" is the correct term here.
I don't have the privileges required to edit the Handbook, but as soon as I
have the time, I will propose a fix and make sure it gets applied.
Thanks for getting back to me.
Regards,
Waldo
On Mon, Apr 15, 2024, 16:04 Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Monday, 15 April 2024 13:24:59 BST Waldo Lemmer wrote:
> I'd like to understand your confusion. Where did you get 27 from?
>From ref 1, viz:
"The architecture and profile targets within the sync-uri value do matter and
should align to the respective computer architecture (amd64 in this
Am Mon, Apr 15, 2024 at 08:04:15AM -0500 schrieb Dale:
> > The physical connector is called M.2. The dimensions of the “sticks” are
> > given in a number such as 2280, meaning 22 mm wide and 80 mm long. There
> > are
> > different lengths available from 30 to 110 mm. M.2 has different “keys”,
Am Sun, Mar 31, 2024 at 08:33:20AM -0400 schrieb Rich Freeman:
> (moving this to gentoo-user as this is really getting off-topic for -dev)
> […]
> We're going on almost 20 years since the Snowden revelations, and back
> then the NSA was basically doing intrusion on an industrial scale.
Weeaalll,
Frank Steinmetzger wrote:
> Am Sat, Apr 13, 2024 at 08:23:27AM -0500 schrieb Dale:
>> Rich Freeman wrote:
>>> On Sat, Apr 13, 2024 at 8:11 AM Dale wrote:
My biggest thing right now, finding a mobo with plenty of PCIe slots.
They put all this new stuff, wifi and such, but remove things I
Hi Peter,
I'd like to understand your confusion. Where did you get 27 from?
Cheers,
Waldo
On Mon, Apr 15, 2024, 13:25 Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Monday, 15 April 2024 12:19:02 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > Hello list,
> >
> > I've decided to follow the instructions in [1] on one of my
On Sunday, 14 April 2024 19:41:41 BST Dr Rainer Woitok wrote:
> Greetings,
>
> On Friday, 2024-01-05 18:46:09 +0100, I myself wrote:
> > ...
> > since a few month or so off and on my laptop fails to resume from hiber-
> > nation due to the "dirty bit" being set on the ext4 "/home" partition.
>
On Monday, 15 April 2024 12:19:02 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> I've decided to follow the instructions in [1] on one of my machines, which
> runs too hot for my comfort on long emerges, but I need some advice, please:
> where the wiki gives this [2], I'm setting 'amd64' as the and
Hello list,
I've decided to follow the instructions in [1] on one of my machines, which
runs too hot for my comfort on long emerges, but I need some advice, please:
where the wiki gives this [2], I'm setting 'amd64' as the and '27' as
the .
Then, when I try to emerge a package, I get this:
!!!
Am Sat, Apr 13, 2024 at 08:23:27AM -0500 schrieb Dale:
> Rich Freeman wrote:
> > On Sat, Apr 13, 2024 at 8:11 AM Dale wrote:
> >> My biggest thing right now, finding a mobo with plenty of PCIe slots.
> >> They put all this new stuff, wifi and such, but remove things I do need,
> >> PCIe slots.
>
--- Original message ---
From: Matthias Hanft
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Date: Mon, 15 Apr 2024 10:14:18 +0200
Hi,
after updating the kernels to the latest stable version (6.6.21)
Hi,
after updating the kernels to the latest stable version (6.6.21)
and updating the profiles from 17.1 to 23.0, the last update step
would be "merge-usr" as described at https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Merge-usr
in order to have complete up-to-date systems.
But my two (nearly identical) systems
Greetings,
On Friday, 2024-01-05 18:46:09 +0100, I myself wrote:
> ...
> since a few month or so off and on my laptop fails to resume from hiber-
> nation due to the "dirty bit" being set on the ext4 "/home" partition.
I was reading this flickering by on the screen, and it wasn't quite cor-
On Sunday, 14 April 2024 10:24:54 CEST Michael wrote:
> On Sunday, 14 April 2024 08:28:07 BST J. Roeleveld wrote:
> > >
> > > Our systems are certainly different, but I noticed this dependency on my
> > > localmount which is missing on yours:
> > >
> > > # /lib/rc/bin/rc-depend localmount
> >
On Sunday, 14 April 2024 08:28:07 BST J. Roeleveld wrote:
> On Thursday, 11 April 2024 12:10:31 CEST Michael wrote:
> > On Thursday, 11 April 2024 10:48:15 BST J. Roeleveld wrote:
> > > On Thursday, 11 April 2024 11:35:10 CEST Michael wrote:
> > > > On Thursday, 11 April 2024 06:19:57 BST J.
On Thursday, 11 April 2024 12:10:31 CEST Michael wrote:
> On Thursday, 11 April 2024 10:48:15 BST J. Roeleveld wrote:
> > On Thursday, 11 April 2024 11:35:10 CEST Michael wrote:
> > > On Thursday, 11 April 2024 06:19:57 BST J. Roeleveld wrote:
> > > > Hi all,
> > > >
> > > > For a while I've been
On Saturday, 13 April 2024 15:49:27 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Friday, 12 April 2024 16:39:12 BST Michael wrote:
> > On Friday, 12 April 2024 16:05:46 BST Peter Humphrey wrote:
> > > On Friday, 12 April 2024 14:35:02 BST Michael wrote:
> > > > There are GUI front-ends for the above to suit
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