Hi,
In Gentoo Prefix on amd64 host with a no-multilib profile, for
packages that inherit multilib multilib-minimal, the multilib-build
eclass wraps headers as if multilib were enabled.
One example is mpi.h header in sys-cluster/openmpi. I am using a custom
modified ebuild, but the differences sho
and then emerging the cvs versions, it worked fine.
Sorry and Thank-You,
Colin
On Fri, 2006-04-07 at 12:06 +0200, Bertrand Jacquin wrote:
> Rebuild ecore
>
> On 4/6/06, Colin Rothwell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > Hi All,
> > I'm trying to compile engage and it s
/work/e17/libs/ewl'
make: *** [all] Error 2
Thanks in advance, Colin
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help me???
Colin
From:
Colin Wildsmith [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]
Sent: Wednesday, 25 January 2006
7:32 AM
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Subject: [gentoo-user] Superblock
error
Hello all,
I have just tried the Gentoo challenge (installing Gentooo
from the minimal CD) and
fstab file? However I
try and change it by
mount /dev/hda1
nano /etc/fstab
I can see the file however I can not write to it.
How can I modify my files?
Colin
Hi List,
Any comment on the best filesystem to use for Gentoo running a
webserver, I prefer more speed and less journaling, is there a standard?
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not sure), if
not any suggestions.
Many Thanks
Colin
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On Aug 4, 2005, at 1:29 AM, Richard Watson wrote:
Thanks Colin, I've (unfortunately) already compiled my system. Can I
re-compile everything with:
# emerge --update --ask --deep --verbose --newuse --tree world
The reason I'm looking into this is Kino keeps crashing, as do
mply
use "i686-pc-linux-gnu". Why this is, I don't know exactly; it
deals with the processor's architecture and how it compiles code.
Also, set your CFLAGS to "-O2 -march=pentium4 -mfpmath=sse,387 -pipe -
fomit-frame-pointer" for a good mix of speed and stabil
On Aug 2, 2005, at 9:18 PM, Raphael Melo de Oliveira Bastos Sales wrote:
Hey Colin,
I was looking at the /etc/ssh/sshd_config file and found these:
LoginGraceTime 600
MaxAuthTries 6
Is the first one what you meant?
The second seems like an attempt to avoid brute force login.
Neither is
our computer or its innards from walking away. :-)
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They might be
enumerated as SCSI devices, though (/dev/sd* rather than /dev/hd*),
but I believe this is perfectly normal.
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OS
after the initial bootup, so caching the system/video BIOSes is just
a waste of memory if you're using Gentoo. Caching video RAM was nice
back in the days of ISA video cards, but with PCI/AGP/PCI-X video
cards, shut off that option.
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ull gigabyte; if it happens
then it's probably a hardware problem, not a Gentoo issue.
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mission, of
course. And slip the boy at Best Buy a couple Alexander Hamiltons
($10 bills, in case you forgot your U.S. history) for making him put
up with you testing a million different cards and not finding
anything that works. :-P
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nna, get in my car, and... well, you get the
idea. :-)
Still haven't had any luck with KisMAC (the OS X port of Kismet),
though. It finds my card but doesn't detect my wireless network...
I'll figure it out eventually.
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rd's line-in will do. I haven't
done it on Linux, but on Windows/Mac OS X, pretty much any program
will do it. As for burning, most programs that can burn an audio CD
take MP3/WAV/OGG/WMA/AAC files (your choices may vary depending on
the app) as input and do the conversion th
On Jul 19, 2005, at 7:37 PM, José Pedro Saraiva wrote:
Thanks for the reply Colin =)
If you remember your stripe size, then you should be able to plug
your drives into any ICH5R-based motherboard and get your data back.
Theoretically, you could plug your drives into any RAID whose BIOS
does
fails and your data is priceless, grab a couple grand and
look into professional data recovery, because unless you can find a
super-geek, that will probably be your best bet.
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1,100
dual-2.3GHz-processor XServe G5's.) :-)
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you need for
USB Mass Storage) and make sure you select the "Probe all LUN's" option.
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l have access to the files!
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Are these in Portage? Masked versions are fine.
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Colin
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ight find that
helpful.
http://www.gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Networkless_stage1_Install
--
Colin
Ok, thanks Colin. I'm ready to do this to get minicom but are you
sure that is the missing piece of my puzzle? I've asked about getting
dial-up working before and slmodem and ppp were th
Daniel Drake wrote:
Colin wrote:
It's not being detected under the LiveCD. I booted with doscsi, but I
don't see /dev/sda. In addition, lspci tells me this:
:00:11.0 Unknown mass storage controller: American Megatrends Inc.
MegaRAID 428 Ultra RAID Controller (rev 04)
Wh
p your data, create a three-drive RAID 5
volume and then copy it all back.
RAID 0+1 would be easier to setup, require much less overhead and have
more fault-tolerance than a three-disk RAID 5 setup. However, it's more
expensive (you need two more disks instead of one more) and it's
ht find that
helpful.
http://www.gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Networkless_stage1_Install
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It's not being detected under the LiveCD. I booted with doscsi, but I
don't see /dev/sda. In addition, lspci tells me this:
:00:11.0 Unknown mass storage controller: American Megatrends Inc.
MegaRAID 428 Ultra RAID Controller (rev 04)
What do I do?
--
Colin
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Mark Knecht wrote:
On 7/4/05, Colin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm not familiar with MythTV, but is it possible to put the server and
frontend on the same machine? That sounds like it will work, at least
in theory.
Yes, that works but he said specifically he didn't wan
hine? That sounds like it will work, at least
in theory.
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on as I get my new
hardware), I can copy back make.conf and the other important ones and
get back up to speed faster. Also copy over your distfiles if you find
them, that saves a lot of time.
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tworking
(if I choose to implement that).
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Peng wrote:
On 6/28/05, Colin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
A. Khattri wrote:
On Mon, 27 Jun 2005, Colin wrote:
CPU: Undecided, some flavor of Pentium III
RAM: 256 MB
Storage: 700 MB IDE (/boot, something else)
Storage: 18.2 GB Ultra160 SCSI (on a Series 428 MegaRAID)
OS: Wind
A. Khattri wrote:
On Mon, 27 Jun 2005, Colin wrote:
CPU: Undecided, some flavor of Pentium III
RAM: 256 MB
Storage: 700 MB IDE (/boot, something else)
Storage: 18.2 GB Ultra160 SCSI (on a Series 428 MegaRAID)
OS: Windows NT Server... kidding! Gentoo!
If you go to the Dell
han likely made
before LBA was invented. In the BIOS, switch it over to CHS mode
(usually "Normal") and see if that does anything.
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problem. Re-select
profile 1, env-update, source /etc/profile and see if it works. If not,
then it's something that I can't help you with.
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nd select a
new compiler. Then env-update; source /etc/profile and emerge again.
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he CD drive
so, I'm back at the
livecd root # prompt.
How do I continue from where I left off or do I have to start all over
again?
Of course not! Just set up your network, mount your partitions and
/proc and then chroot back into /mnt/gentoo. Then just pick up where
you think it left off.
Walter Dnes wrote:
On Sun, Jun 26, 2005 at 04:36:51PM -0400, Colin wrote
Has anyone had any experience with this? Would Gentoo install and
run on this machine without any problems? It looks like it will make
an ideal server/NAT gateway/distcc node/rsync server/DHCP server/DNS
server
A. Khattri wrote:
On Sun, 26 Jun 2005, Colin wrote:
Has anyone had any experience with this? Would Gentoo install and run
on this machine without any problems?
Is there anything special about this machine to make you think it
wouldn't?
Well, Dells always have been rather intere
entium III (Tualatin
core). Has anyone out there put a Socket 370 processor in this machine?
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entium III (Tualatin
core). Has anyone out there put a Socket 370 processor in this machine?
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onfigure it properly and you'll
be dual-booting in no time.
I did that with GRUB, but the same principle applies.
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um systems. Name-brand computers always have some
proprietary "feature" to keep us power users away (like warranties, or older
Dells' nonstandard power supplies).
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t seemed like a good idea
at the time. Now I realize that maybe I should have been more selective
instead of "rm -rf"ing the whole folder.
Well, that's what NOT to do. Please keep the flames to a minimum.
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PowerPC version of Gentoo (2.6.10-gentoo-r8) be able to detect and use
this card?
As for booting the system once it's installed, would quik be able to
detect the card or would I still need a SCSI disk to boot the Mac OS
(for BootX)?
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A. Khattri wrote:
On Tue, 21 Jun 2005, Colin wrote:
Right now, I'm having PartitionMagic 8.0 check each sector of the disk,
to see if it was a hardware problem. (It'd better not be, I bought this
disk not even a year ago!)
If its Maxtor I would not be surprised...
Nop
sidering JFS,
but I can't find any comments about it. Has anyone on this list had any
experience with JFS as a general-purpose file system, and would you recommend
it over ReiserFS 3.6?
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Craig Duncan wrote:
Colin wrote:
Finally. I'm sending this email from a working Gentoo system.
My wireless card (D-Link DWL-120+, ACX100 chipset) had trouble with
acx100, so I unmerged that and gave ndiswrapper a shot. As you can see,
it works, despite not being listed on ndiswrap
I went to do an emerge -Duvn world (I changed my USE flags), and
apparently, I've somehow installed conflicting packages... don't ask me how.
[blocks B ]
Ow Mun Heng wrote:
>On Thu, 2005-06-16 at 03:38 -0400, Colin wrote:
>
>
>>There was an option to make the window dockable in the Windows port. I
>>really miss that feature, since windows would (or they were supposed to,
>>most did) maximize around the window,
Zac Medico wrote:
>Colin wrote:
>
>
>>I just can't mount this FAT32 partition:
>>/dev/hde5 /home/colin/Documents vfat
>>uid=colin,umask=122 0 0
>>
>>When I try to mount it, I get this error:
>>mount: wrong fs type, bad option,
Sorry for all the messages all at once. I've noticed recently that my
mouse's scroll wheel isn't working. How do I turn on the wheel in X
(since I'm guessing it's off)?
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I just can't mount this FAT32 partition:
/dev/hde5 /home/colin/Documents vfat
uid=colin,umask=122 0 0
When I try to mount it, I get this error:
mount: wrong fs type, bad option, bad superblock on /dev/hde5,
or too many mounted file systems
I've tried every mount
under GNOME? I'm using Gaim 1.3.0.
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love that thing. As reported by
AlsaMixer: Card=Sound Blaster Audigy. Chip=TriTech TR28602.
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t.
Is there an easier way to make this cheap card work without manual
configuration all the time? net.wlan0 isn't in my /etc/init.d
directory, but I did add wlan0 is in the autoloaded modules list.
Kernel 2.6.11-gentoo-r11. Using the tiacxusb.sys and tiacxusb.inf
Windows drivers.
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, is definitely not ready
for the general population... :-)
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Richard Fish wrote:
Colin wrote:
It worked! One would think stage1.5 would be an integral step between
1 and 2, but apparently now. Gentoo works! (And Windows does too...)
I got a lot of errors while booting Gentoo, so I've still got a few
bugs to work out. Thanks, guys.
The sta
capable of
faster, more precise math than the 387 coprocessor. But not all
programs like/use SSE, so always specify a fallback.
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Holly Bostick wrote:
Colin schreef:
On Mon, 13 Jun 2005, Colin wrote:
/boot/grub/grub.conf
===
default 0
timeout 10
splashimage=(hd0,0)/grub/splash.xpm.gz
title=Gentoo Linux 2.6.11-r9
root (hd0,0)
kernel=/kernel-2.6.11-gentoo-r9 root=/dev/hde3
video=vesafb:mtrr
On 6/13/05, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Colin wrote:
>
> >On 6/13/05, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> >
> >
> >>Colin wrote:
> >>
> >>
> >>
> >>>Okay, I tried that. No dice. I tried removin
nter, but also use
-march=athlon-xp. If your processor supports MMX, 3DNow!, SSE or
SSE2, add those flags in as well.
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On 6/13/05, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Colin wrote:
>
> > Okay, I tried that. No dice. I tried removing all occurences of
> > /boot in case it didn't like symlinks, but that didn't work either.
>
>
> Well, I didn't expect to find
On 6/13/05, Richard Fish <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> A. Khattri wrote:
>
> > On Mon, 13 Jun 2005, Colin wrote:
> >
> >> /boot/grub/grub.conf
> >> ===
> >> default 0
> >> timeout 10
> >> splashimage=(hd0,0)/grub/
x27;t like symlinks, but that didn't work either.
> The 'd' option is a workaround for BIOSs that get confused about which
> drive is being used to boot.
No, I haven't had problems booting before. The RAID controller's BIOS
is set to boot from the primary master (/dev/hde). Windows liked it.
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is active. Marking partition 2 as active can't
get me into Windows, though, so I'm kinda screwed ATM.
I created my Gentoo partitions by resizing my NTFS partition with
PartitionMagic (I love that software). I moved it down the disk by 32
MB, shrunk it by 20 GB, and converted /home/colin a
Zac Medico wrote:
--- Colin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm compiling my system (emerge -env system), but
when it gets down to
building OpenSSH, it fails, saying "You need Perl
5." Pretending and
checking the tree shows that Perl 5 will be emerged
later on during the
o emerge svgalib as
well (since I haven't built the system), which fails saying that the
kernel has not been configured yet.
Any ideas?
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0 15 kRPM
drive on your back-end server would make a good investment.
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t great. More than one line about a flag would
help. Is there any better documentation out there?
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Richard Fish wrote:
Colin wrote:
Maybe you can answer this question. I have an ATA/66 hard drive (66
MBps) on an ATA/133 bus. If the bus is limited to 133 MBps and the
drive cannot transfer data at more than 66 MBps, how come burst
transfers (as reported by hdparm -tT /dev/hdg) are at about
ive cannot transfer data at more than 66 MBps, how come burst
transfers (as reported by hdparm -tT /dev/hdg) are at about 1.6 GBps?
Not that I'm complaining, of course, it just seems illogical :-)
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t transfer data at more than 66 MBps, how come burst
transfers (as reported by hdparm -tT /dev/hdg) are at about 1.6 GBps?
Not that I'm complaining, of course, it just seems illogical :-)
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y software is still an option if
that's the way you like it, or if you dual-boot Windows.
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y or
jumpered in some nonsense configuration. (Most likely.) Make sure the
jumper pins aren't bent and touching each other, and set the drive to
Master (or Slave) and the combo drive to the other setting..
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access
the hardware directly, which is why options such as hdx=stroke work with
older BIOSes.
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Calvin Walton wrote:
On 5/31/05, Colin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
When will Reiser4 be added to the Gentoo kernel? I can emerge
reiser4progs, but I can't mount the volumes nor use them in /etc/fstab.
--
Colin
Although reiser4 is not in the main gentoo kernel, it is in
sy
/GNOME with the
proper kernel features enabled?
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Does Gentoo have any features that would allow it to work with a tablet
PC? I'm assuming just installing touchscreen support into the kernel
would work.
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Dirk Heinrichs wrote:
Am Dienstag, 31. Mai 2005 08:28 schrieb ext Colin:
I know. I'm just not fond of patching kernels.
Why not, what's the problem?
- I'd rather use gentoo-sources than vanilla-sources. I'll wait for
2.6.12-gentoo before using some potentia
Dirk Heinrichs wrote:
Am Dienstag, 31. Mai 2005 07:15 schrieb ext Colin:
When will Reiser4 be added to the Gentoo kernel? I can emerge
reiser4progs, but I can't mount the volumes nor use them in /etc/fstab.
AFAIK there are kernel sources which have reiser4 patched in.
I
or am I mistaken?
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d type wget -i
filelist.txt. Finally, you play the waiting game...
--
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Thanks for finding it.
--
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ation (preferably Gentoo) to do it, though.
http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/distcc.xml
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lags to your USE flags
(especially mmx).
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his is indeed a "classic" pentium chip with mmx added. You can use
-mcpu=pentium (or -march=pentium), optionally adding the mmx USE flag
for those packages that support it.
Actually, since it has MMX, use {-mcpu/-mtune/-march}=pentium-mmx.
Worked for me.
--
Colin
--
gentoo-user@ge
Bruno Lustosa wrote:
On 5/27/05, Colin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
checking for C compiler default output file name... configure: error: C
compiler cannot create executables
See 'config.log' for more details.
/var/tmp/portage/texinfo-4.7-r1/work/texinfo-4.7/config.log is ava
ter -pipe -fstack_protector -fweb -ftracer"
CXXFLAGS="${CFLAGS}"
MAKEOPTS="-j1"
USE contains "hardened"
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enabled). 19 GB total Fast SCSI-2 storage (internal bus). I *might*
upgrade it later on with a G3 or G4 processor and/or maxing out the RAM
to 1 GB.
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Richard Fish wrote:
Colin wrote:
Julien Cayzac wrote:
On 5/24/05, Robert Crawford <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
For what it's worth, according to man gcc, -O2 turns on
-funit-at-a-time.
Yup. Too bad every single Makefile in the world compiles c/c++ source
files
to at least -j2 attempt to compile in parallel?
--
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W.Kenworthy wrote:
check DNS/name resolution - sounds likes its waiting and timing out.
One of my less appreciated "features" of gnome ...
I noticed that mDNSResponder failed to stop on shutdown, along with famd
and gdm. I don't have an (apparent) problem with DNS, tho
Janne Johansson wrote:
On Tue, 2005-05-24 at 03:31 -0400, Colin wrote:
I shut down my computer normally. When I turned it on, though, after
logging into GNOME about an hour ago, I'm still waiting for it to boot.
I enter my password, wait forever, and then the Gentoo logo pops up.
Mike Williams wrote:
On Tuesday 24 May 2005 08:31, Colin wrote:
Anybody know what's going on? GNOME never used to do this before.
Did this happen after a reboot?
Check the permissions of /dev/null
"ls -l /dev/null": crw-rw-rw- 1 root root 1, 3 Apr 23 19:
l-Alt-Backspace whenever I want and X/GNOME
restarts.
Anybody know what's going on? GNOME never used to do this before.
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ss is the Office shortcut bar,
but just copy the icons to GNOME's top panel and you're back in business.
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on't tell anyone you use it though. It
spreads the whole "Gentoo ricer" myth that's been going around the Internet.
If your Pentium 4 supports Hyper-Threading, adjust MAKEOPTS
accordingly. My P4 compiles faster at -j3 than -j2. (Haven't tried -j4
though.)
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Nick Rout wrote:
On Mon, 23 May 2005 00:23:06 -0400
Colin wrote:
I compiled ALSA as a module instead. That got rid of the above error,
but /etc/init.d/alsasound still spits out the same error, but loads a
few more modules:
* Loading ALSA modules... [ ok ]
* Loading: snd-card-0
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