degraded, a major issue since I work on
it remotely. It could be quite a while before we add drives. I need to
do an upgrade to Jessie and convert a large ext4 fs to btrfs, so I need
reliable boots. But who doesn't? ;)
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md0 --level=raid5 --raid-devices=8
--backup-file=/boot/raidbackup2
Wheezy
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over snapshot vs backup copy. It's hard to tell, because
I think they mostly get the concepts involved.
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you're getting above $100 USD, you're better off
getting an cheap android phone/tablet. Plenty of free apps to play
whatever formats you like, plus other capabilities. Just don't bother
with connecting it to a cellular network.
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o the new during upgrades, but that would be incredibly bad
practice. Debian aims for stability, even during upgrades between stable
releases.
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e with:
>
> "UUID=fca39bca-d795-4664-8c6f-cac459fbd468 / ext4
> rw,noatime,discard 0 1"
>
> after save the file /etc/fstab.
>
> Then reboot the system and watch if there is the same problem.
>
> This could be the reason which caused t
e with problems, but it *is* fixable provided
there's a steward to allow them. Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised if
within a year or two it was forked and all the distros jumped on board
practically overnight.
Just my thoughts, I'm probably going to seriously regret getting
invol
On 09/22/2014 05:56 PM, Lisi Reisz wrote:
> On Monday 22 September 2014 22:49:41 PaulNM wrote:
>> On 09/22/2014 05:44 PM, Lisi Reisz wrote:
>>> On Monday 22 September 2014 18:59:33 Joerg Desch wrote:
>>>> Am Sun, 21 Sep 2014 11:45:23 +0200 schrieb Hans:
>>>&g
ing purely by what you have written here:
>
> "It can copy locally to/from another host" etc.
>
> To ... one direction
> From ... the other direction
>
> Bidirectional.
>
> Lisi
>
Bidirectional copying, yes. Not bidirectional syncing.
Critical differe
t is #762450.
https://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=762450
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, any pointers?
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inder you here.
>
You are correct that it shouldn't affect bootloader selection. It's
important if you plan to resize the windows partition or otherwise
access it, though.
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On 08/07/2014 07:00 PM, Joel Rees wrote:
> Cognitive dissonance?
What are you referring to?
>
> On Fri, Aug 8, 2014 at 7:24 AM, PaulNM wrote:
>> Hi, please reply to the list as I am subscribed.
>>
>> On 08/07/2014 05:56 PM, Johann Spies wrote:
>>> For the s
th. For all I knew, you could very well have been
someone new to Linux/Debian and misunderstood what was happening. We're
just trying to help.
>
> Regards
> Johann
>
Take care,
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o be used unless you
held back on updates, but not anymore.
> I will continue using Debian on my server and two other computers where
> fortunately I did not do a dist-upgrades.
>
> Regards
> Johann
>
> --
> Because experiencing your loyal love is better than life itself,
probably:
> sudo apt-get upgrade
>
>
> --Andrew
>
While not directly related to your current issue, I suggest changing the
instances of stable to wheezy. Otherwise you're in for a surprise once
Jessie is released.
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as
that will remove files in the destination that no longer exist in the
source.
rsync -avxPHAXS --delete source destination
>
> Kind regards,
> Andrei
>
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a sparsefile or regular loopback mount to
play around with it, but for important stuff on your system, stick with
what you know.
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On 06/27/2014 03:31 PM, Diogene Laerce wrote:
>
>
> On 06/27/2014 08:36 PM, PaulNM wrote:
>> In Thunderbird/IceDove you'll have to add it as a custom header when
>> setting up the filter, but it's *way* better than trying to filter by
>> the contents of t
e or to address.
Oh, there's also "User-Agent", which is how I know you use IceDove. :)
> Thanks to all for stopping by. :)
>
Thanks for staying. :)
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0 0 000 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.22 kworker/0:1
>14 root 0 -20 000 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 khelper
>15 root 20 0 000 S 0.0 0.0 0:00.00 kdevtmpfs
>
>
Think (k)ernel, not (k)de.
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hile the system is still live.
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. Personally I found it to be a brilliant and
really cool idea. Even with bittorent being available now, jidgo is
still very useful.
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pass cookies and webbugs
> around if you tell it not to.
>
"Optional" for now. More and more these entities are moving away from
using the browser to store identifying info.
https://panopticlick.eff.org
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Device_fingerprint
- PaulNM
> Hugo
>
>
Another suggestion: Look into ddrescue (package name is gddrescue).
It's more flexible when dealing with drives that have problems.
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On 04/11/2014 09:28 PM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
> On Fri, 11 Apr 2014, PaulNM wrote:
>
>> On 04/11/2014 12:04 AM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
>>>
>>> Now, if "they" could come up with an efficient and effective way to
>>> uninstall/purge stuff installe
ersion changes in stable and old-stable. That's
a matter of repository policies though, not an apt/aptitude thing.
Testing and Sid regularly see major version upgrades, by design.
>
> B
>
>
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w
On 04/11/2014 12:04 AM, Patrick Bartek wrote:
>
> Now, if "they" could come up with an efficient and effective way to
> uninstall/purge stuff installed via a metapackage. Or maybe there is
> and I just haven't found it. ;-)
>
apt-get autoremove
> B
>
On 02/20/2014 03:50 AM, Andrei POPESCU wrote:
> On Lu, 17 feb 14, 22:30:31, PaulNM wrote:
>>
>> I could be wrong, but my understanding is that apt uses standard http,
>> so port 80 outgoing.
>
> Just because port 80 is used for listening for http requests doesn't
ion with apt-get. It means download only, so you'll see
if there are bad/missing downloads without actually starting the upgrade.
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da8 97536 23 975131% /tmp
> /dev/sda5549440 143994 405446 27% /usr
> /dev/sda6183264 9332 1739326% /var
> none 507394 2 5073921% /sys/fs/cgroup
>
>
> Roelof
>
What about
oint, this is something well outside of a
package manager's jurisdiction. It's up to the mirror to say what's
available.
Another thing to look at is if there are any proxy/caching servers
involved that may be serving old versions of the indexes.
> Just a thought...
>
> Ri
ere, but it's worth a
try. We know that in this case, testing/Jessie doesn't work, so perhaps
try a Wheezy install with updated glibc that's only used to run Viber?
Seriously though, I don't think it's worth the effort. Especially since
their support section doesn't a
spare room in it as the older mbr.
Creating a small bios_grub partition gives some space for grub to
install parts of itself.
You need to create a small (recommend 1MB) partition for bios_grub, then
the rest of the drive can be a linux raid partition.
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erred SFTP server, that allows
> chrooting WITH group "w" access
>
Wish I could help with that, but I've only ever used openssh's
implementation, and without chrooting for that matter.
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-x. The executable bit, like setuid/setgid, is
interpreted by the shell.
In that situation, it only matters that the process owner can read the
file.
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cript to change the permissions to www-data for the
update/upgrades, than another to change them back (usually to root)
afterwards. Minor inconvenience, but still way easier than manual
upgrades. :)
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chmod 4644 PermTest-2.sh
chmod: changing permissions of ‘PermTest-2.sh’: Operation not permitted
paul@Serenity:~$ ls -alh PermTest-*
-rwSr--r-- 1 paul paul 0 Dec 24 03:32 PermTest-1.sh
-rwxrwxrwx 1 root paul 0 Dec 24 03:32 PermTest-2.sh
Executables run with the permissions of the user running it,
uot;single" ;).
>
> The "single" kernel cmdline option would never launch GDM.
>
I believe that was his point, and the reason for the smiley ;).
Most would say preventing something from happening is a form of
affecting it.
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On 12/12/2013 03:36 AM, Ralf Mardorf wrote:
> On Thu, 2013-12-12 at 03:29 -0500, PaulNM wrote:
>> All Microsoft 32-bit consumer OS's are limited to 4GB RAM, if not
>> less.
>
> IIRC 3.75 GiB, we already made the mistake and used the term GB instead
> of GiB ;).
>
Check this:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/windows/desktop/aa366778(v=vs.85).aspx
It's also thoroughly documented elsewhere. as well.
All Microsoft 32-bit consumer OS's are limited to 4GB RAM, if not less.
Some of their 32-bit server OS's are also limited to 4GB, though som
I'm pretty sure the only sensible case to disabling it would be in
embedded installs where every kilobyte matters.
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Archi
from the Pentium Pro and up support PAE, and thus 64GB of RAM. Microsoft
decided not to support that on the 32-bit versions of their consumer
operating systems, but there's no technical reason preventing a 32-bit
OS from using more than 4GB. (I mention MS because that's where most
people I
.
>
> *Let's keep trying.
> *
> *
Did you do an "apt-get update"? Adding the line tells apt about new
repositories, but apt won't know what packages are available in them
until it downloads their indexes. That's what update does.
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ested), "exit" should quit that and leave you running in the parent
zsh shell. Otherwise it should log you out. At least this way we could
narrow down where the problem is happening.
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n means globally match anything
except a dash. I'm a little weak on sed (and awk), so I might be a
little off on the specifics. I'm sure others will correct/elaborate for
me. :)
- PaulNM
>
>
> Alex
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On 11/09/2013 04:48 PM, Gary Dale wrote:
> On 09/11/13 04:05 PM, PaulNM wrote:
>> Hi Folks,
>>
>> I've been dealing with a frustratingly vexing issue for a while,
>> and am
>> at a loss on where to go next.
>>
>> Basically, We hav
7;ve checked /boot/grub/grub.cfg. The auto-generated file does
contain all the insmod lines for raid, raid6rec,mdraid1x, lvm, a bunch
of part_gpt, and ext2.
Love to hear any ideas, no matter how far-fetched.
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To clarify, I was talking about my experiences with multiple other imap
accounts. I do have a yahoo account that I don't really use, but it is pop3.
PaulNM
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atically apply filters to new messages. Any messages I read
through my phone and/or webmail will not be filtered automatically. I
need to run filters to do that.
snip
> Thank a lot,
>
> Nicolas
>
Thanks for the filter shortcut, I've been meaning to look that up.
PaulN
amount of
traffic since there are many people worldwide seeding them. This is
especially true immediately after a release.
An old PII or PIII era machine with 128 MB or more should be plenty to
handle the load. Either use smoothwall, or something else like the x86
version of openwrt.
PaulNM
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>
> The problem is in knowing whether a particular CPU is compatible with
> the 64 bit version of the operating system, or whether it requires the
> 32 bit version.
>
> For example, the Pentium 4, from memory, is a 64 bit CPU, but is
> incompatible with the 64 bit version of De
Arthur Machlas wrote:
On Mon, Sep 20, 2010 at 12:18 PM, Scott Ferguson
wrote:
On 20/09/10 10:15, Jerry Stuckle wrote:
This is a new install of Lenny on Windows 7 Virtual PC. I basically
Perhaps some of the links off this link might be useful
http://blogs.msdn.com/search/SearchResults.aspx?q
Jari Fredriksson wrote:
On 6.8.2010 18:35, PaulNM wrote:
If you'll be running the VM only when logged in, virtualbox is
definitely preferred. If you need to run headless servers that start
automatically on bootup, qemu is the way to go.
I use VirtualBox just like you described, but
ed in, virtualbox is
definitely preferred. If you need to run headless servers that start
automatically on bootup, qemu is the way to go.
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Hope this helps,
PaulNM
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n the remark "No space left" and the difference
between records in and records out?
Thanks,... Peter E.
Try it again without the bs=36k.
I know dd will pad zeros to it so the last block is a full 36K. This is
probably making the disk image too big.
PaulNM
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Eduardo M KALINOWSKI wrote:
[How to count words in a text file?]
wc -w
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Celejar wrote:
For your specific problem, why not just mount a different disk /
partition onto /opt?
Celejar
That's a good idea. To the OP, if you don't have any spare partition,
but have room in /usr, you could create a sparse file. Format and
loopback mount it to /opt.
Paul
, can this setting be changed? :-?
edit /etc/default/rcS
UTC=yes for utc, no for local
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Preston Boyington wrote:
I think there is some confusion.
I don't know of any reason to use both 'su' and 'sudo' in a command.
either you would 'su' to root or you would 'sudo' to run a singular command.
'su' is to change into superuser (root) until you exit.
'sudo' is to temporarily be superus
On Fri, 2009-10-23 at 11:05 -0500, Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. wrote:
> On Friday 23 October 2009 09:23:31 PaulNM wrote:
> > The problem is the date info sometimes switches from the time of day to
> > the year or the other way around. This messes up the diff, so it shows
snip
&
> drwxrwxrwx 1 0 Apr 20 2009 Recipes
I do need the time/date info, so having it removed isn't a solution in
this case.
Thanks for any suggestions.
PaulNM
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more like a newline / line carriage issue. Use
dos2unix/unix2dos on text files when moving to/from Windows and Linux.
Basicly dos doesn't recognize the newline characters.
PaulNM
24/7) a qemu based vm of freenas
configured to use 96MB.
Back when this machine was still an etch install, it had 512MB, but we
had to take out one stick to put it in my other system, an XP box with
"only" 256MB at the time. It still runs slower than the Debian box. :)
PaulNM
ot the will to believe, but the will to find out,
> which is the exact opposite. --Bertrand Russell
>
>
Which doesn't return shell builtins.
For example:
$ which test
/usr/bin/test
But if you actually run test (in bash at least), it's the shell's built
in version, not /usr/bin/test.
PaulNM
//archives.likewisesoftware.com/likewise-open/src/
you can get a more recent version than what is used in the article.
Aparently it can set things up with just
"domainjoin-cli join AD_REALM ADMIN_ACCOUNT"
which is pretty much how it is in XP.
HTH,
PaulNM
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a plain stupid (programming) practice, so I doubt you'll run into
any issues with removing the fstab entry, and so on.
3) Go back to ignoring it.
I'm going to investigate #1 first as this is something that I think
is left over from years ago, but maybe you or someone
| grep jack" since I'm not sure if
lsof works on directories alone.
Also, are you sure /tmp/jack is empty? Did you "ls -a" ?
Thanks in advance,
Mark
HTH,
PaulNM
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|
Pentium fdiv bug? |
Regards,
Chris
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ge -C colorcvs the cvs package
didn't show up in the emerge -uDNp world list.
For future reference, emerge has a --tree (-t) option to show what
packages are pulling in others.
PaulNM
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lied to tells you exactly how to do that.
http://www.gentoo.org/main/en/lists.xml
Tenth line of text:
To unsubscribe from a list, send an empty email to:
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
So send an empty email to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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would not be shown in most threaded email clients.
It is annoying, though.
Does anyone know what happened? I saw some theories, but no hard "This
happened..." posts.
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x27;t produce enough mail to make me want to make a filter instead of
just moving the messages manually.
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e are installed sun-jdk-1.6.0.06 and sun-jdk-1.4.2.17
(required by eclipse-sdk-3.2), but not sun-jdk-1.5.0.15.
Thanks,
Marco.
It's not saying what you think. Glsa-check wants to update java by
downgrading it. See bug http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=222861
PaulNM
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messages
"infect" responses in the thread, but I've also found cases where it
doesn't, or a message in the thread reverts to normal appearance.
Any ideas, because I'm completely lost on this one. Google searches
just bring up stuff on html messages or cha
losetup won't work for that
Read the link again, yes it will. Specifically he needs the offset option.
PaulNM
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see:
http://www.nabble.com/%22loopback-mount%22-hard-drive-image-created-with-dd--td14945355.html
PaulNM
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factor correction. Luckily for my Silencer 750 Quad
according to the manufacturer due to the short time in which the UPS is
in use it is not an issue.
-Arthur
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, with 1.5.4 being the latest stable (x86 and amd64) version.
(app-emulation/virtualbox-additions is in the tree)
Note two things though:
1: Everything I suggested refers to inside the guest OS, and
2: my info is from version 1.5.4_OSE.
It's possible the vboxadd-client script is different i
In any case, they should all show up with -d.
PaulNM
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e shows the only instances of dnspython/xcursorgen/yasm in the
entire output (checked with grep).
The "upgraders" (dnspython, xcursorgen, yasm) are not in world, nor is
xvid. The three packages (bittorrent, xcursor-themes, mplayer) at the
top of the trees are in world.
Two of the three are direct dependencies of packages in world, so they
should show as upgradeable even without --deep.
What am I missing/doing wrong?
PaulNM
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ould be used, suitably modified, to
> chroot from my x86_64 bit distro to my x86 distro. Will it mess up one
> or the other?
>
> Tony
>
You should be fine as long as you ignore the installation steps. Just
make sure you have the proper options in the 64 bit kernel and use the
prop
every machine.
PaulNM
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as I can
tell should work. No firewalls are in place for testing, distccd port is
open on all three (confirmed with nmap), and I'm out of ideas on where
to look for problems.
Any help or suggestions would be appreciated.
PaulNM
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Is there a howto for Japanese support in Gentoo?
>
>
>
How about
http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Enabling_Japanese
?
PaulNM
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er tried Ratpoison, but on my lower-power systems I use xfce,
which isn't too bad. If I want to really minimize resource usage I go
with Windowmaker.
Thanks in advance,
Vlad
HTH,
PaulNM
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eople with dual core systems elsewhere, indicating it drastically
speed up some emerges.
So this leaves me with several possibilities. There's -j3 (current
setting), -j5, -j (no limit), -j9, or some other random number. Any
suggestions/warnings/links would be appreciated.
Thanks,
PaulNM
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t helps. In my case there was a gentoo-sources update at the same
time, so I just let that build and restarted.
> 4499 root 18 0 132m 35m 416 R 1.5 60.2 8:41.94 cc1
According to this cc1 is only using 1.5% of cpu, and about 60% of ram.
What does "free" give you, and doe
. If emerge still fails, I'd try adding them to the host file with
whatever ip you get from pinging as a workaround.
PaulNM
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gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
ve problem.
HTH,
PaulNM
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
little better than most since you are doing daily syncs and
not hourly or 4x a day, but do you have any idea how many people set up
syncs at midnight?
Use a daemon, it'll do a better job keeping your system in sync and be
much nicer on all the ntp servers you're syncing again
ning. Is it possible to tell the kernel to
re-run init, and how?
PaulNM
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
old version of python is still on your system from
when there was an ebuild for it. I'd suggest "emerge -p --depclean" to
see if it would remove it.
PaulNM
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
spins down the disks. It may or
may not turn off some hardware like the net card. Ram is still powered
and the machine is still on. Suspend to RAM as I understand it is much
deeper, ram and cpu are just about all that is powered up.
PaulNM
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gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Hi all,
I've come across a weird issue. The other day I decided that it's been
a while since I've had a good read/write badblocks run through fsck.ext3
on all my partitions.
The problem is with /dev/hdb1 , normally mounted on my Gentoo system as
/olddeb since it's a small install of Debian
nce the
install, despite several kernel upgrades.
HTH,
PaulNM
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
ge cdrecord, or even k3b, but I'd try
the other things first.
PaulNM
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
t.
>
> 3. There is far more documentation around for MythTV, I struggle to find good
> docs for VDR.
>
Hey all,
The latest Gentoo Weekly Newsletter:
http://www.gentoo.org/news/en/gwn/20060717-newsletter.xml
Has info about "The Gentoo Video Disk Recorder (VDR) project", with a link:
http://www.gentoo.org/proj/en/desktop/video/vdr/
The second link lists an irc channel as well.
HTH,
PaulNM
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
the crap from previous KDE versions, etc., and it worked
> fine.
I agree, I had issues with getting X setup on a new machine, and thought
that was the problem (refcount). The issue was fixed, and X works, but
I still get that error. I even get that message on my Debian Etch machine!
I'd
st few
letters. If more than one file/directory matches, it'll show you all the
matching examples.
PaulNM
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