2012/9/26 Ionut Biru :
> this is the last version i'm building.
>
> i'll move this into aur because nobody wants to maintain it.
>
Seamonkey is out of date again. Is there still nobody who wants to maintain
it?
On Sat, Oct 20, 2012 at 10:21:53AM +0200, Rodrigo Rivas wrote:
On Sat, Oct 20, 2012 at 3:01 AM, Janna M. wrote:
I just switched to systemd, and was poking around a bit when I noticed
many new entries in /etc/mtab:
...
Note that recent systemd versions include a link to the documentation of
Andreas Radke a écrit:
> And I've received a report about broken -nv driver pkg not working with
> 1.13.
This one just needs a rebuild for the new abi.
It complains about xf86PciInfo.h being deprecated during compilation,
but seems to work nonetheless.
--- /var/abs/extra/xf86-video-nv/PKGBUILD
Hi,
Am 20.10.2012 14:46, schrieb Marko Hauptvogel:
> If you are using systemd, this [0] might solve the issue (especially the
> part above the note). You might need to make systemd ignore acpi events.
Ok, thanks for the pointer. I have read about it when I was configuring
systemd, but have forgot
Take a look at this post [1] which tells you to downgrade certain
packages. Then add the packages to the IgnorePkg line in /etc/pacman.conf
until the problem is solved.
[1]: https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?pid=1175097#p1175097
Kind Regards,
-Mathew Davies.
On 20 October 2012 13:36, Nelso
On Sat, Oct 20, 2012 at 1:36 PM, Nelson Marambio wrote:
> Hi, folks,
>
> until a few days ago running GNOME I could use the special keys on my
> laptop, e.g. for volume up/down. Now nothing happens when I press one of
> these keys. Strange enough, it seems like only the volume up/down keys have
>
Am Samstag, den 20.10.2012, 14:36 +0200 schrieb Nelson Marambio:
> Hi, folks,
>
> until a few days ago running GNOME I could use the special keys on my
> laptop, e.g. for volume up/down. Now nothing happens when I press one of
> these keys. Strange enough, it seems like only the volume up/down k
On Sat, Oct 20, 2012 at 2:36 PM, Nelson Marambio wrote:
> Hi, folks,
>
> until a few days ago running GNOME I could use the special keys on my
> laptop, e.g. for volume up/down. Now nothing happens when I press one of
> these keys. Strange enough, it seems like only the volume up/down keys have
>
On 10/13/2012 09:17 PM, Genes MailLists wrote:
With recent kernels & udev + initscripts I started having warm boot
problems with one of my desktops. Fully updated testing repo (3.6.2).
Cold boot works fine.
The boot console looks very similar to these:
https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic
Am 20.10.2012 03:01, schrieb Janna M.:
> I just switched to systemd, and was poking around a bit when I noticed
> many new entries in /etc/mtab:
mtab is not a regular file anymore, but a symlink to /proc/self/mounts.
Systemd mounts many new virtual file systems that we didn't use with
initscripts.
Hi, folks,
until a few days ago running GNOME I could use the special keys on my
laptop, e.g. for volume up/down. Now nothing happens when I press one of
these keys. Strange enough, it seems like only the volume up/down keys
have quit their work.
Because they did their job out of the box I d
If you are using systemd, this [0] might solve the issue (especially the
part above the note). You might need to make systemd ignore acpi events.
[0]
https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Systemd#ACPI_Power_Management_with_systemd
--
Greetz
On 20.10.2012 14:13, Karol Babioch wrote:
> Hi,
>
> sin
Hi,
since a few weeks my machines are going to an immediate suspend after
the wake-up of another suspend. So basically I have to wake-up my
machines twice after a suspend. One of my machine even reboots randomly
after the wake-up, which renders the suspend functionality quite useless.
Now origina
On Sat, Oct 20, 2012 at 3:01 AM, Janna M. wrote:
> I just switched to systemd, and was poking around a bit when I noticed
> many new entries in /etc/mtab:
>
> ...
> securityfs /sys/kernel/security securityfs rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,**relatime
> 0 0
> tmpfs /sys/fs/cgroup tmpfs rw,nosuid,nodev,noex
On 20/10/12 00:16, Rodrigo Rivas wrote:
On Fri, Oct 19, 2012 at 8:16 AM, Robbie Smith wrote:
I've been having troubles mounting an external USB HDD to two of the three
USB ports on my laptop. dmesg reports a timeout connecting to the device;
plugging in other devices to the same ports works fi
I just switched to systemd, and was poking around a bit when I noticed
many new entries in /etc/mtab:
...
securityfs /sys/kernel/security securityfs rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,relatime 0 0
tmpfs /sys/fs/cgroup tmpfs rw,nosuid,nodev,noexec,mode=755 0 0
cgroup /sys/fs/cgroup/systemd cgroup
rw,nosuid,no
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