too much trouble for
maintainers to remove FDL documents. I had time to file this
bug, so it's just a matter now of whether the ftpmasters have
time to remove the package.
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Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> One thing I do know is that traditional apps like df (and anything
> that uses stat(), I guess) don't know about /.dev, and so return
> false information:
>
> $ df
> Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
> /dev/hda39843
Thiemo Seufer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Unacknowledged NMU for > one year, either update or remove:
>
>Ben Pfaff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> gccchecker Build-Depends: gcc-2.95
I recently filed a request to have this package removed. It is
not maintained
nd dangerous, as it is underquoted:
AC_CHECK_HEADER(stdio.h,
AC_DEFINE(HAVE_STDIO_H),
AC_MSG_ERROR([Sorry, can't do anything for you]))
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Steve Greenland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 12-Mar-06, 04:22 (CST), Bastian Blank <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> On Sat, Mar 11, 2006 at 01:43:34AM +0100, Samuel Thibault wrote:
>> > This is a warning and not an error, because using one's own strdup()
>> > function (that would take ints) is p
s -z; -z by itself is not
sufficient as far as I know.)
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e source code? Just a thought... (I know nothing about the
Infocom game language or the binary format.)
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reupload it. This would take a couple hours but
wouldn't be too difficult.
However, I don't see any point to the change. `A foolish consistency
is the hobgoblin of little minds.' --Emerson
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*Note*: New PG
512 Jun 2 02:52 3.3/
[...]
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=?iso-8859-1?Q?Nicol=E1s_Lichtmaier?= <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> One package with misc/general manpages and another with development
> manpages. What do you think?
What would be the relative sizes of each? In theory I'm in favor.
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Ben Pfaff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 1216
roblem, I admit. What does the law say about copyrighted works
> when the copyright holder dies?
I believe that he may have meant this in a figurative sense. If an
author simply disappears from the net and there is no way to get in
contact with him (her) then we're out of luck, because there
=?iso-8859-1?Q?Nicol=E1s_Lichtmaier?= <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 3 Jun 1997, Ben Pfaff wrote:
> > > One package with misc/general manpages and another with development
> > > manpages. What do you think?
> > What would be the relative sizes of each? In the
This is, of course, a problem nearly as serious as that about utmp.
Not really. This is an issue only with `unstable' (as far as I can
tell from the discussion), and `unstable' means exactly
that--everything might not work properly.
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Ben Pfaff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
checker yet, so I don't know. But I assume that the libraries
> without debugging symbols would work.
They would work. But it isn't The Right Thing To Do.
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reason, to double the effort just so someone can avoid
typing `sudo strip /usr/i486-linuxchecker/lib/*'. Checker is for
debugging, and if you really want to do debugging, you need those
symbols.
Like I said before, it's not The Right Thing To Do.
I am happy, however, to find that my packa
work at all under svgalib but beautifully
under X.)
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530-anonymous users for your domain group.
530-
530 User pfaffben access denied
Login failed.
Remote system type is UNIX.
Using binary mode to transfer files.
ftp>
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which would allow
> me to do it?
No, it doesn't. There might exist software to do this, but it's
likely expensive and commercial.
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ave a
lot of trouble doing your customizations, you can edit the source
code, for that matter.
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this new package
installed by default if autoconf was previously installed? Or should
I just use Suggests: on the part of autoconf?
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gt; have any legal recourse ?
I think that you should put the photo under the GNU GPL and distribute
as part of the Debian system. :-)
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Is there anything we can do about this luser sending the same annoying
message to debian-devel repeatedly?
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[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Mark W. Eichin) writes:
> I'd promised to package up emacs 20 at some point (since that would
> save the hassle of going back and forth to sure emacs19 and xemacs*
> would all coexist :-) but I recently joined a new startup company, and
> with some of the other projects eating my
That EAGAIN disturbs me. We're not even close to being out of disk
space; what could be causing this?
EAGAIN doesn't mean out of disk space. The gnu libc manual says this:
- Macro: int EAGAIN
Resource temporarily unavailable; the call might work if you try
again later. The macr
Mark recently informed me that he'd accepted my offer to work on the
new emacs20 package. I just wanted to let everyone know that I was
getting started. I'd like to get something out very soon, but the
holidays may interfere a little.
I had already offered to package up emacs20 mysel
Looking for someone in the Lansing, Michigan, USA area willing to sign my PGP
key.
I am in DeWitt, MI, near Lansing. I'm willing to sign PGP keys. Get
in touch with me for a time and place.
Can someone remind me of what the secure protocol for exchanging keys
is? I don't seem to see it i
JH> Good grief. Well, it's already in non-free, I guess that's good enough
JH> (since stuff in non-free cannot be safely distributed unless you examine
JH> it's license).
But non-free is mirrored on several FTP servers in Germany. And a child
could download the games from a German
Firstly, there is this:
blp:/raid/home/blp$ ftp master
Connected to master.debian.org.
220-This system is for internal use by the Debian developers. It is not
220-open to anonymous FTP. Please use ftp.debian.org or one of its many
220-mirrors.
220-
220 debian FTP server
I noticed in /var/log/kernel.log that there are lots of messages
like the following:
Free blocks count corrupted for block group 17
Apr 7 18:57:49 everybody kernel: EXT2-fs error (device 03:02):
ext2_new_block:
Free blocks count corrupted for block group 17
Apr 7 18:58:22 ever
On Tue, 7 Apr 1998, Ben Pfaff wrote:
> .
>* need mktemp so depend on debianutils >= 1.8
>
I notice several packages in my available file that depend on debianutils.
As
it is essential/required, this doesn't need to be done. This partitcular
pa
Will Debian 2.0 (and on) retain the ability to install from a small
core system off of floppies? I sincerely hope so. Believe it or not,
there are a lot of computers out there where floppies are still the
easiest way to install things. Old laptops, for example. Debian 1.3's
install m
/** msadpcm.c
*
(C) Copyright Microsoft Corp. 1993. All rights reserved.
You have a royalty-free right to use, modify, reproduce and
distribute the Sample Files (and/or any modified version) in
any way you find useful, provided that you agree that
Mi
> What would be the use of looking at a screen full of control characters?
Because when I look at a binary with less, I *mean* to do
that... usually to look for corruption (blocks of nulls) or things
like *short* strings or strings not in the text section, that
"strings" *won't find
2) If yes what would you include in the Makefile?
1. troff -> ps (of course)
2. troff -> what else
You could support troff -> html and so on if you use the troffcvt
package to do most of the work.
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register-window-manager [pathname]
with no arguments, enters interactive mode
with one pathname argument, invokes interactive mode with "add" action
and pathname already done, thus prompting for priority (see below)
Could we instead have a default priority assigned to each window
Branden Robinson writes:
> The long-term plan is:
>
> 1) ship an empty /etc/X11/window-managers with xbase
> 2) mark it as a conffile
> 3) separate twm into its own package
> 4) write /usr/sbin/register-window-manager
I don't think shipping an empty file, and marking
> Could we instead have a default priority assigned to each window
> manager? So postinst scripts would run it like this:
>
>register-window-manager pathname priority
You know, this looks like a job for update-alternatives. Maybe we should
have a /usr/X11R6/bin/sensible-win
> Actually I like that a lot better myself. Could we do it that way
> instead, Branden?
Uh, I've never played with alternatives before. Would someone care to
flesh out this proposal?
Okay, here we go:
/usr/bin/sensible-window-manager (or whatever) is a symlink to one of
the install
So I go to all the trouble of drafting a proposal for
register-window-manager, and even start coding it, and you guys don't want
to use it?
Don't overreact. Marcelo just brought up what may be a valid point.
Does either proposal include support for varying default command-line
options fo
I'll take it as read that there are no objections. How could there
be?
Gadzooks! You know, it's almost May 1, but that's not the same thing
as April 1, not at all. I hope that this is a joke, at any rate it's
not a very funny one. This program is a monstrosity.
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The who info page indicates that who finds its data in /etc/utmp, but I
have no such file and who works ok. The file I do have is /var/run/utmp,
which I can only assume who knows about.
Yes, it does.
Is the info page wrong? Should I submit a bug?
Yes and yes.
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Could anyone tell me why premail is in non-free? I've read the license a
couple of times, and I really don't see anything that would prevent it from=
=20
being in main (or at least contrib). Am I missing something?
I see nothing that would make me object to its inclusion in main.
--
Even XEmacs with Sparcworks integration doesn't do it for me. So
basically I use XEmacs to edit my source and make files, and the command
line to compile. I debug with whatever debugger is best for the platform
I am using that day.
What exactly are your objections to Emacs' compile-mod
Miriam Ruiz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Cycle is a calendar program for women. Given a cycle length or statistics
> for several periods, it can calculate the days until menstruation, the days
> of "safe" sex, the fertile period, and the days to ovulations, and define
> the d.o.b. of a child. It
Ross Burton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Games serve a purpose: they entertain the user. What is the purpose of
> sdate?
The same. If you are not entertained by sdate, then you do not
need to install it.
That said, the following script is probably just as amusing, and
undoubtedly simpler:
#!
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Vincent Zweije) writes:
> On Mon, May 16, 2005 at 12:06:37PM +0200, Bernd Eckenfels wrote:
>
> || In article <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> you wrote:
>
> || {
> ||struct x25_route_struct rt;
> ||struct sockaddr_x25 sx25;
> || ...
> ||memset((char *) &rt, 0, sizeof(struct x2
Oliver Korff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Advancement of the strong chess engine fruit, it is
> even stronger, and will be further developed.
Please work on the phrasing. It doesn't make much sense as
written. Perhaps "Advanced chess engine under active
development.&
Magnus Holmgren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Friday 04 August 2006 09:57, Wouter Verhelst took the opportunity to say:
>> On Fri, Aug 04, 2006 at 08:21:28AM +0200, Magnus Holmgren wrote:
>> > In short, it's a mess. Lots of improvements can be made, to MUAs, MLMs,
>> > as well as MTAs. An RFC s
rce packages based on an installation tarball
> (a la java-package).
How will its output differ from "alien --to-deb --scripts" based
on the VMware .rpm?
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with a subject of
o distinguish between "this is what the language
> says it will do" and "works for me".
Use of gnulib can help with this. It provides a number of useful
abstractions that can help to avoid #ifdefs in some common
situations:
http://savannah.gnu.org/p/gnulib
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Adam Cécile (Le_Vert) <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Description : Nzb downloader and post processor
>
> Python application designed for *nix environments that
> retrieves nzb files and fully processes them. The goal being to
> make getting files from Usenet as hands-free as possible. Once
>
he discretion of Stanford University and
subject to applicable laws.
If we're going to disallow getting developers' debian-private
mail delivered to gmail, then we're going to have to disallow it
getting delivered to Stanford, too, at least if the developer
ever uses the webmail system
conf to
drop the documentation, I added a suffix to the version number.
In retrospect I would have chosen a suffix different from the one
I did choose, but I didn't think then that it was an unethical
thing to do, nor do I think so now. It's confusing and
undesirable, but not, in my
sion compatible of the DFSG.
How about adding a file named, e.g., README.dfsg or
README.changes-from-upstream to the modified .orig.tar.gz version
pointing out what has been done? A version number or a package
name is easy to misinterpret, but adding a file with an
explanation should be unambiguous (altho
Lars Wirzenius <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> A checksum is a number that identifies the contents of a file: if the
> contents change, so does the checksum. If you create a checksum before
> you burn a CD, when you know the files are correct, you can easily
> check the CD at any time: just comp
ible values.
I don't think that "irresponsible" is the word you are looking for.
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Russ Allbery <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Stephen Gran <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>> This one time, at band camp, Thomas Bushnell BSG said:
>
>>> Except, they *are* loaded together.
>
>>> Making "shim" libraries does not change the licensing rules at all,
>>> which for the GPL, apply to the comp
t would helpful to include a sentence explaining what "Beagle"
is and how or why one queries it.
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Ron Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Ben Pfaff wrote:
>> Andrew Mitchell <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
>>
>>> Description : implements a filesystem representing a live
>>> Beagle query
>>>
>>> beaglefs implements a
Martin Michlmayr <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Half of KDE and a number of other applications currently fail to build
> with a message similar to:
>
> | *** YOU'RE USING autoconf (GNU Autoconf) 2.60.
> | *** KDE requires autoconf 2.53 or newer
>
> Before I file bugs on these packages, I wanted to
Thomas Bushnell BSG <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
[updating copyright years]
> I have a handy-dandy emacs lisp frob that will do this automagically
> for you if you like.
I would like this.
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John Hasler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> There could be if you do so in a way that could be construed as an attempt
> to fraudulently extend the life of the copyright.
At the moment it seems doubtful that any current copyright will
ever expire.
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Peter Makholm <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
Russell Coker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> For those of us who attend in multiple countries we could book plane
flights
> together (hopefully get a good deal), play network Quake in the plane, etc.
Then we need a sponsor with a big wallet.
Dale Scheetz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> $ grep -w debhelper override.potato
> debhelper optionaldevel
> hello-debhelper optionaldevel
>
> In the man page, under the -w option, it says that, in order to match, the
> string must be either at the beginning of the line, or pr
Dale Scheetz <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> > > The hyphon at the ned of hello in "hello-debhelper" isn't any of these,
> > > but grep declares it to match anyway! Is this something to do with the
> > > form of my expression?
> >
> > It's preceded by a character that isn't a letter, digit or under
I'd like to give away gradio and troffcvt to someone who is
interested in maintaining them. I am willing to maintain them
both indefinitely, but I do not use them any longer, so they
aren't really anything I'm excited about.
Neither one has any reported bugs. They have not yet been
converted to
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Ruud de Rooij) writes:
> [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Ben Pfaff) writes:
>
> > gradio is a simple program suitable for a newbie maintainer,
> > though I suppose we don't have any newbie maintainers given that
> > we don't have any new maintainers.
"A. M. Varon" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Could we have a potato mailing lists?
That's part of what debian-devel *is* for. Why would we want another
list for it?
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"michael d. ivey" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> I started making personal debs of the everybuddy CVS snapshots because EB
> releases tend to lag pretty far behind the code in CVS. I called my
> package ebsnap, and made it conflict with everybuddy. I put it on my
> site, and that was that.
>
> N
Brian Almeida <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Mozilla was relicensed under the GPL...
Not quite, as I understand it: Mozilla is *in process* of being
relicensed under GPL. All contributors have to be contacted to
verify agreement first.
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Andrew Suffield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> You could have written this with equal validity:
> long int typedef long int64_t;
Not a good idea, though, because C99 says this:
6.11.5 Storage-class specifiers
1The placement of a storage-class specifier other than at the
beginning o
David Moreno Garza <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Criawips aims to become a full featured presentation application
> that offers the perfect platform both for small presentations
> used to explain a few things to other people and for big
> presentations used for commercial presentations.
>
> Thu
Brian May <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is it time to think about removing kerberos4kth from the archive
> anyway?
Stanford still uses Kerberos 4. Would removing kerberos4kth be
tantamount to dropping Kerberos 4 support? When I've tried to
use Debian's other implementations of Kerberos in the p
KDC to a krb5 KDC is probably necessary.
I don't see how that will help users who have no control over the
KDC that they use.
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bnoxious?
I think it's a reasonable thing to do. It is what I do.
Anyone have a suggestion about what to do when the maintainer
can't reproduce it and the reporter can only reproduce it on one
of his machines? I'm kind of stymied on #329333 for Autoconf.
No idea what the problem
ws any
one of them to satisfy the dependency, but of course this is no
guarantee that this is the correct version for the package being
autoreconf'd.
I would appreciate some guidance on this issue from debian-devel.
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this a "possible bashism". It's not a
bashism (at most, it's an XSI-ism) and it's so pervasively
supported that even Autoconf uses it.
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that even posh supports.
Is there a good reason that we do not in general accept XSI
extensions? The ones that I've noticed while reading SUSv3 are
features that I expect a normal Unix system to have.
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SUSv3 does not say that numeric signal numbers
are interpreted in a system-specific way. It is very specific
that numeric 1 is SIGHUP, 2 is SIGINT, 3 is SIGQUIT, 6 is
SIGABRT, 9 is SIGKILL, 14 is SIGALRM, and 15 is SIGTERM:
http://www.opengroup.org/onlinepubs/009695399/utilities/trap.ht
o POSIX doesn't allow you to use just any numbers. It specifically lets
>> you use numbers for HUP, INT, QUIT, ABRT, KILL, ALRM, and TERM and nothing
>> else. I think that's fairly portable.
>>
>
> So should I only ignore those specifying a signal number in the 1-15
Luciano Bello <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Description : pure-Python library built as a PDF toolkit
Very odd phrasing. Sounds backward: "PDF toolkit built as a
pure-Python library" makes more sense to me.
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ependent of the capabilities of
the machine downloading it.
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eel free to file a bug
against the autoconf package. I do my best to fix important
problems as soon as I can. It's easy in a case like this where
an upstream fix has already been committed.
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Lucas Nussbaum <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> ddpo-by-mail sends monthly emails (one per maintainer), containing a
> list of issues in the package that person maintain:
How long has this been going on? I don't recall receiving any of
these mails, and I don't recall unsubsc
GNU `diff' can produce this format and only GNU
`patch' can automatically apply diffs in this format. For proper
operation, `patch' typically needs at least two lines of context.
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Ryan Niebur writes:
> This is a sparc only FTBFS, and none of us own a sparc machine. Does
> anybody have a spare one they could let me (or somebody else in the
> Perl group) ssh into to debug it?
http://db.debian.org/machines.cgi lists a number of Debian sparc
machines.
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Ryan Niebur writes:
> On Tue, Sep 01, 2009 at 07:53:26PM -0700, Ben Pfaff wrote:
>> Ryan Niebur writes:
>>
>> > This is a sparc only FTBFS, and none of us own a sparc machine. Does
>> > anybody have a spare one they could let me (or somebody else in the
>
Francesco Paolo Lovergine writes:
> Description : The C++ library for supporting OGC KML 2.2 standard
>
> This is a Google's library for use with applications that want to
> parse, generate and operate on KML. It is an implementation of the OGC
> KML 2.2 standard. It is written in C++
he only ballot I recall containing
non-ASCII characters, which could be the cause.
So then I sent in a signed and encrypted ballot. This caused the
whole ballot to be base64-encoded. Presumably this sidestepped
the quoted-printable problem, because it was accepted.
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Ben Pfaff
http://benpfaff.o
"lambda (sbrice)" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Description : A productive numeric working space
>
> promethee is an all-inclusive education project (called numeric
> working space) which support school managing and
What is a numeric working space? You don't say, and the URL that
you poin
package maintainer to implement a pair of build-time options.
The most obvious trouble I can see with it is packages that
invoke tools through absolute paths or reset $PATH themselves.
(I haven't followed previous discussion of these options. If
this approach has already been considered and
ows no hits at all.
Ditto for TCL_INCLUDE_SPEC.
What do you expect to set TK_PREFIX and TCL_INCLUDE_SPEC?
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Ben Pfaff
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"Sergei Golovan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On 6/27/07, Ben Pfaff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> The puzzling thing to me about this situation is what is expected
>> to set TK_PREFIX. "grep TK_PREFIX" in the wordnet directory
>> shows TK_
into why. Quite possibly there's another missing
substitution.
(By the way, it also appears that
AC_LANGINFO_CODESET
in configure.ac should actually be
AM_LANGINFO_CODESET
although I'm not 100% certain.)
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ons.
Please state briefly what a TAP is somewhere in the description.
(To me, a TAP is a virtual Ethernet device, but I think that that
is not what is meant here.)
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"Steve M. Robbins" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> Is there a canonical list of symbols defined by each of the
> Debian architectures, e.g. do I test for Sparc using
> __sparc or __sparc__ ? How about m68k, hppa, etc?
It's not Debian-specific, but the website at
http://predef.sourceforge.
Torsten Werner writes:
> * Package name: surefire
> Version : 2.4.3
> Upstream Author : Apache Software Foundation
> * URL : http://maven.apache.org/surefire/
> * License : Apache-2.0
> Programming Lang: Java
> Description : Surefire test framework for
o my PC everything is
> OK and I can see the outputs in the terminal.
> When I disconnect the serial cable my Linux get stuck. Even my telnet
> connection doesnt responds.
My guess is that syslogd is blocking on a write to the serial
port, and other software is blocking on sending a log mes
time is only used in interactive shells, so this might not be
> that important. IMHO it could be relegated to optional.
I use "time" in benchmarking scripts.
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Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> On Thu, 06 Dec 2007 13:34:10 -0800, Ben Pfaff <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
>
>> I use "time" in benchmarking scripts.
>
> I do not find the built in time to be a substitute for the good
> old f
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