* Michael Orlitzky:
> The eclass sets S=$WORKDIR at first because it creates a separate
> source tree for each version of ruby that will be built for. [...]
Hm. While that sounds useful for "full Ruby" ebuilds, I don't see how to
circumvent the impact for the particular ebuild I am trying to exte
Hello Michael. Long time no read. ;-)
> I think the best way to support that in a package is to declare which
> ruby versions are supported with USE_RUBY and ruby-ng.eclass.
I tried what you suggested. However, inheriting from ruby-ng.eclass
introduces an odd problem: For some reason unknown to m
I need to install Ruby bindings (something.so) during an ebuild,
specifically into the /usr/lib64/ruby/vendor_ruby/3.0.0/x86_64-linux
directory. I scanned existing ebuilds for an example, but have not yet
found one. The developer manual [1] mentions newlib.so, but that
function appears to inject "/
* Raphael Mejias Dias:
> I've read this question and now I'm curious about how much it would
> cost to compile a Gentoo system into cloud. Anyone know this?
The cheapest Gentoo VMs of mine are based on Hetzner's CX11 [1] which
cost 3,49 EUR per month (plus VAT, but no setup fees). Gentoo can be
i
* tastytea:
> Another solution would be to register an inexpensive domain name and
> use that. 😊
Quite so. For example, Hetzner (no affiliation) charges 3,36 EUR per
year for a .de Domain. An officially registered domain saves a lot of
hassle.
-Ralph
* Frank Steinmetzger:
> I am looking for an as-simple-as-possible setup for local mail
> delivery.
See http://www.postfix.org/STANDARD_CONFIGURATION_README.html as a
starting point. Using Postfix for the purposes you described is an
easy-to-setup, robust option which can (but does not have to) gr
* caveman رَجُلُ الْكَهْفِ 穴居人:
> why doesn't portage have foot?
Probably because nobody has yet created an ebuild for it? Feel free to
put in the necessary work and provide one yourself.
-Ralph
* Jack:
> I had originally installed with -test, but just re-emerged with "test"
> and it emerged with no problems, although I'll have to check the log
> to see if it did actually run the tests.
I just tried it myself. I created flask-migrate-3.0.1-r2.ebuild in an
overlay, using RDEPEND=">=dev-py
* Jack:
> It seems that flask-migrate was recently upgraded from 3.0.0 to 3.0.1,
> but it's DEPEND for flask was changed from >=flask-0.9 to https://bugs.gentoo.org/801670
-Ralph
* the...@sys-concept.com:
> I've always used postifx but I want to try sendmail this time.
> And I have a hard time finding gentoo howto.
Well, configuration-wise, you are saying "I've always enjoyed a soothing
massage, but I want to try being dragged over cobblestone pavement while
simultaneousl
* n952...@web.de:
> I confess, I never really read the fine print to the end because it
> never occurred to me that python would be so gratuitously
> authoritarian as that.
Now look at you. Hiding behind an anonymous freemail address, not paying
attention (for years), whining that the makers of a
* Grant Edwards:
> Pricing is based on what people are willing to pay. People are willing
> to pay extra for a static IPv6 address, therefore static IPv6
> addresses cost extra.
Somewhere, and some people. I'd be interested to hear from users who
still need to pay extra for IPv6. Here in Germany
* antli...@youngman.org.uk:
> An ISP will then be allocated the next 16 bits, giving them a 32-bit
> address space to allocate to their customers - each ISP will have an
> address space the size of IPv4?!
ISPs can ask for several address spaces, each of which had a much,
*much* larger address spa
* Daniel Frey:
> You just pointed out the ambiguity.
I did no such thing, and there is no ambiguity. There is only the
failure to specify a package's identifier ("atom").
> Emerging a package solely by its name worked 99.9% of the time before
> this change.
Perhaps for the packages you used; I
* Daniel Frey:
> I went to emerge mythtv (I think) and now it says it's an ambiguous
> requests with *both* the group and user of the same name.
You need to emerge "media-tv/mythtv", not just "mythtv". Nothing
ambiguous about it.
Further reading: https://www.gentoo.org/glep/glep-0081.html
-Ralp
* con...@ftml.net:
> Still you have to manually configure things. And I know that Gentoo is
> about choice, but configuring kernel is hard.
It may be hard for you personally, but it is not hard for everyone, so I
object to the generalisation. You can choose between learning more about
the Linux k
* Stefan G. Weichinger:
> Maybe I look into mongodb as well, for example I found this small
> howto: https://www.fluentd.org/guides/recipes/maillog-mongodb
That looks unnecessarily complicated to me. While you can of course move
data from an existing log file into MongoDB, I find configuring sysl
* Petric Frank:
> But normal people aren't professional actors. I thought i could be
> a technical solution. Making life easier in this corona-days with
> increasing video conferences.
Normal people just have to adapt to a worldwide pandemic and be damn
grateful for existing video conferencing so
* Stefan G. Weichinger:
> My goal:
>
> collect logs of postfix, nginx into the docker-containers running ES,
> Kibana .. and learn my way from there.
If you are not dead-set on Elasticsearch et al, I propose considering
MongoDB as an alternative.
There are syslog Modules that allow logging into
* Petric Frank:
> Problem: Usually the camera is outside of the screen. The user normally looks
> at the screen. As result the communication partner(s) see him not looking at
> the camera.
It may be bothering you, but that's not a problem in any real life
sense. People can either live with it, kn
* ai...@aisha.cc:
> I'm not too sure that running it as a mail server is impossible.
I never wrote that it is impossible, only that "I would not use it as an
Internet-facing production Mailserver". That's a huge difference. You
are free to do as you wish, but I still consider it an unsuitable rol
* james:
> I'm thinking about setting up a pair of Rasp-Pi-4 as DNS servers with
> 4GB of ram. Is that enough ram for a DNS server?
For running the Nameservers, yes. Compiling Gentoo packages will likely
put your SD-Card under stress, but that's just how it goes. My Model B
Rev 2 of 2015 runs dns
* Peter Humphrey:
> My IPv6 address is indeed static.
Nice. In that case, you can of course use your router's global scope
address in /etc/hosts or DNS.
> The only IPv6 details my router shows are the LAN and WAN addresses,
> and 'ip -6 route show' on this host, although it lists six addresses
>
* Ian Zimmerman:
> [OpenWrt] needs one crucial bit of configuration that's kind of hidden
> (can't be done via the GUI), to let the router advertisements through.
Glad to hear that you got things working. You have probably already
filed a GUI enhancement request. ;-)
-Ralph
* gentoo-u...@c-14.de:
> The easiest option is if you're using stateful DHCPv6. In this case
> you just need to set up your dhcp server to notify your dns server of
> any new leases.
That's what you consider "the easiest option"? ;-)
I usually ask the following of people starting with IPv6: Do y
* Peter Humphrey:
> $ ping6 vdsl
> ping: vdsl: No address associated with hostname
The outcome of ping depends on /etc/resolv.conf and /etc/hosts, and even
on the OS of the IPv6 nodes involved. Apple devices will be available as
somename.local, with "somename" being what the user configured as th
* Nuno Silva:
> Which version of netifrc do you have? Could this be bug 642774[1]?
Possibly. Similar issues have been reported for a while, see for example
https://bugs.gentoo.org/609682 . Since I only stop network interfaces
manually once in a blue moon, I have shrugged it off so far.
-Ralph
* Ralph Seichter:
> I just randomly picked [1] as a generator service
[1] being https://cd34.com/rfc4193/ . I need more sleep, I really do.
-Ralph
* Mick:
> I have net-libs/libndp installed, but no ndp command ... where is it
> hiding?
Oh, I forgot that "ndp" is BSD Unix specific. On Gentoo, you can use
sys-apps/iproute2 tools, e.g. "ip -6 neigh" to inspect the kernel's
neighbour table.
> PS. Thanks for your posts and links, at some point
* Walter Dnes:
> Assume the following [...]
Pretty close. If you *really* want to set things up manually, I suggest
using ULA as per https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4193 . I just randomly
picked [1] as a generator service, entered a fictuous MAC address (you
should use one of your own), and clicke
* Walter Dnes:
> Look Ma, we have a form of IPV6 NAT (Ducks back into foxhole before
> incoming artillery barrage from IPV6 purists).
Hehe. ;-) That's both provocative and wrong. An IPv6 router can, at a
glance, decide if a packet needs to be handled locally or pushed out. No
need for mangling/re
* Walter Dnes:
> I prefer man pages to rambling Youtube videos.
As you wish: man ndp ;-)
> given that SLAAC and DHCPV6 assign random addresses how do I
> accomplish the equivalant of "scp i660:."
The world according to 'argon', a MacBook Pro I am using right now:
argon $ ndp -a
Neighbor
* Ian Zimmerman:
> The first reason [...] was that my router does _not_ assign fe80::1 to
> itself, but rather some other arbitrary address in the fe80 prefix
I found an article[1] that I first read years ago. "One method to make
things easier is to manually assign the link-local address to the
u
* Walter Dnes:
> How would this be accomplished under IPV6?
You may find https://youtu.be/A3LFt7CHpgs helpful. It is a video about
Neighbor Discovery Protocol (NDP), provided by RIPE NCC.
-Ralph
* Ian Zimmerman:
> What am I missing?
I can't really tell, based on what you posted. Is there an IPv6 Router
Advertisment service running, either on your router or another machine
in your local network?
Here is some data from the Gentoo machine I am currently working on. It
is hosted in a data
* Ian Zimmerman:
> But what about connecting to the outside world? For that, the
> link-local address doesn't work.
It does work, actually. fe80::1 is a perfectly valid way to specify the
default gateway. Remember that NICs have several IPv6 addresses with
different scopes.
> No configuration ne
* Ian Zimmerman:
> So, how to configure IPv6 on an end user gentoo box (not a router)?
This depends on how clever your existing router is. If it provides
Router Advertisement, like the FRITZ!Box 7xxx line does, IPv6 clients
should be configured automatically. As an alternative, you can run
net-mi
* Daniel Frey:
> I have exactly one choice for an ISP and I need a static IP. The ISP
> disables ipv6 for some reason when you have a static IP.
Like I said, the availability of "decent" ISPs varies by location, and
there are of course locations where one is basically screwed when it
comes to IPv
* Adam Carter:
> when i enable v6, all my internal hosts become directly routable from
> the Internet via the /56 my ISP assigns me.
Even pretty anemic hardware can handle the demands of an IPv6 firewall,
for example using iptables/nftables. The demands of IPV6-related
processing should actually
* Daniel Frey:
> Can't do anything, ipv6 is completely disabled (removed from kernel
> config.)
A search for "linux kernel enable ipv6" just returned more than 1.7
million results.
> Current ISP will not issue any ipv6 if an ipv4 static is required.
My current ISP offers native IPv6 and has bee
https://www.ripe.net/ripe/mail/archives/ripe-list/2019-November/001712.html
This does not come as a surprise, of course, but I consider it a good
point in time to pause and ask oneself what each individual can do to
move further towards IPv6. The end is neigh(ish).
-Ralph
* Michael Orlitzky:
> Shh, this is how we trick people into becoming proxy maintainers and
> eventually Gentoo developers.
And don't I know it. ;-)
-Ralph
* Michael Orlitzky:
> You'll have to write the ebuild yourself, there is no g-cpan
> equivalent for python packages.
Dan wrote "I have a piece of python software [...] that I would like to
install/try". Creating an ebuild just to do that sounds like overkill to
me. If the software author suggests
* Dan Johansson:
> The recommended way to install it is using pip which will then install
> everything including dependencies (which could lead to conflicts with
> software installed using emerge (I guess)).
There will be no conflicts if you use 'pip' with virtual Python
environments. The followi
* Caveman Al Toraboran:
> any thoughts?
Known bug, fixed, see Bugzilla.
-Ralph
* YUE Daian:
> I added [ntp-client] to the default boot level (OpenRC), however it
> seriously slows down the boot process (around 10 seconds or so).
Launching 'clamd' can hold up a reboot for a minute or longer, so ten
seconds do not seem that bad to me.
> Is there any way to make it faster?
P
* Christian Groessler:
> My question is how do I get rid of colors in "emerge", "man" and other
> command line programs.
The methods vary between command line tools. You can for example
disable the 'manpager' USE flag for sys-apps/man-db. The manual page for
emerge mentions different methods (se
* Jack:
> The DEPEND line !!
Hi folks,
I have come across blocked packages [1] before, but this time I am
having a hard time solving things. Accordings to the attached log, there
is a hard block of dev-python/setuptools_scm somewhere, preventing the
update of that package.
Could somebody point me in the way of resolving this
* Grant Edwards:
> If the old config file didn't have drivers for that vendor enabled,
> why should I have to see all the options now?
Indeed. There must have been some working network device driver included
in the old kernel to get the system running. If one feels the need for
additional drivers
* Hasan Ç.:
> I can share my results.
Have you been able to run some tests yet?
-Ralph
* Hasan Ç.:
> Can you share your iptables rules i am on 4.19.8 too with exact
> version of kernel c headers & updated glibc.
Here you go: https://pastebin.com/f8V8DfFU
As you can see, I obfuscated some IP addresses, but other than that,
this is the original ruleset.
-Ralph
With kernel versions 4.19.0 to 4.19.8, I see kernel panics whenever
I activate some iptables rules. The same ruleset works fine with all
earlier kernel versions.
I found https://marc.info/?l=netfilter-devel&m=154211825506348&w=2 and
was wondering if there is any workaround/patch availabe in Gentoo
* Neil Bothwick:
> That's because ~ doesn't mean unstable, it means testing. Stable in
> this context means less likely to change, not less likely to fall
> over. Plus the differentiation is for the ebuilds, not the software
> itself.
It is also worth mentioning that ebuilds cannot be added to th
On 25.09.18 08:15, gevisz wrote:
> Gentoo handbook contains instructions that lead to downloading and
> using unverified portage tree that is unacceptable [...]
See https://bugs.gentoo.org/597918 (filed almost two years ago).
-Ralph
On 26.07.2018 16:57, Grand Duet wrote:
> PYTHON_TARGETS="python2_7 python3_6"
> PYTHON_SINGLE_TARGET="python3_6"
> [...]
> The ebuild selected to satisfy "app-text/asciidoc" has unmet requirements.
> The following REQUIRED_USE flag constraints are unsatisfied:
> exactly-one-of ( python_single_targ
On 23.07.2018 08:56, Kai Peter wrote:
> package.provided have to be configured at each host by hand wich is a
> big effort if you have a lot of boxes.
I call that nonsense. How is that an effort, especially if the proposed
alternative is installing a do-nothing ebuild on "a lot of boxes"?
"He wh
On 22.07.2018 09:27, Kai Peter wrote:
> A bit more easier is to create an 'empty' virtual ebuild which at
> least does nothing but tells portage the dependency is fulfilled.
Not a good choice, IMO. Portage has its own mechanism for that:
https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki//etc/portage/profile/package.p
On 21.07.2018 23:03, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> But what's the proper method to tell my gentoo system that I don't
> want crud like nullmailer installed?
Install an MTA using emerge, or let Gentoo know that you have installed
qmail manually. When you work around portage, you are responsible to
keep
On 10.07.2018 10:23, p...@xvalheru.org wrote:
> I need to set specific python version to a user and I don't want to
> set it up for whole system. Is it possible?
I can't tell if by "set it up" to have Python binaries available for
only one user, or if you want one user to use a different Python v
On 04.07.18 16:53, Alec Warner wrote:
> https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Github/2018-06-28
My thanks to all the people involved for resolving this and also taking
the time to document events.
-Ralph
On 28.06.18 00:16, John Covici wrote:
> after doing a world update, there are still packages which apparently
> need both 3.4 and 3.5, so I cannot remove them.
That sounds like you might still have some packages where the use flags
python_targets_python3_4 and/or python_targets_python3_5 are acti
On 27.06.18 22:43, Bill Kenworthy wrote:
> After installing python 3.6, I now have multiple systems wanting to
> depclean it! Have I missed something? Should I be uninstalling 3.4
> and 3.5 which are also present?
After you have recompiled all packages that were built with Python 3.4
and 3.5 supp
On 19.01.18 19:03, Grant Edwards wrote:
> I need to setup an SMTP relay server.
>
> It needs to accept messages as an SMTP server (using SSL and AUTH on a
> non-standard port) from a single user and single source and then relay
> them by passing them to a command-line MTA (e.g. /usr/bin/sendmail
>
On 28.12.17 20:52, Alan Mackenzie wrote:
> There is some way of initialising a new kernel .config from an existing
> one, I am sure, but I can't find it.
If your previous kernel has IKCONFIG support(*) enabled, I recommend
these steps for a kernel update to keep as many configuration options
as p
On 27.11.17 18:48, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> Do you really need lmtp for that, though? As far as I remember simply
> piping the messages to the /usr/lib/dovecot/deliver program, as the
> deilivery mechanism, will ensure the same thing.
Both Dovecot and Postfix speak LMTP, so why not use it for local
On 27.11.17 14:44, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> Do I really need to do that on this small, low-volume network? What do
> I lose by letting postfix and fetchmail write files for dovecot to read?
It is very easy to configure Postfix to use an LMTP socket provided
by Dovecot (paths match typical installa
On 26.11.2017 18:46, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> those are Exim's local IDs, assigned by the list server host. Those
> are distinct from RFc 5322 Message-IDs, which are the closest thing
> to uniquely identify a message.
I am well aware of this, and this is exactly what I wanted to point out.
> So fr
On 26.11.2017 03:30, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> I get duplicate messages, which are a known problem and easily worked
> around, but the latest version of KMail whinges about more than one
> candidate for display and just gives up.
For debugging purposes it might help you to know that you actually se
On 24.11.17 18:30, Rich Freeman wrote:
> While Postfix certainly won't serve up email via IMAP it definitely
> does store email.
As an MTA should, Postfix transports email. It can also handle local
mail transport (say, in maildirs) and I guess one could call that
"storing" mail, but to me that's
On 24.11.17 17:40, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> That's because I don't yet know enough to know what questions to ask;
> that's why I hoped I'd be pointed to a general guide or explanation.
http://www.fetchmail.info/ is the most obvious starting point, and I
assume you have found that one. Fetchmail pe
On 24.11.17 16:39, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> I'm trying an evasion, which is to use fetchmail to retrieve emails
> from my ISP and deliver them to postfix, which can then serve them
> via IMAP.
Postfix is an MTA and does neither store email nor lets you access email
via IMAP. There must be an IMAP
On 16.10.2017 17:50, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> Nagios and I go way back, way way waay back. I now recommend it
> never be used unless there really is no other option.
Have you tried Icinga 2 (*) yet? It originally started as a Nagios fork
and uses plugins to monitor, but the rule-based configura
On 07.09.17 22:04, Dale wrote:
> If he's using or planning to use Firefox on Gentoo, that is on topic.
If you read the OP again, you'll find that it had no relation to Gentoo
whatsoever. Danny himself agreed this is not the right mailing list, so
please let's leave it at that.
-Ralph
On 07.09.2017 15:20, Danny YUE wrote:
> Well, I know it is not the perfect place but I don't want to spam my
> inbox with Firefox topics, so that's why I don't subscribe that mail
> list and am asking here. ;-)
And you believe that spamming the inbox people interested in Gentoo
(that's why we sub
On 07.09.2017 14:26, Danny YUE wrote:
> I have been using FoxyProxy in Firefox for a really long time, until
> today I found its new version really sucks.
If you're curious about Mozilla's move to the WebExtensions API, see
https://blog.mozilla.org/addons/2016/11/23/add-ons-in-2017/ . You'll
prob
On 29.08.2017 14:52, Stroller wrote:
> Any recommendations for a simple NTP client?
Anything you dislike about net-misc/ntp, which you apparently use on
that other system of yours? It comes with both ntpd and ntp-client,
and the performance impact is minimal.
> I *think* this is because ntp-clie
On 26.08.2017 08:40, Ian Zimmerman wrote:
> The cop-out solution is to have a single pre-hook and a single
> post-hook, which stop (resp. start) both daemons, but that is
> ugly. How do people handle this?
I have not used certbot hooks myself, but a glance at the docs shows:
--pre-hook and --p
On 21.08.2017 13:49, mad.scientist.at.la...@tutanota.com wrote:
> I'm excited about using gentoo, though the online instructions could
> really use more structuring, i.e. it's hard to avoid reading the parts
> you don't need to and the "flow" is rather lost. It's an extremely
> verbose document wh
On 21.08.2017 08:08, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> Ah, so silentoldconfig is effectively the same as old config.
Silentoldconfig is quite a useful make target, since it only asks about
newly introduced kernel options.
> Does your old kernel still work ad before? Just wondering if another
> update could
On 20.08.2017 08:17, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> I'd try again with a clean kernel tree but using make oldconfig. It's
> possible the automagic stuff answered n somewhere where you need a y.
As https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Kernel/Upgrade/en#make_silentoldconfig
describes, "make silentoldconfig" (which
On 20.08.17 00:15, Craig MacKinder wrote:
> It sounds like this vmxnet3 bug causing intermittent interface problems
> https://bugzilla.kernel.org/show_bug.cgi?id=191201
> Try adding this to the VMware guest advanced settings.
> vmxnet3.rev.30 = FALSE
> And restart the guests.
Interesting idea. Ho
It seems strange to me as I write it, but since I updated one of my
virtual servers from Kernel version 4.9.34 to 4.12.5, the server (Gentoo
Linux running as a KVM guest) is experiencing timeouts when trying to
connect to DNS resolvers. For the Kernel update, I followed the same
steps I used for ye
On 27.01.13 19:21, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> so essentially you have an nfs client that by design can't do nfs?
You could put it that way. I purchased this satellite receiver a few
days ago and upgraded to the latest firmware available (version 1.2.61
released 2013-01-07). Unfortunately, the manufac
On 27.01.13 17:23, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> You config certainly looks right to me, and I don't know of any config
> that makes it work differently.
I suspected as much. The trouble is that the Pingulux is unable to write
data to the directories it creates. Thus, your idea of using chmod from
a cro
On 27.01.13 00:04, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> What sort of client is this, and what umask is it using?
The client is an Edision Argus Pingulux Plus satellite receiver.
[root@stlinux]#uname -a
Linux stlinux 2.6.32.42_stm24_V4.1-SAT7111_7111-STSDK #56 PREEMPT Tue Oct 16
16:17:14 CST 2012 sh4 GNU/Linu
Hi list members,
I set up Gentoo as an NFS server, and I am experiencing problems with
one of my NFS clients. When this specific client creates new directories
within the NFS-exported directory, the permissions are 0644 instead of
0755 ('executable' is missing). The client does not allow passing a
On 30.07.11 02:11, Manuel McLure wrote:
> FYI, netatalk 2.1.5 for AFP (I don't use anything else) is working for
> me here with OS X Lion.
That's interesting, I can't seem to connect to Netatalk 2.1.5 with Lion.
Would you perhaps share the contents of your /etc/netatalk folder?
-Ralph
Hi list,
as a Mac user who recently began migrating machines to OS X Lion, I am
wondering if some kind soul is already working on net-fs/netatalk 2.2.0
for Gentoo? The existing version 2.1.5 does not support AFP 3.3, which
is required by Lion's modified Time Machine implementation.
-Ralph
Aggelos wrote:
> I really don't care if consider the above as spam or not or watever, for
> this list or for any list. I am subscribed to this list so I posted it
> here.
If you don't care about the other subscribers here, I suggest you to host
your own mailing list, i.e.
gentoo-user-and-everyth
Peter Ruskin wrote:
> CONFIG_SECURITY_NETWORK is not set
Thanks, I thought so. The compile error occurs in a sections encapsuled
in "#ifdef CONFIG_SECURITY_NETWORK_XFRM", and your kernel configuration
does not include XFRM Networking Security Hooks. I'll probably disable
this, because the machine
Peter Ruskin wrote:
> No, it doesn't look familiar - I had no problems at all
I wonder... Could you please check your kernel configuration?
/usr/src/linux-2.6.20-gentoo # grep CONFIG_SECURITY .config
CONFIG_SECURITY=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_NETWORK=y
CONFIG_SECURITY_NETWORK_XFRM=y
CONFIG_SECU
Peter Ruskin wrote:
> 2.3.3_pre1 works OK here.
So it is possible and there's hope left. ;-) I don't suppose that
[...]/dazuko-2.3.3-pre1/dazuko_linux26_lsm.c:1486: error: too many
arguments to function 'dazuko_security_ops.xfrm_policy_alloc_security'
looks familiar to you? Did you modify o
Has anybody successfully emerged "sys-fs/dazuko" on a machine using
kernel version 2.6.20? I tried dazuko-2.3.2-r3 and dazuko-2.3.3_pre1,
but emerge fails with errors like in the attached build log. I haven't
yet found anything about this on bugs.gentoo.org or MARC.
-R
* Determining the location
Ralph Seichter wrote:
> I'll try to figure out exactly which modules can be used to access
> the network controller (sk98lin, skge or sky2).
"emerge --update --deep world" finished over night, and this is what I
see after booting with an empty "/etc/modules.autolo
rse. I would probably use a different network
controller in a server setup, but as this is a workstation and already
quite crammed with PCI cards, I'd rather not add more hardware.
--
Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Sincerely
Dipl. Inform. Ralph Seichter
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gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
ted "emerge --update --deep
world", and when it is finished, I'll try to figure out exactly which
modules can be used to access the network controller (sk98lin, skge or
sky2).
--
Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Sincerely
Dipl. Inform. Ralph Seichter
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
I'm pretty much stuck now and I'd appreciate your help.
--
Mit freundlichen Grüßen / Sincerely
Dipl. Inform. Ralph Seichter
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
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