Alle 08:04, lunedì 2 ottobre 2006, Andresen ha scritto:
> You really should search bugzilla instead...
>
> http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=89486
Great!
According to your link, I added
#define DISABLE_X11
into /usr/include/SDL/SDL_syswm.h
it then compiles withour x11 support.
Thanks Bo
On Monday 02 October 2006 00:23, gentuxx wrote:
> gentuxx wrote:
> I forgot to state the obvious, in that, the ability to RDP needs to be
> enabled on the target WinXP box. So, in System Properties, go to the
> Remote tab, make sure "Allow users to connect to this computer", select
> the appropri
On Monday 02 October 2006 06:02, Lord Sauron wrote:
> modules_eth0=( "dhcpcd" )
> iface_eth0=( "dhcpcd" )
> config_eth0=( "dhcp" )
>
> Not exactly sure if it's totally right, however, it doesn't give me an
> error message, though I suspect I'm really close to getting one ; )
>
> Hazarding a guess
Mick wrote:
> On Sunday 01 October 2006 22:41, Daniel Iliev wrote:
> > The basinc syntax is:
> > "rdesktop "my-father's-pc"
>
> I have tried to do that with no success. This is what I'm getting:
> =
> $ rdesktop 192.168.0.2
> ERROR: connect: Connection refus
On Sun, 1 Oct 2006 21:45:49 -0700, Lord Sauron wrote:
> I'm going to take your word and try ifplug, however, I installed it and
> it doesn't work. Still pings up /dev/null for all it's doing. I even
> went to rc-update and had it start at boot, though that didn't work.
You don't start it at a
On Sun, 1 Oct 2006 22:02:12 -0700, Lord Sauron wrote:
> Hazarding a guess as to what would get ifplugd to work:
Stop guessing and read the docs.
--
Neil Bothwick
Loose bits sink chips.
signature.asc
Description: PGP signature
061001 Terry Eck wrote:
> Thanks to everyone who responded to my post.
> I will give gentoo a try to see how it goes.
> my first experience with linux was around 1994 using Slackware 1.2.0.
> Back then it was common to configure and compile the kernel for sound.
You really should have no problem w
Title: No device coming up if I plug in an USB device
Hi
I am new to gentoo and I just finished a stage 1,2,3 installation, and I have followed the gentoo USB howto.
When I plug-in a usb device no device coming up in /dev directory, yet dmesg tell me I have plugged in a mass storage device
On Monday 02 October 2006 12:31, Stephen Reynolds wrote:
> Hi
>
> I am new to gentoo and I just finished a stage 1,2,3 installation, and I
> have followed the gentoo USB howto.
> When I plug-in a usb device no device coming up in /dev directory, yet
> dmesg tell me I have plugged in a mass storage
On Monday 02 October 2006 16:01, Stephen Reynolds wrote:
> Hi
>
> I am new to gentoo and I just finished a stage 1,2,3 installation,
> and I have followed the gentoo USB howto.
> When I plug-in a usb device no device coming up in /dev directory,
> yet dmesg tell me I have plugged in a mass storage
I will check dmesg and forward it later, pc at home I'm at work.
-Original Message-
From: Hemmann, Volker Armin
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, 02 October 2006 01:10 PM
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] No device coming up if I plug in an USB
device
On M
Hi!
I recently reinstalled my Gentoo system and unmasked and installed
Gnome 2.16; the system is otherwise a ~x86 system.
When I now insert a DVD/CD or plugin a USB stick, I get a popup showing:
Cannot mount volume
But I can perfectly fine mount this volume manually. Eg.:
[EMAI
Dmesg
usb 1-5: new high speed USB device using ehci_hcd and address 2 ehci_hcd
:00:03.3: port 5 high speed ehci_hcd :00:03.3: GetStatus port 5
status 001005 POWER sig=se0 PE
CONNECT
usb 1-5: default language 0x0409
usb 1-5: new device strings: Mfr=0, Product=2, SerialNumber=3 usb 1-5:
Pro
Hey, could anyone give me a hint on the nature of this problem? I have
tried with a completely new portage tree, yet no success. I really have
no clue how this can happen.
anyone?
thanks for any help!
KArsten
> hm, I get this trying to emerge gnome. I use the ~arch keyword and
just
> now did em
Hi,
For rendering purposes I often start my PC, start the rendering job
and go to work.
For power saving puproses I would like, that my PC "recognizes" its
idle state and go down "as far as possible".
I heard of ACPI and suspend-to-RAM.
I dont lik eto experiment a lot and finally find out
> > > Why would flags like mmx, mmxext, sse, and sse2 be masked from mplayer
> > > for me?
> > >
> > > /etc/make.profile ->
> > > /usr/portage/profiles/default-linux/amd64/2006.1/desktop
> >
> > I'm not sure why the use flags are masked.
>
> Heh, and then I found it...
>
> http://bugs.gentoo.org/s
On Monday 02 October 2006 16:13, Grant wrote:
> I'm actually using -march=k8 in accordance with the Gentoo Handbook's
> recommendation. Should I be using -march=amd64? I have an AMD
> Sempron64 3000+ CPU.
No! Of course not. As you can see in `man gcc` there is no -march=amd64... k8
is fine.
--
Hi,
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 14:41:32 +0200 "Stephen Reynolds"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> ub(1.2): GetMaxLUN returned 0, using 1 LUNs
> uba: uba1
> drivers/usb/core/inode.c: creating file '002'
There's your device node.
You did read the help of the kernel option for the "Low Performance USB
Block d
Hi,
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 17:03:43 +0530 Mrugesh Karnik
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Ah, I wanted to ask about this too. The same thing happens to me. I
> need to reboot with the device plugged in, which is a pain. I'd
> appreciate an answer as well.
That's probably not for the same reason. Please
Hi,
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 07:25:15 -0700 Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> The TV has a native resolution of 1366x768 as stated by the
> manufacturer. If I specify that resolution in xorg.conf, it says it's
> an invalid resolution and uses 1360x768 instead.
Probably because that's the only mode b
On Monday 02 October 2006 14:54, karsten wrote:
> Hey, could anyone give me a hint on the nature of this problem? I have
> tried with a completely new portage tree, yet no success. I really have
> no clue how this can happen.
> anyone?
[SNIP]
foo-a.ebuild depends on foo-b.ebuild and foo-b.ebuild d
> The TV has a native resolution of 1366x768 as stated by the
> manufacturer. If I specify that resolution in xorg.conf, it says it's
> an invalid resolution and uses 1360x768 instead.
Probably because that's the only mode built into the driver near your
desired mode.
Just put an appropriate mo
> > I'm pretty confused. I'm trying to get the system in question to
> > behave like a solid-state router that you can plug an ethernet jack
> > into and be on the network. How should eth1 and eth2 be configured
> > in /etc/conf.d/net ?
>
> They should be configured as part of a bridge device (s
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 08:18:38 -0700, Grant wrote:
> I've never used a switch before. Is there any proprietary software to
> configure (like with a router), or is it just a button or two?
Just one button, the power switch :)
--
Neil Bothwick
If I save time, when do I get it back?
signature.as
Grant wrote:
> > I'm pretty confused. I'm trying to get the system in question to
> > behave like a solid-state router that you can plug an ethernet jack
> > into and be on the network. How should eth1 and eth2 be configured
> > in /etc/conf.d/net ?
>
> They should be configured as part of a br
Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 08:18:38 -0700, Grant wrote:
I've never used a switch before. Is there any proprietary software to
configure (like with a router), or is it just a button or two?
Just one button, the power switch :)
Sometimes two ... if you attempt to use th
On Monday 02 October 2006 10:18, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote
about 'Re: [gentoo-user] Router 3rd and 4th net interface problem':
> > > > I'm pretty confused. I'm trying to get the system in question to
> > > > behave like a solid-state router that you can plug an ethernet
> > > > jack into an
I've three independent hosts - imaginatively called A, B and C.
Firewall rules dictate that A can be directly accessed from B, but not
from C... A and B run the openssh sshd, and C is a terminal with a
working X-Windows display. C has a ssh session opened with B which
tunnels port 22 on C to 22 o
Hi,
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 10:49:34 -0500
"Boyd Stephen Smith Jr." <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > > > How should eth1 and eth2 be
> > > > > configured in /etc/conf.d/net ?
> > > > They should be configured as part of a bridge device (see the
> > > > bridging section of /etc/conf.d/net.example) and
Hi,
On Mon, 02 Oct 2006 16:56:25 +0100
"Steve [Gentoo]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm unclear if the reason for the failure is the additional
> tunnelling... Is this technique incompatible with X11 tunnelling? Is
> there a way to make it work with a reverse-tunnel or something like
> that? A
quoth the Thomas T. Veldhouse:
> Neil Bothwick wrote:
> > On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 08:18:38 -0700, Grant wrote:
> >> I've never used a switch before. Is there any proprietary software to
> >> configure (like with a router), or is it just a button or two?
> >
> > Just one button, the power switch :)
>
>
Grant gmail.com> writes:
> The TV has a native resolution of 1366x768 as stated by the
> manufacturer. If I specify that resolution in xorg.conf, it says it's
> an invalid resolution and uses 1360x768 instead.
This is common, at least for my 37" widescreen LCD/tv/monitor, too:
Here's some p
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 08:45:24 +0200
Bo Ørsted Andresen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 02 October 2006 08:21, Danie Iliev wrote:
> > Several days ago the guys at gentoo-am64 mailing list explained to me
> > all these flags enable different CFLAGS optimizations which came as the
> [SNIP]
>
>
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 16:22:10 +0200
Bo Ørsted Andresen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Monday 02 October 2006 16:13, Grant wrote:
> > I'm actually using -march=k8 in accordance with the Gentoo Handbook's
> > recommendation. Should I be using -march=amd64? I have an AMD
> > Sempron64 3000+ CPU.
>
Hi,
interesting...
I tried to compile a little program (nothing special) and got this
errors:
In file included from /usr/include/stdlib.h:438,
from ethlinkstat.c:10:
/usr/include/sys/types.h:62: error: conflicting types for 'dev_t'
/usr/include/linux/type
On Monday 02 October 2006 19:48, Meino Christian Cramer wrote:
> I tried to compile a little program (nothing special) and got this
> errors:
>
> In file included from /usr/include/stdlib.h:438,
> from ethlinkstat.c:10:
> /usr/include/sys/types.h:62: error: conflic
From: Bo Ørsted Andresen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] What is that (compile errors in system headers...)
Date: Mon, 2 Oct 2006 19:58:57 +0200
> On Monday 02 October 2006 19:48, Meino Christian Cramer wrote:
> > I tried to compile a little program (nothing special) and got this
>
On Monday 02 October 2006 20:15, Meino Christian Cramer wrote:
[SNIP]
> My includes are now:
>
> #include
> #include
> #include
> #include
> #include
> #include
> #include
> #include
[SNIP]
# cat /usr/include/linux/if.h
[SNIP]
#include /* fo
Hi,
We have a machine here, my son's, which runs Gentoo and uses (I
think) a D-Link 802.11abg NIC:
03:0a.0 Ethernet controller: Atheros Communications, Inc. AR5005G
802.11abg NIC (rev 01)
The setup uses ndiswrapper to load the Windows driver. For some
reason this NIC seems to go off line qui
> Anyway, the portage-2.1.2 tracker bug [1] shows you the
> differences between
> portage-2.1.1 and the latest 2.1.2 prerelease. Also a comment
> from zmedico
> (the portage dev who is providing us with all of these new
> features and
> fixes) [2] clearly shows that the change is intended.
W
emerge app-admin/sudo
Edit /etc/sudoers and add:
username ALL= NOPASSWD: /etc/init.d/ner.wlan0
Where username is his login. To run it:
sudo /etc/init.d/net.wlan0 restart
dcmOn 10/2/06, Mark Knecht <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi, We have a machine here, my son's, which runs Gentoo and uses (Ith
On 10/2/06, Devon Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
emerge app-admin/sudo
Edit /etc/sudoers and add:
username ALL= NOPASSWD: /etc/init.d/ner.wlan0
Where username is his login. To run it:
sudo /etc/init.d/net.wlan0 restart
dcmAlso, for best practice, I would suggest using visudo to edit /etc/sud
On 10/2/06, Devon Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
emerge app-admin/sudo
Edit /etc/sudoers and add:
username ALL= NOPASSWD: /etc/init.d/ner.wlan0
Where username is his login. To run it:
sudo /etc/init.d/net.wlan0 restart
dcm
Thanks guys. I should have thought of sudo myself. I don't
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 15:38:39 -0400, Devon Miller wrote:
> emerge app-admin/sudo
>
> Edit /etc/sudoers and add:
>
> username ALL= NOPASSWD: /etc/init.d/ner.wlan0
>
> Where username is his login. To run it:
> sudo /etc/init.d/net.wlan0 restart
A slightly more secure approach is to create a script
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 12:20:52 -0700, Daevid Vincent wrote:
> I'm no expert by any stretch, I just noticed that it was acting
> different and as illustrated, I could prove it. Perhaps I misunderstood
> what --deep was for. I guess I thought it was the package and any
> dependencies that NEEDED upgrad
On Mon, 2006-10-02 at 21:31 +0100, Neil Bothwick wrote:
> On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 15:38:39 -0400, Devon Miller wrote:
>
> > emerge app-admin/sudo
> >
> > Edit /etc/sudoers and add:
> >
> > username ALL= NOPASSWD: /etc/init.d/ner.wlan0
> >
> > Where username is his login. To run it:
> > sudo /etc/ini
I attempting to transfer from PATA to SATA on my AMD64 box. The main problem I
am having is that GRUB is not booting my new partition. The (one) SATA (Wsetern
Digital WD740GD-00FLC0) drive is setup as JBOD (to get windows to install) on
an nvidia controller (asus A8N-E bios rev 13). This is AMD6
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-
Hash: SHA1
Mick wrote:
> On Monday 02 October 2006 00:23, gentuxx wrote:
>> gentuxx wrote:
>
>> I forgot to state the obvious, in that, the ability to RDP needs to be
>> enabled on the target WinXP box. So, in System Properties, go to the
>> Remote tab, make su
On 10/2/2006, "Mark Knecht" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>On 10/2/06, Devon Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> emerge app-admin/sudo
>>
>> Edit /etc/sudoers and add:
>>
>> username ALL= NOPASSWD: /etc/init.d/ner.wlan0
>>
>> Where username is his login. To run it:
>> sudo /etc/init.d
> The TV has a native resolution of 1366x768 as stated by the
> manufacturer. If I specify that resolution in xorg.conf, it says it's
> an invalid resolution and uses 1360x768 instead.
This is common, at least for my 37" widescreen LCD/tv/monitor, too:
I tried the following modeline with no l
Hi group,
Do these things work very well? What's a good one? Is
it gentoo-friendly.
I'll be using it with a Viewsonic 17" LCD with a
digital connector and a ATI Radeon 256M vid card.
I saw one work back in 2000 and thought the picture
quality quite poor. Have they improved much since
then?
-Ma
On 10/3/2006, "maxim wexler" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>Hi group,
>
>Do these things work very well? What's a good one? Is
>it gentoo-friendly.
>
>I'll be using it with a Viewsonic 17" LCD with a
>digital connector and a ATI Radeon 256M vid card.
>
>I saw one work back in 2000 and thou
On 10/2/06, maxim wexler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi group,
Do these things work very well? What's a good one? Is
it gentoo-friendly.
Maxim,
I have a MYthTV server with two cards in it. One is a Hauppage
PVR-150 and the other is a PVR-250. They are both reasonably good
quality and run pre
> The TV has a native resolution of 1366x768 as stated by the
> manufacturer. If I specify that resolution in xorg.conf, it says it's
> an invalid resolution and uses 1360x768 instead.
This is common, at least for my 37" widescreen LCD/tv/monitor, too:
I found this from Nvidia:
http://nvidia
On Tuesday 03 October 2006 03:32, Grant wrote:
> > > The TV has a native resolution of 1366x768 as stated by the
> > > manufacturer. If I specify that resolution in xorg.conf, it says it's
> > > an invalid resolution and uses 1360x768 instead.
> >
> > This is common, at least for my 37" widescreen
On Mon, 2006-10-02 at 18:04 -0700, maxim wexler wrote:
> Hi group,
>
> Do these things work very well? What's a good one? Is
> it gentoo-friendly.
if it's linux-friendly, it's gentoo-friendly :)
> I'll be using it with a Viewsonic 17" LCD with a
> digital connector and a ATI Radeon 256M vid card
On Tue, 2006-10-03 at 11:54 +0930, Iain Buchanan wrote:
> I personally like the COMPRO DTV-300
sorry, that's really a Compro Videomate DVB-T300
:)
--
Iain Buchanan
I thought YOU silenced the guard!
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
I'm trying to get my Sansa e260 to work under Gentoo.I can mount the flash via /dev/sda1, but I can't find the microSD card under linux.I expected it would show up as /dev/sdb or something like that, but no dice.
lsusb gives me:Bus 001 Device 014: ID 0781:7421 SanDisk Corp.When it's plugged in, t
Hi Guys,
I'm just a little curious why --set-user-classpath and
--set-system-classpath are being done away with? Is there a
replacement facility for this functionality?
Thanks.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Thanks
-Original Message-
From: Hans-Werner Hilse [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Monday, 02 October 2006 04:27 PM
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] No device coming up if I plug in an USB
device
Hi,
On Mon, 2 Oct 2006 17:03:43 +0530 Mrugesh Karnik
<[EMAIL PROT
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