Am Samstag 17 November 2007 schrieb Thufir:
> On Sat, 17 Nov 2007 20:54:41 +, Mick wrote:
> > So if you look into /dev/hdb1 while mounted under /boot, can you see a
> > file called "kernel-has-alsa"?
>
> I don't understand your question, but does this answer it?
No, see below.
> arrakis ~ #
>
How do you get the TRACE target to work in iptables?
north ~ # /sbin/iptables -t raw -A PREROUTING -j TRACE
iptables v1.3.8: Couldn't load target
`TRACE':/lib/iptables/libipt_TRACE.so: cannot open shared object file:
No such file or directory
Try `iptables -h' or 'iptables --help' for more inform
Am Sonntag 18 November 2007 schrieb Thufir:
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 10:45:38 +0100, Dirk Heinrichs wrote:
> > That show's that /dev/hdb1 is mounted as /boot (which, BTW, is
> > completely irrelevant for GRUB).
>
> wouldn't GRUB would need that location to use the kernel?
No. GRUB uses its own naming
On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 10:45:38 +0100, Dirk Heinrichs wrote:
> That show's that /dev/hdb1 is mounted as /boot (which, BTW, is
> completely irrelevant for GRUB).
wouldn't GRUB would need that location to use the kernel?
> However, once it's mounted, does "ls -l
> /boot" show a file called "kernel-ha
Hi *,
~
I have been using different Linux and BSD distros without settling
for any in particular. As it always happens with any other thing
anyway in life you find things you like in one that you don't have in
the other
~
I like the gentoo way, except for their BSD-like portage system's
attempt
On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 12:01:46 +0100, Dirk Heinrichs wrote:
>> > However, once it's mounted, does "ls -l /boot" show a file called
>> > "kernel-has-alsa"?
>>
>> Yes:
>
> Errh, no. Look again, please.
>
>> arrakis ~ #
>> arrakis ~ # ls /boot/
>> kernel-with-alsa
>
> See the difference?
arrakis
Am Sonntag 18 November 2007 schrieb Thufir:
> Are you asking whether or not /boot/ has the kernel? From the above,
> isn't the answer "yes"?
No, from the above the answer is "no": It's "kernel-with-alsa" in /boot
vs. "kernel-has-alsa" in your grub.conf.
Bye...
Dirk
signature.asc
Des
Thufir wrote:
> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2658736 Nov 16 23:52 kernel-with-als
why do you have kernel-WITH-alsa in your /boot, but kernel-HAS-alsa in
your grub.conf? typo? or is there a particular reason?
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I'd really like to replace the /bin/sh link to point to a smaller shell,
such as ash or dash instead of the bash default, but that apparently makes
functions.sh _very_ unhappy. Does anyone know of some unbashification
documentation for functions.sh?
--
Sean
Great Moments in History: #3
A
I have just tried to install the latest 2.6.22-r9 kernel
I copied the config file across from the present 2.6.17.r8 installed kernel,
then recompiled.
The grub line which works for the 2.6.17-r8 kernel is:
# For booting GNU/Linux
title Gentoo Linux 2.6.17-r8
root (hd0,4)
kernel /kernel-2.6.17-ge
I get the following message when attempting to emerge world:
On Sun, 2007-11-18 at 08:59 -0800, Grant wrote:
> I get the following message when attempting to emerge world:
>
>
> I un-emerged pygtk and emerged pygobject but I get the same message
> when trying to emerge world. I did 'equery depends pygtk' and there
> are a few packages listed with their
On Sat, 17 Nov 2007 23:37:21 + (UTC)
Thufir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> e error message is caused by GRUB currently being
> configured for genkernel.
>
>
> -Thufir
>
> --
Thufir,
Grub does not care what kernel it boots, or what OS it implements or
what partition it is stored on. Grub
On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 00:07:50 + (UTC)
Thufir <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 00:19:34 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
>
> > Think about this a little bit. Modern audio hardware has multiple
> > inputs and often multiple outputs as well.
> >
> > You absolutely need to be able to c
On Sunday 18 November 2007, Thufir wrote:
> On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 00:19:34 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
> > Think about this a little bit. Modern audio hardware has multiple
> > inputs and often multiple outputs as well.
> >
> > You absolutely need to be able to control these independantly,
> > becaus
> > I get the following message when attempting to emerge world:
> >
> > >
> > I un-emerged pygtk and emerged pygobject but I get the same message
> > when trying to emerge world. I did 'equery depends pygtk' and there
> > are a few packages listed with their python USE. Should I remove the
> >
> -Original Message-
> From: Neil Bothwick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> What's wrong with "tar xf glibc-2.6.1.tbz2 -C /mnt/gentoo"? It's
worked
> for me in the past when I "upgraded" to a broken glibc.
>
I was not sure what would happen with other files in some of the
existing directori
> -Original Message-
> From: Neil Bothwick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> It looks like you still have the temporary files from a previous
> revdep-rebuild run, so you don't get to see the list of broken
packages.
> Add --ignore to the command.
>
Indeed there were some left over files and
Jeff Cranmer ha scritto:
> I have just tried to install the latest 2.6.22-r9 kernel
> I copied the config file across from the present 2.6.17.r8 installed kernel,
> then recompiled.
[...]
> Can anyone point me in the direction of why the new kernel will not boot,
> while the old one boots fine?
On Sunday 18 November 2007 03:42:53 pm b.n. wrote:
> Jeff Cranmer ha scritto:
> > I have just tried to install the latest 2.6.22-r9 kernel
> > I copied the config file across from the present 2.6.17.r8 installed
> > kernel, then recompiled.
>
> [...]
>
> > Can anyone point me in the direction of wh
On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 13:48:52 +0100, Dirk Heinrichs wrote:
>> Are you asking whether or not /boot/ has the kernel? From the above,
>> isn't the answer "yes"?
>
> No, from the above the answer is "no": It's "kernel-with-alsa" in /boot
> vs. "kernel-has-alsa" in your grub.conf.
Thank you,
Thufi
On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 11:04:15 -0500, Billy Holmes wrote:
> why do you have kernel-WITH-alsa in your /boot, but kernel-HAS-alsa in
> your grub.conf? typo? or is there a particular reason?
Typo. I think it seemed more intimidating than it really is, hence the
typo. After correcting the typo, it
> -Original Message-
> From: Bo Ørsted Andresen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> This could be bug #189720 which would mean you need to manually remerge
> slot 1
> of apr and apr-util.
>
> [1] https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=189720
It was actually left over files from a previous rev
On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 15:05:24 -0500, de Almeida, Valmor F. wrote:
> > What's wrong with "tar xf glibc-2.6.1.tbz2 -C /mnt/gentoo"? It's
> worked
> > for me in the past when I "upgraded" to a broken glibc.
> >
>
> I was not sure what would happen with other files in some of the
> existing direc
> -Original Message-
> From: Neil Bothwick [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> However you do it, you should emerge glibc, either from source or the
> package, once you have a working system.
>
Yes. After it became operational, still booted from the cd, I did a
total rebuild over the weekend;
Hello,
How would I go about rebuilding all installed packages, except gcc? I
suppose I could do "emerge --emptytree world", but that would also merge
gcc, which I don't want, because I want to be sure that the whole system
is rebuilt with the same compiler.
Any help is appreciated...
--
Timur A
On Sun, 2007-11-18 at 11:01 -0800, Grant wrote:
>
> app-office/gnumeric-1.6.3 (python? >=dev-python/pygtk-2)
> gnome-base/gnome-menus-2.18.3-r1 (python? dev-python/pygtk)
> gnome-extra/libgsf-1.14.3 (python? >=dev-python/pygtk-2.8)
> media-gfx/gimp-2.2.17 (python? >=dev-python/pygtk-2)
> x11-lib
On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 01:19:06 +0200
~/Timur Aydin wrote:
> Hello,
>
> How would I go about rebuilding all installed packages, except gcc? I
> suppose I could do "emerge --emptytree world", but that would also
> merge gcc, which I don't want, because I want to be sure that the
> whole system is reb
Is anyone able to tell me what the status is of Gentoo moving to LTSP 5?
http://wiki.ltsp.org/twiki/bin/view/Ltsp/Ltsp5Status shows Gentoo as not
supported but states work is being done to provide LTSP-5 in the future.
Doing some searches I do not come across any information newer than
eight mont
On Sunday 18 November 2007 08:38:04 pm sean wrote:
> Is anyone able to tell me what the status is of Gentoo moving to LTSP 5?
>
> http://wiki.ltsp.org/twiki/bin/view/Ltsp/Ltsp5Status shows Gentoo as not
> supported but states work is being done to provide LTSP-5 in the future.
>
> Doing some search
David Relson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> /var/lib/world has a (partial) list of installed packages. You could
> do something like:
>
> cat /var/lib/world | grep -v /gcc$ | xargs emerge
???
przehyba ~ # cat /var/lib/world
cat: /var/lib/world: No such file or directory
przehyba ~ # uname -a
Lin
On Mon, Nov 19, 2007 at 03:14:47AM +0100, Miernik wrote:
> David Relson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > /var/lib/world has a (partial) list of installed packages. You could
> > do something like:
> >
> > cat /var/lib/world | grep -v /gcc$ | xargs emerge
>
> ???
>
> przehyba ~ # cat /var/lib/wor
On Mon, 2007-11-19 at 03:14 +0100, Miernik wrote:
> David Relson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > /var/lib/world has a (partial) list of installed packages. You could
> > do something like:
> >
> > cat /var/lib/world | grep -v /gcc$ | xargs emerge
>
> ???
>
> przehyba ~ # cat /var/lib/world
> ca
"emerge world -ep > buildfile"
edit buildfile and do some search and replaces on each line.
[ebuild R ] sys-libs/gpm-1.20.1-r5
[ebuild R ] sys-libs/ncurses-5.6-r1
becomes
emerge =sys-libs/gpm-1.20.1-r5 && \
emerge =sys-libs/ncurses-5.6-r1 && \
and so on
Make sure there are no spaces a
On Mon, 19 Nov 2007 01:19:06 +0200
~/Timur Aydin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hello,
>
> How would I go about rebuilding all installed packages, except gcc? I
> suppose I could do "emerge --emptytree world", but that would also
> merge gcc, which I don't want, because I want to be sure that the
>
Well, I tried this, and didn't see any additional options which would explain
the error. After copying the newly compiled kernel into the boot directory
and re-running grub-install, I still get the same kernel panic error.
I wonder what else could be going on which could explain this?
Jeff
On
i think that "sda" option might be removed for newer kernels and that you
should go along
with "hdx"...when you boot and you get the grub screen choose the entry of
your new kernel
and type "e" so that you can edit that entry...then you have to choose the
appropriate root
partition to boot with...i
Jeff Cranmer wrote:
> Cannot open root device "sda3" or unknown block (0,0)
> Please append a correct "root=" boot option.
> Here are the available partitions
>
run "make menuconfig" in your new kernel dir.
check to ensure ext3 is compiled in. (not sure why it wouldn't be)
check to make sure
Thufir wrote:
> I'm going to experiment a bit and then recompile again, though because,
> ironically, the "alsa" kernel fails to load alsa and the genkernel had
> alsa all along, which was the impetus for the recompile.
>
alsa, at least to me, is some sort of dark magic. Once I get it to work
Albretch Mueller wrote:
> be quite a bit stupidly risky. I am thinking here mostly about running
> servers
>
on servers, I am VERY selective about what gets updated with portage. I
have even added package versions to portage.mask in order to keep things
from upgrading (such as php4 vs php5). Al
Grant wrote:
> but in white. Am I the only one with a white terminal background?
>
back in my day, we didn't have colored backgrounds! A GUI was putting
the printed cardboard mapping sheet on the keyboard for your word processor.
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