Hello all,
Managed to set my self up with an awesome KDE desktop.
there is only one problem that only happens occasionally.
When I queue a few music videos in vlc and it goes from one to next,
only sometimes it comes with an ALSA error:
ALSA version problem:
VLC failed to re-initialize your
Am 12.11.2010 09:09, schrieb Coert Waagmeester:
> Hello all,
>
> Managed to set my self up with an awesome KDE desktop.
>
> there is only one problem that only happens occasionally.
>
>
> When I queue a few music videos in vlc and it goes from one to next,
> only sometimes it comes with an ALSA
On Thursday 11 November 2010 17:33:25 Grant wrote:
> > Have you ever managed a programming team before?
>
> I haven't. Any pointers?
Good grief! The literature is full of weighty tomes on the subject, and
copious advice is available in multiple news groups - and no doubt e-
mail lists too by n
are you sure this Swing is Java's? I don't see any reference to Java on
SuperCollider's website. and Swing is always installed in any JRE since
version 1.2.
On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 1:59 AM, wrote:
> Nikos Chantziaras [10-11-12 04:40]:
> > On 11/12/2010 05:05 AM, meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote:
> > >
On 11/12/10, Crístian Viana wrote:
> are you sure this Swing is Java's? I don't see any reference to Java on
> SuperCollider's website. and Swing is always installed in any JRE since
> version 1.2.
It has mostly cpp files so I'd wager its written in c++. But there
seems to be some (optional?) GUI
Hi
I found that genkernel does not build all available modules.
2 devices have not been detected by a kernel while they were detected
with manually
configured kernel.
How can I force genkernel to build all available modules ?
thanks for help
Hi,
I have cloned the root fs and /usr onto a new machine (as I have done
many times before)
I boot SystemRescueCD and mount the new root on, say, /nroot
Then my standard procedure is as follows
mount -o bind /proc /nroot/proc
mount -o bind /dev /nroot/proc
chroot /nroot /bin/bash
cp /proc/m
Alan McKinnon gmail.com> writes:
> My first spot of advice would be to use unbound as your caching servers -
Did you experiment iwth ldns-utils
(Set of utilities to simplify various dns(sec) tasks) ???
James
On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 15:56, Helmut Jarausch
wrote:
> mount -o bind /proc /nroot/proc
> mount -o bind /dev /nroot/proc
That looks a bit strange to me, doesnt it to you? :) I would retype
that as follow:
mount -t proc none /nroot/proc
mount -o bind /dev/ /nroot/dev
--
Fatih
On 11/12/10 15:24:44, Fatih Tümen wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 15:56, Helmut Jarausch
> wrote:
> > mount -o bind /proc /nroot/proc
> > mount -o bind /dev /nroot/proc
>
> That looks a bit strange to me, doesnt it to you? :) I would retype
> that as follow:
>
> mount -t proc none /nroot/proc
>
On 2010-11-11, Grant wrote:
>>> Should I only hire coders I can sit in the same room with?
>>
>> That will probably work best, but it will cost more.
>>
>> Have you ever managed a programming team before?
>
> I haven't. Any pointers?
Not really. Just be prepared for the programmers to misunder
On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 16:32, Helmut Jarausch
wrote:
> On 11/12/10 15:24:44, Fatih Tümen wrote:
>> On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 15:56, Helmut Jarausch
>> wrote:
>> > mount -o bind /proc /nroot/proc
>> > mount -o bind /dev /nroot/proc
>>
>> That looks a bit strange to me, doesnt it to you? :) I would
On 11/09/2010 06:52 AM, Grant wrote:
This is OT, but you guys have proven extremely insightful over the
years and I would love to hear what you think.
I've been working on a particular software project for a long time.
I'd like to hire a team of developers to take over the project, but I
conside
On 11/12/10 15:58:27, Fatih Tümen wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 16:32, Helmut Jarausch
> wrote:
> > On 11/12/10 15:24:44, Fatih Tümen wrote:
> >> On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 15:56, Helmut Jarausch
> >> wrote:
> >> > mount -o bind /proc /nroot/proc
> >> > mount -o bind /dev /nroot/proc
> >>
> >> Th
> PowerDNS is a fine auth server. If it suits your needs I'd recommend you try
> it first. I don't know about it's DNSSEC abilities or feature roadmap - it's
> been a long time since I looked closely at it. Lack of ACLs is what killed
> PowerDNS for us, I still feel sad about that
"Using
Maybe stupid question:
How to find out which physical NIC is for example eth0 ?
If I have 2 NICs in the box, for example one e1000 and one from 3com,
how to find out which one is eth0 ?
I looked up /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules where the MAC is
determining the devicefile ...
Is the
I usually do one of two things. Depending on the situation.
If both NICs are from the same vendor I install mii-tool and only plug in
one port. mii-tool will show link state. This when it negotiates it will
show output like:
eth0: negotiated 1000baseT-FD flow-control, link ok
eth1: no link
If th
Apparently, though unproven, at 16:18 on Friday 12 November 2010, James did
opine thusly:
> Alan McKinnon gmail.com> writes:
> > My first spot of advice would be to use unbound as your caching servers -
>
> Did you experiment iwth ldns-utils
> (Set of utilities to simplify various dns(sec) task
On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 17:44, Helmut Jarausch
wrote:
> Meanwhile, I have run python-updater on the master machine and I have
> re-install portage.
> Then I resync'ed the new machine against this master.
>
> Still, env-update fails after chroot
> Here is the output
>
> Python 2.6.6 (r266:84292, Oc
On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 10:51 AM, Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
>
> How to find out which physical NIC is for example eth0 ?
>
> If I have 2 NICs in the box, for example one e1000 and one from 3com,
> how to find out which one is eth0 ?
>
> I looked up /etc/udev/rules.d/70-persistent-net.rules where
There are quick'n'easy commands to goto the previous dir
-- 'cd -' , which cb aliased as 'p' --
& goto the next-higher dir -- 'cd ..' , which cb aliased as 's' -- ,
but is there a way to set up a qne command to goto a parallel dir,
eg if you're in ~/tmp goto ~/hold ( 2 of my commonly-used dirs
Am 12.11.2010 17:41, schrieb Tom H:
>> Is there another way? on non-udev-systems?
>
> dmesg | grep ethX
I looked that up, there was nothing!
Could be that I someday back then did a "dmesg -c" (I have an issue on
that server that triggered quite many lines in dmesg).
Thanks, S
Am 12.11.2010 16:57, schrieb Colt Jones:
> I usually do one of two things. Depending on the situation.
>
> If both NICs are from the same vendor I install mii-tool and only plug
> in one port. mii-tool will show link state. This when it negotiates it
> will show output like:
>
> eth0: negotiated
On Fri, 12 Nov 2010 16:51:58 +0100 "Stefan G. Weichinger"
wrote:
> Maybe stupid question:
>
> How to find out which physical NIC is for example eth0 ?
>
> If I have 2 NICs in the box, for example one e1000 and one from 3com,
> how to find out which one is eth0 ?
>
> I looked up /etc/udev/rule
On 11/12/2010 09:57 AM, Philip Webb wrote:
> There are quick'n'easy commands to goto the previous dir
> -- 'cd -' , which cb aliased as 'p' --
> & goto the next-higher dir -- 'cd ..' , which cb aliased as 's' -- ,
> but is there a way to set up a qne command to goto a parallel dir,
> eg if you're i
101112 Bill Longman wrote:
> On 11/12/2010 09:57 AM, Philip Webb wrote:
>> but is there a way to set up a command to goto a parallel dir,
>> eg if you're in ~/tmp goto ~/hold ( 2 of my commonly-used dirs) ?
>> The elegant way is 'function cd2() { cd .. ; cd $"$1" ; }'.
> cd ${PWD/old/new}
> wo
On 12 November 2010 09:57, Philip Webb wrote:
> It needs to be a Bash function, so in ~/.bashrc
> I tried 'function cd2() { cd .. ; cd $1 ; }',
Doesn't
function cd2() { cd ../$1 }
work? (I haven't tried it.)
On Tuesday 09 November 2010, meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote:
> Hi,
>
> it is possible to run a 32-bit binary executable on a 64-bit system
> (AMD64).
yes, if you use the multilib profile.
> But: Is it possible to compile source code on a 64-bit system and get
> an 32-bit executable a the result ???
Am 12.11.2010 18:51, schrieb Etaoin Shrdlu:
> mii-tool -w eth0
>
> Also look at ethtool -p (details in the man page).
Yep, thanks. Maybe I haven't explained exactly what I mean:
I want to somehow find out the relation between loaded kernel-module and
ethernet-devicefile. Without physical access
On 12 November 2010 10:36, Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
> On 12 November 2010 09:57, Philip Webb wrote:
>> It needs to be a Bash function, so in ~/.bashrc
>> I tried 'function cd2() { cd .. ; cd $1 ; }',
>
> Doesn't
>
> function cd2() { cd ../$1 }
>
> work? (I haven't tried it.)
So yes, this:
functio
- Original Message
> From: Hilco Wijbenga
> On 12 November 2010 10:36, Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
> > On 12 November 2010 09:57, Philip Webb wrote:
> >> It needs to be a Bash function, so in ~/.bashrc
> >> I tried 'function cd2() { cd .. ; cd $1 ; }',
> >
> > Doesn't
> >
> > function c
On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 21:14, Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
> I want to somehow find out the relation between loaded kernel-module and
> ethernet-devicefile. Without physical access ...
>
> In another way: "Which kernel-module is in use for /dev/ethX ?"
>
# ethtool -i eth1
driver: foo_driver
versi
101112 Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
> On 12 November 2010 09:57, Philip Webb wrote:
>> I tried 'function cd2() { cd .. ; cd $1 ; }',
> Doesn't 'function cd2() { cd ../$1 ; }' work ? -- Yes
Yes, you're correct (slightly red face) !
I'm not sure why I didn't try that variation originally.
--
===
On Fri, 12 Nov 2010 22:31:09 +0200 Fatih Tümen
wrote:
> On Fri, Nov 12, 2010 at 21:14, Stefan G. Weichinger
> wrote:
> > I want to somehow find out the relation between loaded kernel-module and
> > ethernet-devicefile. Without physical access ...
> >
> > In another way: "Which kernel-module is i
On Fri, 12 Nov 2010 21:01:50 + Etaoin Shrdlu
wrote:
> Also modprobe -k
I obviously meant lspci -k, though probably rereading the question, it's
not what he wanted.
Am 12.11.2010 22:12, schrieb Etaoin Shrdlu:
> On Fri, 12 Nov 2010 21:01:50 + Etaoin Shrdlu
> wrote:
>
>> Also modprobe -k
>
> I obviously meant lspci -k, though probably rereading the question, it's
> not what he wanted.
Thanks to all of you, I think I got it now!
"modprobe -k" is non-ex
This samba problem (windows machines cannot connect to gentoo server)
seems to have followed a recent update including samba.
qlop shows: Mon Nov 1 05:10:33 2010 >>> net-fs/samba-3.5.6
Usually I've found I might need to redo passwords with smbpasswd.
This time, that is not sufficient.
Looking
On 13/11/2010, at 12:04am, Harry Putnam wrote:
> This samba problem (windows machines cannot connect to gentoo server)
> seems to have followed a recent update including samba.
>
> qlop shows: Mon Nov 1 05:10:33 2010 >>> net-fs/samba-3.5.6
>
> Usually I've found I might need to redo passwords
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