On Monday 03 January 2011 18:43:28 Jörg Schaible wrote:
> Hi,
>
> starting with the 2.6.36-r5 kernel of the Gentoo sources my boot device
> changes. With 2.6.35 and below it is alway /dev/sda3, with the new kernel
> it seems that anything that is internally connected with USB is assigned a
> devic
Hi Stroller,
Stroller wrote:
>
> On 3/1/2011, at 7:36pm, Jörg Schaible wrote:
>> ...
>> And how does this help the kernel to find the root device where
>> /etc/fstab is located ?
>
> The kernel doesn't. You leave that to GRUB.
>
> I'm not saying this helps solve your problem, I'm just sayin'.
Hi Paul,
Paul Hartman wrote:
> On Mon, Jan 3, 2011 at 11:43 AM, Jörg Schaible
> wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> starting with the 2.6.36-r5 kernel of the Gentoo sources my boot device
>> changes. With 2.6.35 and below it is alway /dev/sda3, with the new kernel
>> it seems that anything that is internally co
Hi Alan,
Alan McKinnon wrote:
> Apparently, though unproven, at 21:36 on Monday 03 January 2011, Jörg
> Schaible did opine thusly:
>
>> Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
>> > On 01/03/2011 07:43 PM, Jörg Schaible wrote:
>> >> Hi,
>> >>
>> >> starting with the 2.6.36-r5 kernel of the Gentoo sources my bo
Hi Joost,
J. Roeleveld wrote:
> On Monday 03 January 2011 18:43:28 Jörg Schaible wrote:
>> Hi,
>>
>> starting with the 2.6.36-r5 kernel of the Gentoo sources my boot device
>> changes. With 2.6.35 and below it is alway /dev/sda3, with the new kernel
>> it seems that anything that is internally c
On Monday 03 January 2011 14:40:41 walt wrote:
> I'm wondering if you have some mixture of baselayout versions on that
> machine from previous updates.
Unlikely: this box has been ~amd64 since before it had a complete
system.
> Could your machine be trying to start something other than kdm by
>
On Tuesday 04 January 2011 01:31:27 Dale wrote:
> Anybody else ran into this? Am I missing something that is different
> on a 64 bit rig?
I discovered chrony some years ago, which has a sophisticated clock
slewing mechanism, and haven't used ntp since.
Chrony runs on my gateway machine to main
On 4/1/2011, at 9:42am, Jörg Schaible wrote:
>> ...
>> Does
>>
>> boot=LABEL=
>>
>> in grub config work for you?
>
> I hoped so, but actually no. Grub complains at boot time not finding the
> root device. Is this available in the grub-0.97 series at all?
I found numerous references to this sy
On 01/04/2011 02:50 AM, Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Monday 03 January 2011 14:40:41 walt wrote:
I'm wondering if you have some mixture of baselayout versions on that
machine from previous updates.
Unlikely: this box has been ~amd64 since before it had a complete
system.
Could your machine be t
Hi all,
With last updates, i encounter some strange behaviour witth my cdrom and
cdrw tray.
When i open the tray, this one closes quite immediatly, and i can't
insert any CD or DVD...
It's not very convenient... :-(
Where is the problem ? hal ? udev ? gvfs ?
When i uninstall gvfs, problem is gone.
On Mon, Jan 3, 2011 at 5:22 PM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> On 01/03/2011 10:23 PM, Paul Hartman wrote:
>>
>> On Mon, Jan 3, 2011 at 2:07 PM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
>>>
>>> uvesafb will not give you extra resolutions. It will however allow you
>>> to
>>> use non-default refresh-rates which is s
On Tuesday 04 January 2011 09:44:05 Jörg Schaible wrote:
> J. Roeleveld wrote:
> > One way to avoid USB-devices to be picked up before the kernel
> > picks its boot- device is to put the USB-stuff as modules and have
> > them loaded later.
> >
> > I haven't found a way to delay usb-device detectio
I'm trying to do a new install on an amd64 box and there are a lot of
problems somewhere between X, Gnome, and the Graphics card. I'm using
genkernel so there shouldn't be too much of a problem there.
The graphics card as identified by the system is: nVidia Corporation
NV36 [GeForce FX 5700L
On Mon, Jan 3, 2011 at 9:04 PM, wrote:
> Very last question:
> Is there any way to test what font looks best without haveing
> to boot each time ?
setfont
Am 04.01.2011 02:31, schrieb Dale:
Hi,
I been watching my clock here for a while. On my old rig, ntp kept the clock
set very, very well. This rig seems to have issues. I tried the stable version
of ntp and it just seems to keep resetting the time but not adjusting the drift
file at all. I eve
On 4 January 2011 11:01, Peter Humphrey wrote:
> On Tuesday 04 January 2011 09:44:05 Jörg Schaible wrote:
>> J. Roeleveld wrote:
>> > One way to avoid USB-devices to be picked up before the kernel
>> > picks its boot- device is to put the USB-stuff as modules and have
>> > them loaded later.
>> >
Peter Humphrey wrote:
On Tuesday 04 January 2011 01:31:27 Dale wrote:
Anybody else ran into this? Am I missing something that is different
on a 64 bit rig?
I discovered chrony some years ago, which has a sophisticated clock
slewing mechanism, and haven't used ntp since.
Chrony runs
Paul Hartman [11-01-04 17:28]:
> On Mon, Jan 3, 2011 at 9:04 PM, wrote:
> > Very last question:
> > Is there any way to test what font looks best without haveing
> > to boot each time ?
>
> setfont
>
Hi all,
thank you very much for your help again!
Now I have a beautiful console!
Long lives
I just upgraded to php-5.3.4 which I believe went into a new slot. Is
slotted behavior new for PHP? I think things have been rearranged.
Can someone clue me in to the new layout? For example, I get:
# /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
* Caching service dependencies ...
* apache2 has detected an err
On 01/04/11 10:27, Grant wrote:
> I just upgraded to php-5.3.4 which I believe went into a new slot. Is
> slotted behavior new for PHP? I think things have been rearranged.
> Can someone clue me in to the new layout? For example, I get:
>
> # /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
> * Caching service depe
Hi again,
Some tests about the problem :
1- problem = cdrom and cdrw tray open and close.
2- I run /etc/init.d/dbus restart, then : dbus, consolekit, cupsd and
hald restart => the problem is gone.
3- I open Nautilus => problem is back...
4- I uninstall gvfs ; i open Nautilus => problem is gone, b
On Tuesday 04 January 2011 18:47:30 Hung Dang wrote:
> On 01/04/11 10:27, Grant wrote:
> > I just upgraded to php-5.3.4 which I believe went into a new slot. Is
> > slotted behavior new for PHP? I think things have been rearranged.
> > Can someone clue me in to the new layout? For example, I get
>> boot=LABEL=
>>
>> in grub config work for you?
>
> I hoped so, but actually no. Grub complains at boot time not finding the
> root device. Is this available in the grub-0.97 series at all?
I am not sure about grub 2, but 0.97 knows nothing about filesystem
labels (and neither does the kernel
> I just upgraded to php-5.3.4 which I believe went into a new slot. Is
> slotted behavior new for PHP? I think things have been rearranged.
> Can someone clue me in to the new layout? For example, I get:
>
> # /etc/init.d/apache2 restart
> * Caching service dependencies ...
> * apache2 has de
What happens if you give the command
eject
Le 04/01/2011 21:00, Thanasis a écrit :
> What happens if you give the command
> eject
>
>
CD tray opens then close.
Jacques
On Tue, Jan 4, 2011 at 3:09 PM, Jacques Montier
wrote:
> Le 04/01/2011 21:00, Thanasis a écrit :
>> What happens if you give the command
>> eject
>>
>>
> CD tray opens then close.
>
> Jacques
>
>
This may help;
http://gentoo-pr.org/node/27
http://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=319829
--
David A
Hello.
Are you using python 3 as your main python interpreter?
Try:
#emerge -av python:2.6
#eselect python lists
#eselect python set N
where N is the number of python 2 in the previos command.
I can't help with the video card problem.
Sorry about my poor English.
Bye.
Yes, it looks like I'm using python 3. I change it to python2.6 and it
looks like it's emerge'ing without errors. This should be mentioned in
the install documentation. Now do I need to rebuild everything else,
emerge --empty-tree, now that I switched python interpreters?
# eselect python l
Apparently, though unproven, at 15:18 on Tuesday 04 January 2011, Stroller did
opine thusly:
> On 4/1/2011, at 9:42am, Jörg Schaible wrote:
> >> ...
> >> Does
> >>
> >> boot=LABEL=
> >>
> >> in grub config work for you?
> >
> > I hoped so, but actually no. Grub complains at boot time not findi
Apparently, though unproven, at 18:03 on Tuesday 04 January 2011, Paul Hartman
did opine thusly:
> On Mon, Jan 3, 2011 at 5:22 PM, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
> > On 01/03/2011 10:23 PM, Paul Hartman wrote:
> >> On Mon, Jan 3, 2011 at 2:07 PM, Nikos Chantziaras
wrote:
> >>> uvesafb will not give
Apparently, though unproven, at 12:50 on Tuesday 04 January 2011, Peter
Humphrey did opine thusly:
> On Monday 03 January 2011 14:40:41 walt wrote:
> > I'm wondering if you have some mixture of baselayout versions on that
> > machine from previous updates.
>
> Unlikely: this box has been ~amd64
On Tuesday 04 January 2011 22:35:08 KIM WHALEN wrote:
> Yes, it looks like I'm using python 3. I change it to python2.6 and it
> looks like it's emerge'ing without errors. This should be mentioned in
> the install documentation. Now do I need to rebuild everything else,
> emerge --empty-tree, no
On Tuesday 04 January 2011 21:35:08 KIM WHALEN wrote:
> Yes, it looks like I'm using python 3. I change it to python2.6 and it
> looks like it's emerge'ing without errors. This should be mentioned in
> the install documentation. Now do I need to rebuild everything else,
> emerge --empty-tree, no
KIM WHALEN wrote:
Yes, it looks like I'm using python 3. I change it to python2.6 and
it looks like it's emerge'ing without errors. This should be
mentioned in the install documentation. Now do I need to rebuild
everything else, emerge --empty-tree, now that I switched python
interpreters?
Alan McKinnon wrote:
Apparently, though unproven, at 15:18 on Tuesday 04 January 2011, Stroller did
opine thusly:
I found numerous references to this syntax going back to 2005 or
so, and some major distros seem to use it as the default way of
describing "root=" to the kernel.
http://www.li
Dale writes:
> Alan McKinnon wrote:
>> Apparently, though unproven, at 15:18 on Tuesday 04 January 2011, Stroller
>> did
>> opine thusly:
>>
>>> I found numerous references to this syntax going back to 2005 or
>>> so, and some major distros seem to use it as the default way of
>>> describing
On Tue, 4 Jan 2011, Grant wrote:
>
> Since things seem to be working with php-5.3.4, how can I get rid of
> the older version of php that must be installed in another slot? I'm
> hoping that simplifies things a bit. PHP on Gentoo just got more
> complicated and all I need out of it is squirrelmai
Is the clock almost in sync? - if its too far out ntp will silently fail
to sync (by design - large scale time steps can be destructive for
heavily active databases for instance)
Check out the -g option to ntpd in 'man ntpd'
or 'tinker panic 0' in ntp.conf
Also, has ntp.conf specified a writable
All,
Has anyone gotten both the trackpad and trackpoint on a t400 to work
simultaneously? I can't seem to get it to work. Here are the relevant
sections of my xorg.conf file.
Section "ServerLayout"
Identifier "Layout0"
Screen 0 "Screen0" 0 0
InputDevice"Keyboard0" "CoreK
William Kenworthy wrote:
Is the clock almost in sync? - if its too far out ntp will silently fail
to sync (by design - large scale time steps can be destructive for
heavily active databases for instance)
Check out the -g option to ntpd in 'man ntpd'
or 'tinker panic 0' in ntp.conf
Also, has nt
Hi,
I installed gnupg 2.0.16-r2 (and r1 previously) on the AC100 which is
arm based.
When I start gpg-agent i got this error :
$ gpg-agent
*** longjmp causes uninitialized stack frame ***: gpg-agent terminated
Aborted
there is a bugfix in ubuntu :
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/gnu
On 01/04/11 14:42, Grant wrote:
>
> Thank you, that fixed it. I'm getting some errors in squirrelmail but
> functionality seems to be intact.
>
> Since things seem to be working with php-5.3.4, how can I get rid of
> the older version of php that must be installed in another slot? I'm
> hoping
On Wednesday 05 January 2011 00:55:49 Alex Schuster wrote:
> Dale writes:
> > Alan McKinnon wrote:
> >> Apparently, though unproven, at 15:18 on Tuesday 04 January 2011,
> >> Stroller did
> >>
> >> opine thusly:
> >>> I found numerous references to this syntax going back to 2005 or
> >>> so, and s
On Wednesday 05 January 2011 04:42:53 James wrote:
> All,
>
> Has anyone gotten both the trackpad and trackpoint on a t400 to work
> simultaneously? I can't seem to get it to work. Here are the relevant
> sections of my xorg.conf file.
>
> Section "ServerLayout"
> Identifier "Layout0"
>
> > I had a similar problem before and I did solve it by running this
> command:
> > eselect php set apache2 php5.3. I believe I get this command from a
> Gentoo
> > official PHP guide.
> >
> > Hung
>
> Thank you, that fixed it. I'm getting some errors in squirrelmail but
> functionality seems to
Try the following and see if it resets time correctly
date 0101010101 && /etc/init.d/ntpd restart && date
on 01/05/2011 09:39 AM Dale wrote the following:
> Thanasis wrote:
>> date 0101010101&& /etc/init.d/ntpd restart&& date
>
> I got this:
>
> Jan 1 01:05:16 localhost ntpd[5709]: time correction of 315880203
> seconds exceeds sanity limit (1000); set clock manually to the correct
> UTC time.
>
> I
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