I recently did my first-in-a-long-while "emerge world". Now, when I
click a link in Thunderbird nothing happens. I'd like the link to be
opened in Firefox (of course). I'm using KDE.
Any ideas?
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Arran
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nfly" or replace with "-h localhost".
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Arran Fraser
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OK, one time it allowed me to set a password. However no form of this
command seems to work for me so far. Is it the Using password: No
telling me to not use a password?
So you noticed that now the error isn't "lost connection" any more,
which means your first problem (with "-h dragonfly") is fixe
Hi,
Did you install dev-php/mod_php as well as dev-php/php? The latter just
gives you PHP on the command line; the former gives you an Apache2
module (with the right USE flags).
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Arran
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William Meertens wrote:
Hi,
Thank you for your answer.
Yes I did. Currently I have version 4.3.11-r2 installed.
OK... but your Apache2 conf is looking for version >= 5
Perhaps the source of your problem is actually in /etc/conf.d/apache2 --
the option to load PHP is now version-specific. So your
>
> If somebody knows what to do, I would be really happy about it (I would like
> to hear my audio-cd's, for example).
aaah! Now it's making sense! You can't mount *audio* CD's because
they don't contain a filesystem.
Just point your favorite CD-player software directly to the CD *devic
Greetings from Halifax, Nova Scotia!
I have a Memorex 1GB USB drive that I've used with my Gentoo systems
(home and work) quite happily for some time.
Until this week. I upgraded a number of packages, including my kernel
(gentoo 2.6.12 --> gentoo 2.6.13). After the reboot, no more /dev/sd
Since it no longer works with the old config either, it is possible the
device has failed and it happening when you changed kernels was one of
those 'coincidences' that prove the existence of Finagle.
That is exactly what I thought too when reverting didn't work. But, the
device does work fine
Tamas Sarga wrote:
On Fri, 23 Sep 2005, Arran Fraser wrote:
To me, that implies that it may have been another package I upgraded
(udev?) that is causing the change... but unfortunately I don't remember
exactly what programs were on the list of updates.
You can see all emerges in date
Based on the log, I would say udev is the most likely point of failure.
Have you run etc-update yet?
Yes... although I may have rebooted before doing so.
You can also try setting udev_log="yes" in /etc/udev/udev.conf, to have
udev output sturff to /var/log/messages.
Will do. Is there
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