Grant Edwards wrote:
On my installation 'info kqemu' runs the Gnu info utility,
which doesn't seem to know anything about kqemu. What info
program is the Wiki talking about, and where does one get it?
A shot in the dark: qemu has a console that can be reached with
Ctrl+Alt+2. I would assume
On Friday 26 Dec 2008, Grant Edwards wrote:
Both the kqemu and qemu packages are installed.
Apparently run info kqemu refers to somthing other than the
Gnu info program, but I don't know what.
You should switch to the Qemu monitor (Ctrl-Alt-2) and then you can run the
info and other
Dale wrote:
Grant Edwards wrote:
The Wiki page on Qemu says
To test if kqemu is correctly installed, run info kqemu. If
it returns kqemu support: enabled for user and kernel code,
your installation is correct.
On my installation 'info kqemu' runs the Gnu info utility,
which
Dale wrote:
Paul Hartman wrote:
On Sun, Dec 7, 2008 at 10:09 PM, Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com wrote:
Paul Hartman wrote:
It's on the second page of the filter setup. Mine gives me these options:
Skip the Inbox (Archive it)
Mark as read
Star it
Apply the label:
On 2008-12-26, Remy Blank remy.bl...@pobox.com wrote:
Grant Edwards wrote:
On my installation 'info kqemu' runs the Gnu info utility,
which doesn't seem to know anything about kqemu. What info
program is the Wiki talking about, and where does one get it?
A shot in the dark: qemu has a
Grant Edwards wrote:
On 2008-12-26, Remy Blank remy.bl...@pobox.com wrote:
Grant Edwards wrote:
On my installation 'info kqemu' runs the Gnu info utility,
which doesn't seem to know anything about kqemu. What info
program is the Wiki talking about, and where does one get it?
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Jorge Peixoto de Morais Neto wrote:
[...] what would be the best way to defrag it?
By not defragging it.
[...]
I don't buy into that argument and never did. Every few months I
copy the
whole HD to another one and then back to counter fragmentation (ext3)
and
the
On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 09:01:03 -0800, Grant wrote:
I think I'm getting system included within world too.
Check /var/lib/portage/world_sets
--
Neil Bothwick
Top Oxymorons Number 41: Good grief
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On Tue, 23 Dec 2008 19:54:12 -0600, Dale wrote:
I was sort of in the discussion on -dev about this one. From my
understanding, world and system works like it used to. @system and
@world works the new way. However, when I type in emerge -ep world and
then do emerge -pv @world, I get the
On Wed, 24 Dec 2008 17:17:16 +0200, Leonid Podolny wrote:
Anyway, is there an easy way to find orphan packages, i.e. installed
packages that don't have repository behind? For example, if I used to
have a layman overlay and now I deleted it, all the packages that
belonged to that overlay are
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Jorge Peixoto de Morais Neto wrote:
[...] what would be the best way to defrag it?
By not defragging it.
[...]
I don't buy into that argument and never did. Every few months I
copy the
whole HD to another one and then back to counter
I think I'm getting system included within world too.
Check /var/lib/portage/world_sets
That file doesn't exist on my system.
- Grant
Dale wrote:
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
OK, I once again verified that fragmentation seems to be a big issue
even on Linux. I just migrated to ext4, and in order to do that I had
to rsync, format and rsync back. The result is similar to the last
time I did this (over 8 months ago):
emerge
On Friday 26 December 2008 21:49:02 Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
OK, I once again verified that fragmentation seems to be a big issue
even on Linux. I just migrated to ext4, and in order to do that I had
to rsync, format and rsync back. The result is similar to the last time
I did this (over 8
I have 3 Gentoo systems on a wireless network, one of which is the
firewall/router. Sometimes any traffic to one of the systems
effectively freezes traffic on the whole network. Does anyone know
what might cause that? It's tough to investigate because it doesn't
happen all the time.
- Grant
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Friday 26 December 2008 21:49:02 Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
OK, I once again verified that fragmentation seems to be a big issue
even on Linux. I just migrated to ext4, and in order to do that I had
to rsync, format and rsync back. The result is similar to the last time
2008/12/26 Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:
Sorry to say but I'm back. I set up that filter and checked the spam
bucket on webmail today. It had over 800 messages and some of them are
not spam.
This is not an answer to your question below but I wanted to mention a
few things that might help you
Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
2008/12/26 Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:
Sorry to say but I'm back. I set up that filter and checked the spam
bucket on webmail today. It had over 800 messages and some of them are
not spam.
This is not an answer to your question below but I wanted to mention a
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Dale wrote:
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
OK, I once again verified that fragmentation seems to be a big issue
even on Linux. I just migrated to ext4, and in order to do that I had
to rsync, format and rsync back. The result is similar to the last
time I did this (over
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Friday 26 December 2008 21:49:02 Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
OK, I once again verified that fragmentation seems to be a big issue
even on Linux. I just migrated to ext4, and in order to do that I had
to rsync, format and rsync back. The result
Dale wrote:
I have to say that after my recent transfer, my login got a whole one
second faster. I can't tell any difference anywhere else. Of course,
portage has always been on its own partition and used ext3.
We need a hard drive engineer on here. :/
Dale
:-) :-)
Hey, I've been
Dale wrote:
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
I already did the rsync/format thing a few times over the last years,
and the results are always the same: very fast filesystem for about a
month, then it starts getting slower over time.
I have to say that after my recent transfer, my login got a whole
2008/12/26 Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:
Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
2008/12/26 Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:
snip/
Well, I'm on dial-up and that thing doesn't like my slow as crap
connection. Thanks ATT for keeping your promise on getting use DSL.
Bit of sarcasm there in case you can't tell. Very few
Matt Harrison wrote:
Dale wrote:
I have to say that after my recent transfer, my login got a whole one
second faster. I can't tell any difference anywhere else. Of course,
portage has always been on its own partition and used ext3.
We need a hard drive engineer on here. :/
Dale
:-)
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Dale wrote:
Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
I already did the rsync/format thing a few times over the last years,
and the results are always the same: very fast filesystem for about a
month, then it starts getting slower over time.
I have to say that after my recent
Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
2008/12/26 Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:
Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
2008/12/26 Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:
snip/
Well, I'm on dial-up and that thing doesn't like my slow as crap
connection. Thanks ATT for keeping your promise on getting use DSL.
Bit of
Due to a new work situation where extensive use is made of Debian, I
feel the need to have a Debian-based play server. This unfortunately
means my trusty Gentoo box is to be sacrificed :-(
Thanks for the help I have received over the last few years (think I
joined in 2005). I have enjoyed
Dale wrote:
But if we learned to much, we may be dangerous or something. Sometimes
to much knowledge can be bad. lol
I !think! I tried XFS once. If it was XFS, you need to have a UPS for
sure. Every time the system crashed I had to re-install. I never got
it to recover even once. I have
On Fri, Dec 26, 2008 at 04:58:26AM +, Penguin Lover Grant Edwards squawked:
AFAICT, kqemu 1.3.0_pre11 is not compatible with 2.6.26
kernels. It seems to work fine with 2.6.25, but with 2.6.26 it
causes qemu to crash with a segfault. I've seen other reports
of similar problems on other
Dale wrote:
If you have no ideas on how to disable, what are some free email
servers that allow pop access?
Ideas?
Dale
:-) :-)
I use the Webmail extension for Thunderbird (I don't know if it works in
Seamonkey), it supports quite a few webmail interfaces and lets Mozilla
talk to
Hi All,
I just upgraded my kernel with make oldconfig and noticed new options for
sound. Other than taking in excess of 50 seconds looking at the penguin
before the kernel starts booting up I found out upon bootup that alsasound
fails to find the kernel driver for my sound card:
Marc Blumentritt wrote:
I have since 2 months a problem with my boot up splash. Splash is
working, but the init messages (like starting daemon foh ... [ok]) are
written an screen above (for lack of a better word) my splash. When
the messages reach the bottom of the screen, the splash is
Quoting Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:
Thought about marking them ALL as not spam and just
screwing their spam filter right up. Sort of a get even thing there. :-@
I did that many many many many times. I hate google for not let me
disable the stupid spam filter. **BUT** I found a workaround:
On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 23:02:38 +0200, Nikos Chantziaras wrote:
Well, instead of yesterday let's just say the past 5 months. I
already did the rsync/format thing a few times over the last years, and
the results are always the same: very fast filesystem for about a
month, then it starts
On Fri, 26 Dec 2008 12:32:36 -0800, Grant wrote:
Check /var/lib/portage/world_sets
That file doesn't exist on my system.
Which version of portage are you using? Sets are a feature of the
2.2 branch, as is the separate @system and 'world.
--
Neil Bothwick
... Never say anything more
This is OT but here I am anyway:
Quoting Hilco Wijbenga hilco.wijbe...@gmail.com:
When you see spam in your inbox do you use Report spam? When you see
valid email in your spam do you use Not spam? I found it learns very
quickly what I consider spam and what not. I also tend to go through
the
Quoting Mark Kirkwood mar...@paradise.net.nz:
Due to a new work situation where extensive use is made of Debian, I
feel the need to have a Debian-based play server. This unfortunately
means my trusty Gentoo box is to be sacrificed :-(
At work we abuse Ubuntu and that means I need to know it
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