On Sun, Feb 20, 2011 at 08:33:22PM -0500, Walter Dnes wrote:
On Sun, Feb 20, 2011 at 12:09:27PM +, Mick wrote
Indeed, the Gentoo Alsa Guide still says pretty much the same thing:
Please note that for ease of use, all examples show ALSA built as
modules. It is advisable to follow the
On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 12:39:43AM -0500, Philip Webb wrote:
110220 Philip Webb wrote:
110220 Florian Philipp wrote:
Just change your cron job to look like
'test -e /var/run/dhcpcd.pid fetchmail'
That's by far the simplest it still fetches the mail,
so we'll see if it also avoids the
On Sun, 20 Feb 2011 23:10:18 -0500, David Relson wrote:
You're suggesting that the RUN clause be
RUN+=pmount /dev/PNY
right?
Right. Most importantly, stop using mount -a.
--
Neil Bothwick
If you think that there is good in everybody, you haven't met everybody.
signature.asc
btw, if I need to check if the network is up in a script, I usually do
ping -q -c1 -w4 some.remote.host /dev/null 21
command-to-run-if-remote-host-reachable
It the advantage that it checks directly connection to the host
you wish to connect to, so it also won't run the command if your
On 21 February 2011 04:27, James wirel...@tampabay.rr.com wrote:
James wireless at tampabay.rr.com writes:
In the kernel, under the Generic section, I first tried:
CONFIG_FW_LOADER=y
CONFIG_FIRMWARE_IN_KERNEL=y
CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE=radeon
CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE_DIR=/lib/firmware
This
Mick michaelkintzios at gmail.com writes:
# cat /usr/src/linux/.config | grep -i FIRMWARE
CONFIG_PREVENT_FIRMWARE_BUILD=y
CONFIG_FIRMWARE_IN_KERNEL=y
CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE=radeon/R700_rlc.bin
CONFIG_EXTRA_FIRMWARE_DIR=/lib/firmware/
CONFIG_FIRMWARE_EDID=y
# Firmware Drivers
On Monday 21 February 2011 04:07:20 Valmor de Almeida wrote:
otherwise my keyboard keybindings do not work. I have also tried the
pointer InputClass outside the xorg.conf file, that is, inside the
xorg.conf.d/ directory. As long as the 10-synaptics.conf file is read
first, the keyboard config
Is there either a kernel config option or additionally some
application that allows me to turn on and off the lights underneath
this groovy new laptop's keyboard?
They flash on when booting, and work in Windows, but I don't know how
to control them in Linux. I haven't found any function key that
Hi,
I just noticed my /var/log/sshd.log is suddenly somehow big.
After checking it out I have found a lot of messages like this:
2011-02-21T03:49:21+00:00 obelix sshd[19767]: SSH: Server;Ltype:
Version;Remote: my.ip.add.ress-56254;Protocol: 2.0;Client:
OpenSSH_5.8p1-hpn13v10
This message
On Monday 21 February 2011 19:40:33 Mark Knecht wrote:
Is there either a kernel config option or additionally some
application that allows me to turn on and off the lights underneath
this groovy new laptop's keyboard?
They flash on when booting, and work in Windows, but I don't know how
to
On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 12:10 PM, Mick michaelkintz...@gmail.com wrote:
On Monday 21 February 2011 19:40:33 Mark Knecht wrote:
Is there either a kernel config option or additionally some
application that allows me to turn on and off the lights underneath
this groovy new laptop's keyboard?
I've gotten confused on this problem way too many times.. I'd like to
get some definitive starting points.
When you see net adapters online they are always rated like
10/100 or 10/100/1000. So how does one turn that notation into
megabytes?
I think those numbers stand for bits, right?
But
On Mon, Feb 21, 2011 at 11:11:54AM +0100, YoYo Siska wrote
Run alsamixer, pres F4 (capture) and either look for
- a mic control (along with CD, Line, Aux,... controls), then make
sure it has a red CAPTURE text (spacebar toggles CAPTURE)
Thank you very much. That was the last step that I
On 02/21/2011 11:48 AM, Jarry wrote:
Hi,
I just noticed my /var/log/sshd.log is suddenly somehow big.
That's interesting. I have no such logfile. Did you change something
in /etc/ssh/sshd_config?
Oh, wait, I'm running openssh-5.8-p1, and my config file says the logging
configuration has
G'day,
My USB subsystem is working much better now (than it was this
weekend). /etc/fstab had a reference to /dev/hdb which no my current
kernel no longer supports. Removing this has improved flash drive
mounting a whole lot!
I've also modified /etc/udev/rules.d/10-local.rules to use pmount
Harry Putnam rea...@newsguy.com writes:
I've gotten confused on this problem way too many times.. I'd like to
get some definitive starting points.
When you see net adapters online they are always rated like
10/100 or 10/100/1000. So how does one turn that notation into
megabytes?
I
On Mon, 21 Feb 2011 18:58:38 -0500, David Relson wrote:
I've also modified /etc/udev/rules.d/10-local.rules to use pmount
device label rather than mount -a. This is mounting flash drives
in /media as desired:
mount -a was always a bad idea, because it could potentially affect
drives other
I've gotten confused on this problem way too many times.. I'd like to
get some definitive starting points.
When you see net adapters online they are always rated like
10/100 or 10/100/1000. So how does one turn that notation into
megabytes?
That notation is in megabits per second, or
On 02/21/2011 03:14 PM, Walter Dnes wrote:
ffmpeg -y -f alsa -i plughw:0,0 audio1.wav
ffmpeg -y -f oss -i /dev/dsp audio2.wav
I understand the /dev/dsp, but where did plughw:0,0 come from?
After googling around a bit, I must say I've rarely seen such
opaque documentation as I've just
Jarry writes:
I just noticed my /var/log/sshd.log is suddenly somehow big.
After checking it out I have found a lot of messages like this:
2011-02-21T03:49:21+00:00 obelix sshd[19767]: SSH: Server;Ltype:
Version;Remote: my.ip.add.ress-56254;Protocol: 2.0;Client:
OpenSSH_5.8p1-hpn13v10
On 22. 2. 2011 0:42, walt wrote:
On 02/21/2011 11:48 AM, Jarry wrote:
Hi,
I just noticed my /var/log/sshd.log is suddenly somehow big.
That's interesting. I have no such logfile. Did you change something
in /etc/ssh/sshd_config?
I forgot to say: I have set up filter for ssh-messages.
They
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