Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 25/06/2015 10:27, Dale wrote:
Do we even have a clue how many puters Google has now? I read several
years ago it was like 10,000 or so. No telling what they have now. o_O
Around 2006, it was at least 100,000
You are out by an order of magnitude :-)
I would not
Best way I ever found to learn how things really work under the hood is
to build a Linux From Scratch and pay close attention to every single step.
Not that you'd ever actually *use* that system - there's no sane package
management for a start - but after building an LFS, the content of
On Thu, Jun 25, 2015 at 8:01 AM, behrouz khosravi bz.khosr...@gmail.com wrote:
Best way I ever found to learn how things really work under the hood is
to build a Linux From Scratch and pay close attention to every single
step.
Not that you'd ever actually *use* that system - there's no sane
On 25 June 2015 at 14:56, Rich Freeman ri...@gentoo.org wrote:
The only issue I'd raise with LFS in this day and age is that many of
these guides tend to leave out stuff like devtmpfs, udev, policykit,
and so on. Some people choose not to use them (this list probably
being one of the larger
On 24/06/2015 13:50, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
P.P.S. Also, on 1% better performance: My professor for the compilers
class I took used to (maybe still does) work at Google. Apparently
Google sees a 1% increase in performance as *the best thing ever*,
because it can save them a bunch of money in
On Wed, 24 Jun 2015 16:29:14 +0430, behrouz khosravi wrote:
I have moved to i3wm and
USE=-* and it was not that hard.
No one said it would be hard, just that it has great potential for
breakage. That potential is still there. When the devs tweak default USE
settings in ebuilds to make
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 24/06/2015 13:50, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
P.P.S. Also, on 1% better performance: My professor for the compilers
class I took used to (maybe still does) work at Google. Apparently
Google sees a 1% increase in performance as *the best thing ever*,
because it can save
On 24/06/2015 14:23, behrouz khosravi wrote:
Here's some good advice:
Don't do that. See below.
Oops! I have done it and I am happy so far !
Wait a little longer :-)
I predict within 2 weeks you'll be posting back about some completely
baffling problem and we'll have a huge
On 25/06/2015 10:27, Dale wrote:
Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 24/06/2015 13:50, Alec Ten Harmsel wrote:
P.P.S. Also, on 1% better performance: My professor for the compilers
class I took used to (maybe still does) work at Google. Apparently
Google sees a 1% increase in performance as *the best
On 25/06/2015 06:25, Jc García wrote:
2015-06-24 6:23 GMT-06:00 behrouz khosravi bz.khosr...@gmail.com:
Here's some good advice:
Don't do that. See below.
Oops! I have done it and I am happy so far !
That's a bit of a nonsensical line of thought, as what you think you
want doesn't
On Wed, Jun 24, 2015 at 01:13:40PM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 23/06/2015 15:05, behrouz khosravi wrote:
Hello everyone.
I really like to have control over my machine as much as possible. In
this way I will learn a lot, so I am trying to remove all the default
use flags and control
Here's some good advice:
Don't do that. See below.
Oops! I have done it and I am happy so far !
That's a bit of a nonsensical line of thought, as what you think you
want doesn't really exist.
I think you misunderstood me! for example adding CPU specific flags is a
good idea right?
I meant
behrouz khosravi wrote:
Hello everyone.
I really like to have control over my machine as much as possible. In this
way I will learn a lot, so I am trying to remove all the default use flags
and control them manually.
I just don't know which global use flags are absolutely necessary to the
On 23/06/2015 15:05, behrouz khosravi wrote:
Hello everyone.
I really like to have control over my machine as much as possible. In
this way I will learn a lot, so I am trying to remove all the default
use flags and control them manually.
Here's some good advice:
Don't do that. See below.
On Wed, Jun 24, 2015 at 01:13:40PM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 23/06/2015 15:05, behrouz khosravi wrote:
Hello everyone.
I really like to have control over my machine as much as possible. In
this way I will learn a lot, so I am trying to remove all the default
use flags and control
To be more serious:
* Set a minimal basic profile (as already suggested)
* Tune your USE-Flags in make.conf. media-related flags (mp3, flac) should
be harmless, if you touch flags that get used in core packages (e.g. in the
toolchain) double (or triple) check if you don't do evil things.
*
On Wed, Jun 24, 2015 at 01:13:40PM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 23/06/2015 15:05, behrouz khosravi wrote:
Hello everyone.
I really like to have control over my machine as much as possible. In
this way I will learn a lot, so I am trying to remove all the default
use flags and control
2015-06-24 6:23 GMT-06:00 behrouz khosravi bz.khosr...@gmail.com:
Here's some good advice:
Don't do that. See below.
Oops! I have done it and I am happy so far !
That's a bit of a nonsensical line of thought, as what you think you
want doesn't really exist.
I think you misunderstood
On Wed, Jun 24, 2015 at 04:53:18PM +0430, behrouz khosravi wrote
What do you recommend ?
DO NOT SET USE=-*
As I said before I have done it and I totally recommend it to anyone
interested to get a better understanding of user land.
The point with USE=-* is to create your own base
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015 16:45:58 +0200, David Haller wrote:
You can also start USE with -* in make.conf to turn everything off then
set your own choices. This is the ideal setup for those who prefer to
spend more time fixing their computer than using it.
Hah!
Hey, I got no printer, had
Hello,
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015 17:35:10 +0430, behrouz khosravi wrote:
I really like to have control over my machine as much as possible. In
this way I will learn a lot, so I am trying to remove all the default
use flags and control them manually.
[..]
You
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015 17:35:10 +0430, behrouz khosravi wrote:
I really like to have control over my machine as much as possible. In
this way I will learn a lot, so I am trying to remove all the default
use flags and control them manually.
I just don't know which global use flags are
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015 18:35:32 +0200, David Haller wrote:
You do know that only the desktop profiles include cups as a default
USE flag? The one I recommended does not.
Try compiling icedtea, libreoffice, scribus and whatnot without
pulling in cups, no matter the use-flags. And sabotaging the
Hello,
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015 16:45:58 +0200, David Haller wrote:
You can also start USE with -* in make.conf to turn everything off then
set your own choices. This is the ideal setup for those who prefer to
spend more time fixing their computer than
Hello,
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Tue, 23 Jun 2015 18:35:32 +0200, David Haller wrote:
You do know that only the desktop profiles include cups as a default
USE flag? The one I recommended does not.
Try compiling icedtea, libreoffice, scribus and whatnot without
pulling in
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