NORMAN HAKIM YAHYA
--- On Thu, 6/26/08, Ricardo Bevilacqua [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Ricardo Bevilacqua [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Problem mounting cdrom,cdrw,usb
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Date: Thursday, June 26, 2008, 8:26 PM
2008/6/26 Norman Hakim [EMAIL
On Friday 27 June 2008, kashani wrote:
The thing about this keys is, that there is no better way than to
brute force such keys. The algorithm uses a function which inverse
is a known hard problem which resides in NP, which is a class of
functions equal to just guessing.
I don't believe
On Thu, 26 Jun 2008 20:00:03 -0400, Chris Walters wrote:
Actually, if a theory I read about in theoretical physics is true -
that is that all events that have occurred, are occurring, and will
occur coexist together, and that we only perceive them as being linear
because our brains are not
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 10:51:57 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Neil
mentioned GCHQ developing public key several years before RSA, but do
note that RSA still had the same bright idea that GCHQ had, only a few
short years later.
The important point was that they kept quiet about it. Even after
Hello,
I keep running into errors while using an external eSATA drive. I have
searched for information regarding this issue, and there just is not
much out there. The best information I've seen mentions that a user was
having this issue, but it went away as long as the disk was connected to
OK, it works!
this what I did:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~/music $ cdda2wav -e -N -B
cdda2wav: No such file or directory. Cannot open '-1'. Cannot open SCSI
driver.
cdda2wav: For possible targets try 'wodim -scanbus'. Make sure you are root.
Use the script scan_scsi.linux to find out more.
Probably you
Alan McKinnon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thursday 26 June 2008, Joerg Schilling wrote:
A more general problem is the license incompatibility with libcdio.
Sun dropped libcdio already a year ago after Sun lawyers detected the
problem and I expect that Linux distros will do the same soon.
Yoav Luft [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OK, it works!
this what I did:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] ~/music $ cdda2wav -e -N -B
cdda2wav: No such file or directory. Cannot open '-1'. Cannot open SCSI
driver.
cdda2wav: For possible targets try 'wodim -scanbus'. Make sure you are root.
Use the script
On 27 Jun 2008, at 00:37, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 00:47:34 +0200, Sebastian Günther wrote:
If the NSA had a sufficient algorithm, that is capable of
reducing the time that much, they should also be able to prove P=NP.
This is worth 1.000.000$ iirc and somehow you should get
On 27 Jun 2008, at 10:25, Joerg Schilling wrote:
Alan McKinnon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thursday 26 June 2008, Joerg Schilling wrote:
A more general problem is the license incompatibility with libcdio.
Sun dropped libcdio already a year ago after Sun lawyers detected
the
problem and I
On Friday 27 June 2008, Joerg Schilling wrote:
If we ignore this, we come to the problem identified by the Sun
lawyers:
If you run sound-juicer, then gstreamer (being LGPL) loads and calls
libcdio which is GPL. This is not allowed by the GPL. GPL and LGPL
are incompatible.
Thanks for the
On 27 Jun 2008, at 10:57, Joerg Schilling wrote:
Stroller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 27 Jun 2008, at 10:25, Joerg Schilling wrote:
Alan McKinnon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thursday 26 June 2008, Joerg Schilling wrote:
A more general problem is the license incompatibility with
libcdio.
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 10:44:00 +0100, Stroller wrote:
I'm sure the NSA would be happy to forego the prize and keep quiet
about
being able to break a secure cipher.
I can't help wondering if - since P=NP is such a big problem - the
advantages of having this knowledge in the public
Stroller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On 27 Jun 2008, at 10:25, Joerg Schilling wrote:
Alan McKinnon [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Thursday 26 June 2008, Joerg Schilling wrote:
A more general problem is the license incompatibility with libcdio.
Sun dropped libcdio already a year ago after
Hi there,
With an `emerge -pv world` today I've noticed an anomaly with vlv
ffmpeg. It initially came up with a portage message which reported
AFAIR a package would be slotted for the first time. I uninstalled
vlc just for the moment, and upgraded ffmpeg to the latest version.
Still I
Hi all,
vmplayer broke again. I guess my last update had to do with gtk but
still when running vmplayer I get:
process 5474: Attempt to remove filter function 0xb58653a0 user data
0x8678f18,but no such filter has been added
D-Bus not built with -rdynamic so unable to print a backtrace.
Steven Lembark [EMAIL PROTECTED] at Thursday 26 June 2008, 23:52:17
I submit that brute forcing an AES key of reasonably length is
currently impossible in an amount of time that would matter to the
human race.
On average yes.
As already pointed out, however, there is nothing
to
7v5w7go9ub0o [EMAIL PROTECTED] at Friday 27 June 2008, 05:41:15
Chris Walters wrote:
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Sorry if this subject has been hashed and rehashed again, but I was
wondering
which Gentoo partition encryption scheme is considered the best, in
kashani [EMAIL PROTECTED] at Friday 27 June 2008, 02:28:21
Here's a reference to the interesting meet-in-the-middle attack which
reduced 3DES key space down to 112 bits from 192.
3DES always had an effective key size of 112 bits, because it uses the
original DES algorithm applied in the
On Friday 27 June 2008, David Harel wrote:
Hi all,
vmplayer broke again. I guess my last update had to do with gtk but
still when running vmplayer I get:
process 5474: Attempt to remove filter function 0xb58653a0 user data
0x8678f18,but no such filter has been added
D-Bus not built with
On Friday 27 June 2008, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 10:44:00 +0100, Stroller wrote:
I'm sure the NSA would be happy to forego the prize and keep
quiet about
being able to break a secure cipher.
I can't help wondering if - since P=NP is such a big problem - the
Norman,
First understand one thing: The terminal is always a good friend :-)
Second, let's explain the fstab: Fstab (filesystem table) is a table
with all the specification for you filesystem. Check this out:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fstab. To check the content of fstab just
type this on you
I have 2 Internet connections, 1 fast ADSL and 1 slow wireless as a
backup. My router doesn't do automatic failover or even have support for
multiple WAN connections so I thought I'd set up PPP connections on my
Gentoo server that do PPPoE to the 2 modems which I connected directly
to my
Stroller,
This doesn't mean that ffmpeg is slotted. It means that the version of VLC
you're trying to merge depends on an OLDER version of ffmpeg. VLC has some
major issues with later versions of ffmpeg that are being handled rather
poorly upstream. So unfortunately, if you want to use a stable
On 27 Jun 2008, at 17:08, Brian Johnson wrote:
...
This doesn't mean that ffmpeg is slotted. It means that the version
of VLC you're trying to merge depends on an OLDER version of
ffmpeg. VLC has some major issues with later versions of ffmpeg
that are being handled rather poorly
Hello,
I need to deploy a (gentoo) server, on an isolated, remote network, with
just a few custom applications. However, to periodically
update the gentoo distro, I want to build a second (congruent)
system, that can be physically swapped for update, or in the
event of failure (brain-dead, I
Sebastian Wiesner wrote:
7v5w7go9ub0o [EMAIL PROTECTED] at Friday 27 June 2008, 05:41:15
Chris Walters wrote:
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Sorry if this subject has been hashed and rehashed again, but I was
wondering
which Gentoo partition encryption scheme is considered
I have a linksys (Cisco) WRT54G, which works fine except for one
point.
I have been unable to find in the documentation how to tell its dhcp
server that mac address X should get IP addr Y. I am prepared to
accept the deserved shame if someone tells me how to do this.
Failing the above, I am
Allan Gottlieb wrote:
I have a linksys (Cisco) WRT54G, which works fine except for one
point.
I have been unable to find in the documentation how to tell its dhcp
server that mac address X should get IP addr Y. I am prepared to
accept the deserved shame if someone tells me how to do this.
On Friday 27 June 2008, James wrote:
Hello,
I need to deploy a (gentoo) server, on an isolated, remote network,
with just a few custom applications. However, to periodically
update the gentoo distro, I want to build a second (congruent)
system, that can be physically swapped for update, or
On Friday 27 June 2008, James wrote:
Hello,
I need to deploy a (gentoo) server, on an isolated, remote network,
with just a few custom applications. However, to periodically
update the gentoo distro, I want to build a second (congruent)
system, that can be physically swapped for update, or
Alan McKinnon alan.mckinnon at gmail.com writes:
Is the new (minimal) system a strict sub-set of the old (bloated one)?
As in, could you add to the minimal config a bunch of USE flags (that
would not change the overall behaviour of what is already there),
emerge a lot of new packages, and
Another option is the excellent Tomato Firmware
(http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato), which does exactly what you need
out of the box.
Greetings,
gordon.
On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 7:34 PM, Allan Gottlieb [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I have a linksys (Cisco) WRT54G, which works fine except for one
Uwe Thiem uwix at iway.na writes:
Pruning a fat system can be very time consuming. I'd rather clone the
I'd rather tar the whole small system up and install this tarball on
the other one (after adjusting partitioning, creating filesystems and
such).
Yes, that's what occurred to me, as
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 11:57:43 +0200
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Joerg Schilling) wrote:
Stroller [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Since you now appear to be answering license questions, could I
trouble you, please, to address this query?
http://article.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.user/200045
If
On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 3:26 PM, Gordon Schulz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Another option is the excellent Tomato Firmware
(http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato), which does exactly what you need
out of the box.
Another vote for Tomato, as its the best firmware I've used so far.
But, if you have a
On Friday 27 June 2008, James wrote:
Alan McKinnon alan.mckinnon at gmail.com writes:
Is the new (minimal) system a strict sub-set of the old (bloated
one)? As in, could you add to the minimal config a bunch of USE
flags (that would not change the overall behaviour of what is
already
On Friday 27 June 2008, Alan McKinnon wrote:
On Friday 27 June 2008, James wrote:
Alan McKinnon alan.mckinnon at gmail.com writes:
Is the new (minimal) system a strict sub-set of the old (bloated
one)? As in, could you add to the minimal config a bunch of USE
flags (that would not
On 13:18 Thu 26 Jun , Alan McKinnon wrote:
That info is still a bit skimpy though. Is there anything more
somewhere? And what about FEATURES=preserve-libs, is that documented
somewhere?
All you need to do is to run 'emerge @preserved-rebuild' when you are reminded
to.
If you want to know
Lately it seems like a new problem pops up every day and every time I
try to do something new it doesn't work. Anybody else experiencing
that lately?
- Grant
--
gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
On Friday 27 June 2008, Grant wrote:
Lately it seems like a new problem pops up every day and every time I
try to do something new it doesn't work. Anybody else experiencing
that lately?
No.
--
Alan McKinnon
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com
--
gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
Grant wrote:
Lately it seems like a new problem pops up every day and every time I
try to do something new it doesn't work. Anybody else experiencing
that lately?
- Grant
Rock solid.
--Joshua Doll
--
gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org mailing list
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 11:08:04 +0100
Neil Bothwick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 10:44:00 +0100, Stroller wrote:
I'm sure the NSA would be happy to forego the prize and keep
quiet about
being able to break a secure cipher.
I can't help wondering if - since P=NP is
Am Freitag, 27. Juni 2008 schrieb 7v5w7go9ub0o:
So IIUC the question becomes, can one configure LUKS to NOT keep a copy
of the passphrase-protected encryption key on the HD (or is keeping it
there part of the LUKS standard)?
Well, LUKS means Linux Unified Key Setup, that's what LUKS is all
On Freitag, 27. Juni 2008, Grant wrote:
Lately it seems like a new problem pops up every day and every time I
try to do something new it doesn't work. Anybody else experiencing
that lately?
- Grant
a botched gcc-upgrade/clean cycle damaged gcc beyond repair - but that was
easily solved by
Grant,
I've had a lot of problems lately upgrading ~arch and masked packages. This
is expected (obviously) but 99% of the time I am able to fix them myself
without going through support resources.
If you're using any that are ~arch and in packages.mask perhaps that is why
you're having problems
Grant,
I've had a lot of problems lately upgrading ~arch and masked packages. This
is expected (obviously) but 99% of the time I am able to fix them myself
without going through support resources.
If you're using any that are ~arch and in packages.mask perhaps that is why
you're having
Grant ha scritto:
Lately it seems like a new problem pops up every day and every time I
try to do something new it doesn't work. Anybody else experiencing
that lately?
- Grant
Yes. Looks like my Gentoo box is rotting these days, but most probably
it's me not having time at all to iron out
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 14:09:16 -0700, Grant wrote:
I think you're right Brian. Of course, this is nobody's fault but
mine for using ~amd64 packages, but I only pull those in if I feel I
have to. Quite a few of them now though. Does it seem like ~arch
packages have been more difficult lately?
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 22:01:10 +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
Lately it seems like a new problem pops up every day and every time I
try to do something new it doesn't work. Anybody else experiencing
that lately?
No.
How can you be so certain that not one of the thousands of Gentoo users
On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 4:41 PM, Grant [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Lately it seems like a new problem pops up every day and every time I
try to do something new it doesn't work. Anybody else experiencing
that lately?
After almost 8 months withtou an upgrade, I finally decided to go on
with it,
b.n. wrote:
Grant ha scritto:
Lately it seems like a new problem pops up every day and every time I
try to do something new it doesn't work. Anybody else experiencing
that lately?
- Grant
Yes. Looks like my Gentoo box is rotting these days, but most probably
it's me not having time at all
At Fri, 27 Jun 2008 16:01:17 -0300 Daniel da Veiga [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Fri, Jun 27, 2008 at 3:26 PM, Gordon Schulz [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Another option is the excellent Tomato Firmware
(http://www.polarcloud.com/tomato), which does exactly what you need
out of the box.
Another
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Alan McKinnon wrote:
| On Friday 27 June 2008, Neil Bothwick wrote:
| On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 10:44:00 +0100, Stroller wrote:
| I'm sure the NSA would be happy to forego the prize and keep
| quiet about
| being able to break a secure cipher.
| I can't
On Freitag, 27. Juni 2008, Neil Bothwick wrote:
On Fri, 27 Jun 2008 14:09:16 -0700, Grant wrote:
I think you're right Brian. Of course, this is nobody's fault but
mine for using ~amd64 packages, but I only pull those in if I feel I
have to. Quite a few of them now though. Does it seem
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Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
| On Freitag, 27. Juni 2008, Neil Bothwick wrote:
| I think it could be the pick-and-mix approach to keywording, I use pure
| ~amd64 on my desktop and laptop and the only problems I've had recently
| turned out to be a
Daniel Iliev [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The question is valid and interesting, moreover it is asked very kindly.
I can't see what possibly might be preventing you to answer the same
way.
I did answer these questions many times before and in many cases I have
later been attacked.
The URLs
| I think it could be the pick-and-mix approach to keywording, I use pure
| ~amd64 on my desktop and laptop and the only problems I've had recently
| turned out to be a corrupt root filesystem.
|
| yeah, mixing isn't good. Pure systems are way more stable.
Now that's an interesting idea.
Joerg Schilling ha scritto:
The URLs mentioned did point to disinformation from lwn.net that should be
easily identifyable as incorrect claims. If such URLs are published without
comment, I asume that the questionair believes the incorrect claims from
lwn.net. Would you answer people if they
On Friday 27 June 2008, Grant wrote:
| I think it could be the pick-and-mix approach to keywording, I use
| pure ~amd64 on my desktop and laptop and the only problems I've had
| recently turned out to be a corrupt root filesystem.
|
| yeah, mixing isn't good. Pure systems are way more
My Gentoo systems get this way for one of two reasons:
Some config files get overwritten (make.conf was one time ) by accident
and a few packages get installed with the wrong build settings causing
random grief
system inconsistency, mainly with libraries. revdep-rebuild may or may
not help - if
On Sat, 28 Jun 2008 00:20:50 +0200
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Joerg Schilling) wrote:
Daniel Iliev [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
The question is valid and interesting, moreover it is asked very
kindly. I can't see what possibly might be preventing you to answer
the same way.
I did answer these
Grant emailgrant at gmail.com writes:
Gentoo is rock solid for me, but, I have endured much pain
since early 2004. I use many system and only stray from stable
when warranted.
| yeah, mixing isn't good. Pure systems are way more stable.
Well, I do not agree here, with this blanket
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