a
definitive source to back up my claims :)
The reason for $(...) being preferred is simple: you can nest
$($($(...))), but you can't nest `...`. Deep nesting is quite useful
indeed.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpv4whI_T8sT.pgp
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,
Andrew Savchenko
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(distcc is my friend here).
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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On Fri, 31 Jan 2014 19:13:21 + Mick wrote:
On Friday 31 Jan 2014 19:03:05 Andrew Savchenko wrote:
On Sun, 26 Jan 2014 20:30:19 +0200 Alan McKinnon wrote:
[...]
I'm willing to give up 4 minutes while emerge runs so I don't have to
spend many more minutes right afterwards doing manually
should be awesome on modern multi-core CPUs. And I'm sure this is a
doable task (on a first glance analyse subtrees first then join), but
this issue requires further and deeper investigation.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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.
Other alternative is to add sys-apps/systemd to package.provided,
though the effect will be the same as above.
And you may switch to some other DE/WM of course.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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. And all that science was ignored during systemd
architecture process if there was any at all.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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.
That the real reason I despise systemd: in replaces the freedom of
choice by a dictatorship of a small bunch of managers of a single
corporation (yes, managers, not developers). And all this is under the
veil of GPL and technical merits. This is the poison in the well of
FOSS.
Best regards,
Andrew
On Mon, 17 Feb 2014 14:52:33 -0500 Tanstaafl wrote:
On 2014-02-17 12:52 PM, Andrew Savchenko birc...@gmail.com wrote:
And this is a very, very bad idea. Looks like you don't know matter at
all: to begin with kdbus protocol is NOT compatible dbus and special
converter daemon will be needed
know what it is: everything's free but nothing to choose from. We had it
before, it's called communism. Maybe it is not that bad but we don't want it
anymore.
(Really? A cold war reference?)
Yes, we have a software^Wcorporation war right upon us.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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by the fly
without preliminary planning) and a lot of religious statements.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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!
Frankly, I have doubts he is unpayed. Though as long as arguments are
technical this doesn't matter. Though when arguments are down to Said
who? Listen to the Oracle! it starts to.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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as an example of its flawed nature.
Though as we know these days such systems exist and are quite well
used in numerous experiments. My point is simple: do not blindly
adhere to someone's words, even if this person has high authority.
Common sense must prevail. Period.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
, this is no way to go.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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profile, you need to
use systemd.
Or to create a non-systemd profile :)
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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_on_ start. Some may just crash and will be restarted (though
not all services may be restarted after crash without manual
interaction, e.g. some DB setups may fail badly), while other may
loose some functionality and continue to work.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpgPnRlfgeDk.pgp
Description
on my ~x86 and ~amd64 boxes. Probably you
have stable amd64 setup. Unmasking is generally safe in such cases,
though if you'll mix stable and unstable packages too much you may
have unforeseen consequences.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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to maintain.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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by qualified professionals, this will only hinder their
approach, but binary based distributions will not provide any
advantage here either.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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an appropriate
job.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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modules. Of
course this goal will be never achieved as-is, but one may consider
it as an asymptote of their actions.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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On Thu, 20 Feb 2014 21:41:03 +0100 Nicolas Sebrecht wrote:
On Thu, Feb 20, 2014 at 08:52:07PM +0400, Andrew Savchenko wrote:
And this point is one of the highest security benefits in real world:
one have non-standard binaries, not available in the wild. Most
exploits will fail
On Thu, 20 Feb 2014 22:59:59 +0200 Alan McKinnon wrote:
On 20/02/2014 22:41, Nicolas Sebrecht wrote:
On Thu, Feb 20, 2014 at 08:52:07PM +0400, Andrew Savchenko wrote:
And this point is one of the highest security benefits in real world:
one have non-standard binaries, not available
can see, while systemd socket activation design will work for
many case, it will fail for corner ones and by no means can't be used
in production (where this corner cases have a high chance to rise).
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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profit!!!
Typing just FHANDLE is sufficient. CONFIG_ prefixes are allowed, but
not needed at all for menuconfig search functionality.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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available, many people will have to say Gentoo good
bye.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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native and you will get both best performance and one
less headache.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpwPFk2d1kJG.pgp
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up device lookup:
$ grep -v ^# /etc/mdadm.conf
DEVICE /dev/sd*
And here we go:
$ cat /proc/mdstat
Personalities : [raid10]
md0 : active raid10 sdd[3] sdf[2]
2930265088 blocks super 1.2 256K chunks 2 far-copies [2/2] [UU]
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpYAu22dxvLA.pgp
Description
[1]
http://ceph.com/docs/v0.78/rados/configuration/filesystem-recommendations/
[2] http://ceph.com/docs/master/release-notes/#v0-80-firefly
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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they are useless, just not my
usecases.)
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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systemd related items with ceph.
We are using openrc too, no related issues. (systemd is banned on
all our setups: masked and its dirs are in INSTALL_MASK, so we don't
have its stuff floating around.)
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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On Fri, 24 Oct 2014 16:20:36 + (UTC) James wrote:
Andrew Savchenko bircoph at gmail.com writes:
We are using openrc too, no related issues. (systemd is banned on
all our setups: masked and its dirs are in INSTALL_MASK, so we don't
have its stuff floating around.)
замечательно
Рад
tends to take the
pragmatic approach. If you're a purist of just about any kind you're
going to have to hold your nose. However, this cuts both ways - the
purists who don't want YOU to be able to make the choices YOU want to
make also have to hold their noses. :)
Best regards,
Andrew
verbalism is inappropriate here.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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not exactly sure how to identify
which files belong to which block, though.
This depends on filesystem being used. For ext* family debugfs may
be used:
# debugfs /dev/your_dev
ncheck inode1 inode2 ...
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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-x86-* prebuilt
packages. Either way your system will end up with 32-bit libraries
installed, but in case of multilib they will be optimized for your
hardware and use cases (*FLAGS and USE).
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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by both design and capabilities.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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Hi,
On Tue, 23 Dec 2014 16:36:25 +0100 Stefan G. Weichinger wrote:
Am 23.12.2014 um 16:20 schrieb Andrew Savchenko:
[...]
We used it about a year ago for our infrastructure (backup and live
sync of HA systems), obviously both servers and clients were used,
both on Gentoo. We stopped
:/ It was something rather new at that time like 3.12.x.
How many disks / OSDs?
3 OSDs with raid6 attached to each one.
Sorry for being so curious ..
Not a problem :)
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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Hi,
On Fri, 26 Dec 2014 00:38:58 -0600 Bruce Hill wrote:
To whoever controls this list...
I just arrived home to find my mailbox spammed with hundreds of messages from
this luser Andrew Savchenko birc...@gentoo.org
Please stop insults and offensive language. I just sent replies to
the list
) with check that filesystem is not mounted already,
something like:
grep -q $MOUNTPOINT || sshfs $USR@HOST:/file/system MOUNTPOINT
Alternatively you may add this to your DE/WM autostart scripts, if
you are using GUI logins only.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpJvFFahiIWL.pgp
Description: PGP
by available memory). This is really handy when handling huge
pdf pages (e.g. some schemes, graphs) with very small fonts, so
large zoom is required to made them readable; evince can't handle
such issues.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpkt9XrfqNla.pgp
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regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpJxLhd51IC7.pgp
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using gethostbyname() or
gethostbyname2() and glibc-2.18 IS vulnerable.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgp0memZyNaAg.pgp
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overlay. New
clsync version was recently released and I plan to push it to tree
after some testing.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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is much better suited for this task.
And as a result 13 years old hardware is still usable to watch 720p
and most of 1080p videos (without GPU hardware decoding). A
byproduct of such interest is a deep understanding of system
internals, which is a great result on its own.
Best regards,
Andrew
works fine here on ~x86.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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have critical bugs sooner or later.
These reminds me of recent openssl issue, after which many switched
to polarssl and that one had a critical security bug just recently.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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ones.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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are
implemented).
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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?
Considering how old one's setup should be to be affected to this
issue, it is likely that such systems have another vulnerabilities,
allowing attacker to gain root privileges even if exim itself is
being run as a non-root user.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpKpmns3wCDW.pgp
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of the washing machine. They are
crumpled.
I think it as to do something with the static.
How to I combine (overlap) two pdf files into one page.
Use imagegick's composite tool to overlap images into single pdf,
then print it.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpBg2C5bORzm.pgp
Description
with
related applications.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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). I tried to
re-add this stuff with partial success (works, but still SIGILLs
sometimes) and it's very hard to clean all pieces. Looks like
they're slowly abandoning x86 and older hardware at all.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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Hi,
On Sun, 25 Jan 2015 19:43:12 +0100 Nils Holland wrote:
On Sun, Jan 25, 2015 at 02:03:48PM +0300, Andrew Savchenko wrote:
I gave up on chromium starting from chromium-36, where they dropped
pre-SSE2 x86 support (and I use such system: Athlon-XP). I tried to
re-add this stuff
On Fri, 09 Jan 2015 20:49:56 +0100 lee wrote:
Andrew Savchenko birc...@gentoo.org writes:
When I need something simple (e.g. to read pdf books) I use mupdf.
How did you get mupdf to display a pdf?
Just run it:
$ mupdf file.pdf
In my case mupdf is configured as follows:
Installed versions
On Sat, 10 Jan 2015 19:25:54 +0100 lee wrote:
Andrew Savchenko birc...@gentoo.org writes:
On Fri, 09 Jan 2015 20:49:56 +0100 lee wrote:
Andrew Savchenko birc...@gentoo.org writes:
When I need something simple (e.g. to read pdf books) I use mupdf.
How did you get mupdf to display
using caching (like
cachefilesd).
Yet again, all these tricks are required for @world updates only,
for other stuff EeePC is self sufficient box.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpyDJl2Xegal.pgp
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*?
Try to add
priority = 100
to local.conf
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpLSYv7zqRwe.pgp
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!
As for the Phase II, are there any plans for 8 floppy support or
only 5.25 devices are targeted?
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 11:12:48 +0100 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
On 03/03/2015 10:47:46 AM, Andrew Savchenko wrote:
Hello,
On Tue, 03 Mar 2015 10:21:19 +0100 Helmut Jarausch wrote:
Hi,
I'd like to install all packages which need Python, only for Python3
except those which cannot
On Tue, 3 Mar 2015 12:47:46 +0300 Andrew Savchenko wrote:
EIX_LIMIT=0 eix -I --only-names -\( -U python_targets_python2_ -! -U
python_targets_python3_ -\)
On second though parenthesis are surplus here:
EIX_LIMIT=0 eix -I --only-names -U python_targets_python2_ -! -U
python_targets_python3_
installed packages having python2_* in
their python targets, but not having python3_*.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpqJxF4ePsjM.pgp
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, if it doesn't exist):
category1/foo no-distcc.conf
category2/bar no-distcc.conf
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpfH5oQn8S7W.pgp
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useful guide is here[3].
[1] https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/distcc-patches/eeP-9pTgz7E
[2] git://git.overlays.gentoo.org/dev/bircoph.git sys-devel/distcc
[3] http://www.gentoo-wiki.info/HOWTO_Emerge_on_very_slow_systems
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpqjFjXODScJ.pgp
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On Thu, 29 Jan 2015 18:13:35 -0500 Philip Webb wrote:
150129 Andrew Savchenko wrote:
On Thu, 29 Jan 2015 05:52:27 -0500 Philip Webb wrote:
The 3rd stumble was Python, which refused to compile,
as it couldn't find /usr/lib/libjpeg.so.8 .
It seems that Libjpeg-turbo works only on 64-bit
already.
I have not seen GLSAs for kernel in ages, though old kernels
definitely have serious security issues, and they may be far more
serious than Ghost glibc bug.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpgafG4_tW6U.pgp
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intervals of vulnerable and fixed
versions, e.g. multiple slots fix fixes in several slots,
glsa-check fail:
https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=106677
Quite an old bug...
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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-patches[1], as was pointed in other reply already.
This code will ensure that proper CPU support is enabled while
keeping all floating point instructions disabled. Just apply a
patch and select native arch in CPU arch menu.
[1] https://github.com/graysky2/kernel_gcc_patch
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
and results are available here:
https://github.com/graysky2/kernel_gcc_patch
Optimization is a very powerful tool if taken with care. Of course
it may lead to a disastrous result if mindlessly used.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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On Thu, 30 Apr 2015 20:11:52 +0200 Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
Am 30.04.2015 um 19:45 schrieb Andrew Savchenko:
Hi,
On Thu, 30 Apr 2015 18:26:22 +0200 Volker Armin Hemmann wrote:
That simple. The kernel is too important and the people programming it
know what they are doing. Don't set
On Fri, 1 May 2015 05:09:51 + (UTC) Martin Vaeth wrote:
Andrew Savchenko birc...@gentoo.org wrote:
That's why kernel makes sure that no floating point instructions
sneaks in using CFLAGS, you may see a lot of -mno-${intrucion_set}
flags when running make -V.
So it should
email link.
No, it doesn't. Well, at least at November 2014 (when I
resubscribed from another e-mail) it did not.
How to proceed now? Should I contact some admin to fix my account for
me? If so, how can he/she be contacted?
Just make another request on Bugzilla.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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on a system.
In order to remove already installed plugin one have to delete the
following directory:
~/.config/chromium/Default/Extensions/lccekmodgklaepjeofjdjpbminllajkg
See also:
https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=552298
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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for clustering, fast
deployment, fast downgrades and so on.
2) The same binpkg packages, but put into the portage tree for
specific hard to build packages, they usually have -bin suffix.
That is your case.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpE1rzm3lUeq.pgp
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regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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somewhere between a couple days and a couple weeks.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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are missing.
In the old days make.conf and other files were not in /etc/portage,
but in /etc. At least non-optional stuff.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpk_ozEwD__p.pgp
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this), then you have to set up network inside container and
bridge/route it with the host system.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgp79Vhj9xFZf.pgp
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in a FOSS way.
[1] https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Project:Science
[2] https://github.com/gentoo-science/sci (If you check the commits
log you'll see that it is a very alive repo)
I added sci-libs/asl-0.1.4 to the science overlay. Enjoy!
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpxlzvN6OU2s.pgp
Description
) but why the
same delay for reading email?
I use POP3 and SMTP for gmail daily, no delays here. Maybe your ISP
is doing something: either bug, or MitM or some other nasty things.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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that even
without any network applications they may be vulnerable with
enabled interfaces. Proper configuration of kernel, especially
iproute2 and iptables can minimize such risks, of course.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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in the documentation. Fixing this will
save people from digging into cmake files.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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Hi,
On Mon, 19 Oct 2015 10:57:37 +0200 Jean-Christophe Bach wrote:
> I have a very similar problem, at least concerning your 2nd point
> (duplicated keys). All my problems came when I updated gnupg from 1.x to
> 2.x. I tried to solve them by playing with different 2.x versions but
> with the last
ec rsa4096/0x565953B95372756C 2013-02-27 [expires: 2018-02-26]
Key fingerprint = 63EB 04FA A30C 76E2 952E 6ED6 5659 53B9 5372 756C
uid [ultimate] Andrew Savchenko <birc...@gmail.com>
uid [ultimate] Andrew A. Savchenko (NRNU MEPhI)
<aasa
tion = /usr/portage
> sync-type = rsync
> sync-uri = rsync://192.168.139.7/gentoo-portage
You are missing local overlay description. Add to gentoo.conf
something like this:
[local]
priority = 100
location = /usr/local/portage
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpa7G4JRbOCP.pgp
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ngle screen setup. I'm trying to select text on
> DISPLAY=:0.0 and paste it on DISPLAY=:0.1
Just for the record: I have the same problem with multihead setup
(:0.0 and :0.1). While selecting with mouse doesn't work. Using
menu functions "copy" in one application and "paste" in another one
works fine. IIRC there are actually two buffers in X: for mouse
selection and for copy-and-paste (both via menu and
keyboard shortcuts).
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpQtXl3f62Nt.pgp
Description: PGP signature
eason already mentioned by Grant is true for my case too:
in my window manager (e16) I can have independent desktops on each
screen, but not in xinerama mode. Probably this can be fixed in
software, but might require a lot of work. JFYI dwm allows
independent work on xinerama screens, but I have another issues
with dwm.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgp0yKiSht8LF.pgp
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> I think I'm going to try exporting it first and see if it does what I
> want first, if it works I'll leave it. :-)
We have a cluster of identical machines. Exporting over NFS works
just fine, though we exported not only /usr/portage,
but /usr/local/portage, /var/lib/layman and /va
h command, it usually contains a hint on
what is wrong. Also it is much better to write iptables / iproute /
tc rules manually then using high level generators like shorewall —
this will give you a good understanding on what is going on and how
to optimize or tighten your setup.
Best regards,
Andrew S
ed
without touching iptables rules. Gentoo init script support ipset
rules save/load as well as iptables.
Do not forget about ipv6 if it is enabled on your network.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgp4gZGYmgNxX.pgp
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In some rare cases ebuild ignores
{C,CXX,F,FC}FLAGS, while this is a bug and should be fixed, this
can be worked around on distcc server by forcing -m32 for each
gcc call.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
pgpDx8p1e6tpV.pgp
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On Sat, 2 Jan 2016 13:27:52 -0500 waltd...@waltdnes.org wrote:
> On Sat, Jan 02, 2016 at 02:56:58PM +0300, Andrew Savchenko wrote
>
> > For 32-bit distcc on 64-bit host there is no need to chroot or
> > create VM (hey, they're hellishly slow!). Just add -m32 to your
> >
in CFLAGS.
Of course there are also another reasons (e.g. stricter checks or
standard compliance) and all problems should be dealt on per-case
basis.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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ernal
media (PXE, CD/DVD, USB stick) and have whole HDD/SSD encrypted.
Though I see little point in whole / encryption. What is the
point to encrypt /usr, /lib, /bin, /sbin? Just do this
to /home, /var and other sensitive pieces.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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when
large numbers like 1000 or 10000 will be reached.
[/offtopic]
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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be applied. Of
course, you should terminate this command with ^C if new rules are
good, so that old ones will not be fired in a minute.
Best regards,
Andrew Savchenko
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