After the thread about depclean I thought that dep (emerge udept)
was a better way to clean up things, so I did a dep -d.
It took a long time so I went away. When I came back, emerge dies
constantly with:
checking for C++ compiler default output file name... configure: error:
C++ compiler cannot
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
On Saturday 28 October 2006 13:43, Hans de Hartog wrote:
but it dies at the first emerge with:
checking for C++ compiler default output file name... configure: error:
C++ compiler cannot create executables.
Do you have ccache installed? If you do try to remerge
Philip Webb wrote:
061028 Hans de Hartog wrote:
it dies at the first emerge with:
checking for C++ compiler default output file name... configure: error:
C++ compiler cannot create executables.
...
CHOST=i486-pc-linux-gnu
do 'gcc-config -c' 'gcc-config -l' to explore;
try 'gcc
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
I assume you've changed your CHOST when upgrading glibc without having a clue
about you were doing...
http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/change-chost.xml
Yes, now I remember something like that.
Don't know if it was glibc, but some
package told me to do so. So I did
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
Oh, and just for the the record. Whatever you do with this don't downgrade
glibc! :p That will make you even more screwed that you are already. I guess
you've learned by now that you should never run --depclean blindly. Always
run it with --pretend first and
Mick wrote:
On Monday 30 October 2006 09:52, GEORGE ZERVAS wrote:
Μιχάλη, αυτή την περίοδο δεν έχω ADSL γραμμή, γιαυτό δεν επικοινωνούμε.
Ελπίζω σύντομα να αποκατασταθεί η σύνδεση. Διέκοψα την παλαιά και έκανα
αίτηση για καινούργια φθηνότερη. Θέλω την άποψή σου, να ζητήσω σταθερή IP,
χωρίς
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
I'd wait hold off on --newuse for a day or two if I were you...
http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.devel/43805
It's not that bad. I started 90 minutes ago for 94 packages and
it (2.6 GHz Celeron with 768Mb RAM) is busy with number 78 (xorg-server).
--
Mick wrote:
Indeed! Why when I just hit Reply to a message, I end up posting it in the
gentoo-user mailing list?! This has happened a couple of times so far. The
strange thing is that on some of these cases the messages were not even sent
to my gmail.com account. A common theme may
Hans de Hartog wrote:
It's not that bad. I started 90 minutes ago for 94 packages and
it (2.6 GHz Celeron with 768Mb RAM) is busy with number 78 (xorg-server).
Done! In less then 2 hours (rebuild of openoffice takes at least
11 hours).
However, before each unmerge I got:
QA Notice: ECLASS
Hi,
Due to circumstances beyond my control I have
to run (once a month) Windows (98 or 2000) :-(
I guess that vmware can do the job. In windows
I need internet access with IE and I must be
able to print some webpages to a printserver
(gentoo+cups).
What to use? Vmware server, workstation or
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
I would like to implement some sort of virtual servers
(mail, www, ftp) on my small gentoo server as a way of
increasing security...
Now the only problem is (so typical for linux :-)
which solution to use, because there are many:
Vserver?
OpenVZ?
Xen?
Maybe
This morning I did my regular emerge --sync
and emerge -NDuva world and here's what happens:
[blocks B ] =sys-fs/udev-089 (is blocking sys-apps/coldplug-20040920-r1)
[blocks B ] sys-apps/coldplug (is blocking sys-fs/udev-103)
[ebuild U ] sys-fs/udev-103 [087-r1] USE=(-selinux) 195 kB
Normally,
Mark wrote:
Currently I have udev-087-r1 and coldplug-20040920-r1 installed. It
would be my suggestion not to install udev-103 currently (it is marked
as ~x86).
Well, I bet you didn't do your emerge --sync this morning. It's x86 now.
Regards,
Hans.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Mark wrote:
Actually .. just in case you are interested in using udev-103 you will
find that you can enable udev coldplugging.
I took the plunge: unmerged coldplug and upgraded to udev-103.
Everything went fine without doing anything special.
I only removed /etc/init.d/coldplug and did a
Philip Webb wrote:
It would help if you listed the packages in question.
Also thanks to Ryan and Steve to illustrate the situation
in the not_so_common_packages scene. (BTW, how do I check
for an overlay somewhere?)
- freewheeling (dies in glibc with double free or corruption)
In the
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hey,
Im relatively new to the whole gentoo system but im looking for a basic
easy to use dvd player program something that isn't too touchy basically. Any
reccomendations or opinions on this would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks
Kelly Stewart
Sent via
Grant wrote:
Does anyone else find the Gentoo apache2 layout/config annoying?
I don't think it's annoying. I would say: it's, eh, versatile :-)
But I guess it's very much the same on other distributions.
So, I would this mark this as OT.
Kind regards,
Hans.
--
gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing
After upgrading to xorg-x11-7.0-r1, every emerge -Du world
wants to downgrade from libpng-1.2.12 to libpng-1.2.8-r1 and
if I do that, any emerge after that wants to upgrade again to
libpng-1.2.12.
Everything seems to work fine with either version of libpng.
Here's my emerge --info:
Portage 2.1-r1
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
libpng-1.2.12 has been rapidly stabilized due to a buffer overflow in
libpng-1.2.12 [1]. A lot of packages in stable that depend on libpng are
incompatible with libpng-1.2.12. In most if not all cases a newer version
that is compatible exist in ~arch but it has not
Bo Ørsted Andresen wrote:
On Sunday 02 July 2006 14:45, Hans de Hartog wrote:
[nomerge ] net-print/cups-1.1.23-r7 USE=nls pam samba ssl [...]
[ebuild UD] media-libs/libpng-1.2.8-r1 [1.2.12] USE=-doc 0 kB
echo ~net-print/cups-1.2.1 ~x86 /etc/portage/package.keywords
Does someone know which of the dozens of cd-players for gentoo
is able to play copy-controlled cd's (the cd's that install a
player first under Windows).
My discman can play them, my home audioset can play them so
i guess there must be a cdplayer for gentoo that can do it.
Xmms and xine won't.
--
The cron manpage says that /etc/crontab should have mode 0600.
However, it is installed with 0644.
A /etc/cron.deny is installed without any users in it which
means (according to crontab(1)) that all users are allowed
to work with crontab.
However, /usr/bin/crontab has mode 4710 which means that
Hans de Hartog wrote:
The cron manpage says that /etc/crontab should have mode 0600.
However, it is installed with 0644.
A /etc/cron.deny is installed without any users in it which
means (according to crontab(1)) that all users are allowed
to work with crontab.
However, /usr/bin/crontab has mode
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