Re: [gentoo-user] udev upgrade and baselayout 2.2

2013-04-30 Thread Tanstaafl

On 2013-04-29 7:16 PM, Dustin C. Hatch admiraln...@gmail.com wrote:

On 4/29/2013 17:35, fe...@crowfix.com wrote:

Some give me pause:

 =sys-apps/baselayout-2.2

Is baselayout 2.2 necessary for upgrading udev, or just optional?
Could I upgrade this without upgrading udev?



I can't comment on baselayout 2.2 yet, as I have been holding off on
updating it on my systems as well.


Why? No news item about baselayout 2.2, so whats the big deal?

Ooops... guess I'm forgetting the other times that some massively major 
change was implemented with little to no warning breaking many people's 
systems... ;)


But seriously... is there any major change in baselayout 2.2 to be 
concerned about? any links for reading?


Incidentally, I already updated my shiny new gentoo VM to 2.2 and openrc 
0.11.8, rebooted, nary a hiccup...




[gentoo-user] udev upgrade and baselayout 2.2

2013-04-29 Thread felix
I've finally got my system settled enough to look into teh scary udev upgrade.  
Especially I have all data dirs off in their own LVM partitions (/home, /encfs, 
/usr/portage, /var/spool), and a backup of the most recent bootable and runable 
/, so I can boot back to that if I need to and still get email etc. while 
working oout what I screwed up.

Excluding gcc, llvm, various app-emulation packages, videolibs, etc, most of it 
looks innocent enough.

=sys-apps/coreutils-8.21
=sys-apps/dbus-1.6.10
=sys-apps/dmidecode-2.12
=sys-apps/gptfdisk-0.8.6
=sys-apps/hwids-20130329
=sys-apps/hwloc-1.6.2
=sys-apps/kmod-13
=sys-apps/pciutils-3.2.0
=sys-apps/portage-2.1.11.62
=sys-apps/sandbox-2.6-r1
=sys-apps/sysvinit-2.88-r4
=sys-apps/usbutils-006-r1
=sys-apps/util-linux-2.22.2
=sys-auth/consolekit-0.4.5_p20120320-r2
=sys-auth/pambase-20120417-r1
=sys-auth/polkit-0.110
=sys-block/nbd-3.3
=sys-block/thin-provisioning-tools-0.1.5-r1
=sys-cluster/openmpi-1.6.4
=sys-fs/ecryptfs-utils-103
=sys-fs/lvm2-2.02.98
=sys-fs/s3fs-1.67
=sys-fs/s3ql-1.14
=sys-fs/udev-202
=sys-fs/udev-init-scripts-26
=sys-fs/udisks-1.0.4-r5
=sys-fs/udisks-2.1.0:2
=sys-libs/glibc-2.17:2.2
=sys-libs/pam-1.1.6-r4
=sys-power/cpufrequtils-008-r2
=sys-power/cpupower-3.8-r1
=sys-power/powertop-2.3
=sys-power/upower-0.9.20-r2
=sys-process/lsof-4.87-r1
=virtual/udev-197-r3

Some give me pause:

=sys-apps/baselayout-2.2

Is baselayout 2.2 necessary for upgrading udev, or just optional?  Could I 
upgrade this without upgrading udev?

=sys-boot/grub-2.00-r3:2

I'm running grub 1.  What I have seen of grub 2 doesn't impress me, and 
besides, my bootable backup is on a different disk but relies on the grub 1 
boot setup, and I'd just as soon not upgrade to grub 2 ever if possible.

-- 
... _._. ._ ._. . _._. ._. ___ .__ ._. . .__. ._ .. ._.
 Felix Finch: scarecrow repairman  rocket surgeon / fe...@crowfix.com
  GPG = E987 4493 C860 246C 3B1E  6477 7838 76E9 182E 8151 ITAR license #4933
I've found a solution to Fermat's Last Theorem but I see I've run out of room o



Re: [gentoo-user] udev upgrade and baselayout 2.2

2013-04-29 Thread Dustin C. Hatch

On 4/29/2013 17:35, fe...@crowfix.com wrote:

I've finally got my system settled enough to look into teh scary udev upgrade.  
Especially I have all data dirs off in their own LVM partitions (/home, /encfs, 
/usr/portage, /var/spool), and a backup of the most recent bootable and runable 
/, so I can boot back to that if I need to and still get email etc. while 
working oout what I screwed up.

Excluding gcc, llvm, various app-emulation packages, videolibs, etc, most of it 
looks innocent enough.


...


Some give me pause:

 =sys-apps/baselayout-2.2

Is baselayout 2.2 necessary for upgrading udev, or just optional?  Could I 
upgrade this without upgrading udev?

I can't comment on baselayout 2.2 yet, as I have been holding off on 
updating it on my systems as well. I have updated them all to at least 
udev 197, though, without too much trouble. If you update to udev 200 
without going through 197, though, make sure you don't forget to ``touch 
/etc/udev/rules.d/80-net-name-slot.rules``, lest you end up with 
ridiculous names for your ethernet devices.



 =sys-boot/grub-2.00-r3:2

I'm running grub 1.  What I have seen of grub 2 doesn't impress me, and 
besides, my bootable backup is on a different disk but relies on the grub 1 
boot setup, and I'd just as soon not upgrade to grub 2 ever if possible.

I too prefer grub 1. You can prevent the upgrade to grub 2 with the 
following::


emerge --deselect grub
emerge --noreplace grub:0

And, just for good measure::

echo '=sys-boot/grub-2'  /etc/portage/package.mask/grub2

Hope this helps

--
♫Dustin
http://dustin.hatch.name/