Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
downgrading to bash-2.05d-r11 solved the problem, but now supr doesn't work, so bash sucks. i hope i can have a stable version soon... anyway i'm happy now i can type anything except supr :P 2005/6/14, Zac Medico [EMAIL PROTECTED]: sIbOk wrote: splashutils didn't solved the problem and come with a few bugs 2005/6/13, sIbOk [EMAIL PROTECTED]: before posting i reemerged kbd and didn't help. I don't use the console on these Pc cause it's my daughter's Pc so i don't have consolefont in any runlevel, but that's not the problem. When i have to do anything i start it manually, it's not very often. By now someone tells that the problem i get is due tu a strange behavour of splahsutils and it's solved in a new version, so gonna try to solve it this way. If i can solve it i will post here so if someone has a similar problem could know the solution. Thanks to all you :) Are you certain that /etc/init.d/keymaps is executed at boot with no errors? Are all the package versions the same as one of your working gentoo systems? Instead of iso8559-15 you may want to try the utf-8 charset since it is probably more common. http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list -- Cualquier hijo de puta sabe lo que darte si tiene que dolerte, pero no cualquier hijo de puta saber lo que darte si tiene que gustarte. Yo soy sIbOk un hijo puta especial...!! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
splashutils didn't solved the problem and come with a few bugs 2005/6/13, sIbOk [EMAIL PROTECTED]: before posting i reemerged kbd and didn't help. I don't use the console on these Pc cause it's my daughter's Pc so i don't have consolefont in any runlevel, but that's not the problem. When i have to do anything i start it manually, it's not very often. By now someone tells that the problem i get is due tu a strange behavour of splahsutils and it's solved in a new version, so gonna try to solve it this way. If i can solve it i will post here so if someone has a similar problem could know the solution. Thanks to all you :) 2005/6/13, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Zac Medico wrote: Zac Medico wrote: sIbOk wrote: i thanks your time to all, i run etc-update. I have 3 different Gentoo machines i updated them all and converted to unicode just because i planned a long time ago and they all work great escept the one that gave me first the error. I didn't miss anything, maybe there is some broken package althought revdep-debuild doesn't show. thanks again to all who read the post, and i ddin't mean to eb rude, just wanted to remark that before answering it's mportant to read everything well. thanks again :) Is /etc/runlevels/boot/keymaps a symlink to /etc/init.d/keymaps and does /etc/init.d/keymaps look okay? Zac Also, maybe for some reason you need to remerge sys-apps/kbd. Zac Yep, that's the next step. Make sure that 'rc-update -s' shows both consolefont and keymaps. I have them both starting in 'boot'. And yes, I wen't back and read your original message again (sorry about that), and you don't mention whether these are in your startup or not! ;- -Richard -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list -- Cualquier hijo de puta sabe lo que darte si tiene que dolerte, pero no cualquier hijo de puta saber lo que darte si tiene que gustarte. Yo soy sIbOk un hijo puta especial...!! -- Cualquier hijo de puta sabe lo que darte si tiene que dolerte, pero no cualquier hijo de puta saber lo que darte si tiene que gustarte. Yo soy sIbOk un hijo puta especial...!! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
sIbOk wrote: splashutils didn't solved the problem and come with a few bugs 2005/6/13, sIbOk [EMAIL PROTECTED]: before posting i reemerged kbd and didn't help. I don't use the console on these Pc cause it's my daughter's Pc so i don't have consolefont in any runlevel, but that's not the problem. When i have to do anything i start it manually, it's not very often. By now someone tells that the problem i get is due tu a strange behavour of splahsutils and it's solved in a new version, so gonna try to solve it this way. If i can solve it i will post here so if someone has a similar problem could know the solution. Thanks to all you :) Are you certain that /etc/init.d/keymaps is executed at boot with no errors? Are all the package versions the same as one of your working gentoo systems? Instead of iso8559-15 you may want to try the utf-8 charset since it is probably more common. http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
before posting i reemerged kbd and didn't help. I don't use the console on these Pc cause it's my daughter's Pc so i don't have consolefont in any runlevel, but that's not the problem. When i have to do anything i start it manually, it's not very often. By now someone tells that the problem i get is due tu a strange behavour of splahsutils and it's solved in a new version, so gonna try to solve it this way. If i can solve it i will post here so if someone has a similar problem could know the solution. Thanks to all you :) 2005/6/13, Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Zac Medico wrote: Zac Medico wrote: sIbOk wrote: i thanks your time to all, i run etc-update. I have 3 different Gentoo machines i updated them all and converted to unicode just because i planned a long time ago and they all work great escept the one that gave me first the error. I didn't miss anything, maybe there is some broken package althought revdep-debuild doesn't show. thanks again to all who read the post, and i ddin't mean to eb rude, just wanted to remark that before answering it's mportant to read everything well. thanks again :) Is /etc/runlevels/boot/keymaps a symlink to /etc/init.d/keymaps and does /etc/init.d/keymaps look okay? Zac Also, maybe for some reason you need to remerge sys-apps/kbd. Zac Yep, that's the next step. Make sure that 'rc-update -s' shows both consolefont and keymaps. I have them both starting in 'boot'. And yes, I wen't back and read your original message again (sorry about that), and you don't mention whether these are in your startup or not! ;- -Richard -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list -- Cualquier hijo de puta sabe lo que darte si tiene que dolerte, pero no cualquier hijo de puta saber lo que darte si tiene que gustarte. Yo soy sIbOk un hijo puta especial...!! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
Hello, today i've updated coreutils, baselayout and new sysvinit. Now my locales are not working well since i've lost some letters/simbols like 's' or '#' etc I'm using iso8559-15 Since today i've been using /etc/rc.conf like this with no troubles: Código: # /etc/rc.conf: Global startup script configuration settings # $Header: /home/cvsroot/gentoo-src/rc-scripts/etc/rc.conf,v 1.21 2003/07/16 19:38:51 azarah Exp $ # Use KEYMAP to specify the default console keymap. There is a complete tree # of keymaps in /usr/share/keymaps to choose from. This setting is used by the # /etc/init.d/keymaps script. KEYMAP=es euro2 #KEYMAP=es # Should we first load the 'windowkeys' console keymap? Most x86 users will # say yes here. Note that non-x86 users should leave it as no. SET_WINDOWKEYS=yes # The maps to load for extended keyboards. Most users will leave this as is. EXTENDED_KEYMAPS=backspace keypad euro windowkeys #EXTENDED_KEYMAPS=backspace keypad # CONSOLEFONT specifies the default font that you'd like Linux to use on the # console. You can find a good selection of fonts in /usr/share/consolefonts; # you shouldn't specify the trailing .psf.gz, just the font name below. # To use the default console font, comment out the CONSOLEFONT setting below. # This setting is used by the /etc/init.d/consolefont script (NOTE: if you do # not want to use it, run rc-update del consolefont as root). #CONSOLEFONT=default8x16 CONSOLEFONT=lat9-16 #CONSOLEFONT=lat9w-16 # CONSOLETRANSALTION is the charset map file to use. Leave commented to use # the default one. Have a look in /usr/share/consoletrans for a selection of # map files you can use. CONSOLETRANSLATION=8859-15_to_uni # Set CLOCK to UTC if your system clock is set to UTC (also known as # Greenwich Mean Time). If your clock is set to the local time, then set CLOCK # to local. This setting is used by the /etc/init.d/clock script. CLOCK=local # Set EDITOR to your preferred editor. EDITOR=/bin/nano #EDITOR=/usr/bin/vim #EDITOR=/usr/bin/emacs # Set PROTOCOLS to the protocols that you plan to use. Gentoo Linux will only # enable module auto-loading for these protocols, eliminating annoying module # not found errors. # # NOTE: Do NOT uncomment the next lines, but add them to 'PROTOCOLS=...' line!! # # Num Protocol # 1:Unix # 2:IPv4 # 3:Amateur Radio AX.25 # 4:IPX # 5:DDP / appletalk # 6:Amateur Radio NET/ROM # 9:X.25 # 10: IPv6 # 11: ROSE / Amateur Radio X.25 PLP # 19: Acorn Econet # Most users want this: PROTOCOLS=1 2 4 #For IPv6 support: #PROTOCOLS=1 2 10 # What display manager do you use ? [ xdm | gdm | kdm | elogin | entrance ] DISPLAYMANAGER=kdm # XSESSION is a new variable to control what window manager to start # default with X if run with xdm, startx or xinit. The default behavior # is to look in /etc/X11/Sessions/ and run the script in matching the # value that XSESSION is set to. The support scripts is smart enouth to # look in all bin directories if it cant find a match in /etc/X11/Sessions/, # so setting it to enligtenment can also work. This is basically used # as a way for the system admin to configure a default system wide WM, # allthough it will work if the user export XSESSION in his .bash_profile, etc. # # NOTE: 1) this behaviour is overridden when a ~/.xinitrc exists, and startx # is called. #2) even if a ~/.xsession exist, if XSESSION can be resolved, it will # be executed rather than ~/.xsession, else KDM breaks ... # # Defaults depending on what you install currently include: # # Gnome - will start gnome-session # kde-version - will start startkde (ex: kde-3.0.2) # Xsession - will start a terminal and a few other nice apps #XSESSION=Gnome XSESSION=kde-3.4 Since the new sysvinit is installed i use some other files, /etc/rc.conf is like this: Código: # /etc/rc.conf: Global startup script configuration settings # $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-src/rc-scripts/etc/rc.conf,v 1.30.4.1 2005/02/10 01:11:52 vapier Exp $ # UNICODE specifies whether you want to have UNICODE support in the console. # If you set to yes, please make sure to set a UNICODE aware CONSOLEFONT and # KEYMAP in the /etc/conf.d/consolefont and /etc/conf.d/keymaps config files. UNICODE=no # Set EDITOR to your preferred editor. # You may use something other than what is listed here. EDITOR=/bin/nano #EDITOR=/usr/bin/vim #EDITOR=/usr/bin/emacs # What display manager do you use ? [ xdm | gdm | kdm | entrance ] DISPLAYMANAGER=kdm # XSESSION is a new variable to control what window manager to start # default with X if run with xdm, startx or xinit. The default behavior # is to look in /etc/X11/Sessions/ and run the script in matching the # value that XSESSION is set to. The support scripts are smart enough to # look in all bin directories if it cant find a match in /etc/X11/Sessions/, # so setting it to enlightenment can also work. This is basically used # as a way for the system admin to configure
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
sIbOk wrote: Hello, today i've updated coreutils, baselayout and new sysvinit. Now my locales are not working well since i've lost some letters/simbols like 's' or '#' etc I'm using iso8559-15 snip I've only noticed that i can't type 's' in lower case and '#'. 's' in upper case works well. strange After that i recompiled the kernel with utf8 as default nls for me, all i did can be found here: http://es.gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Castellanizar_Gentoo still with the same trouble, someone know what could it be? Is this a problem in X or the console? In the localization guide it mentions an XkbLayout option for xorg.conf. http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/guide-localization.xml Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
it's a console problem, X works well. Ihave to say that my system have been running without problems since gentoo 1.2. Never had locales problems. Yesterday updated tthose 3 packages and got s lower case broken. Before login in the console i can type s and # but after login i can't. I don't know what copuld it be, so i changed my iso8559-15 system to a unicode and still the same trouble. now i'm using unicode and it works well, every X program works well, also nano from a xterm or a tty works well with s or # but then when i'm typing direct to bash i can't type s or #. etc work well 2005/6/12, Zac Medico [EMAIL PROTECTED]: sIbOk wrote: Hello, today i've updated coreutils, baselayout and new sysvinit. Now my locales are not working well since i've lost some letters/simbols like 's' or '#' etc I'm using iso8559-15 snip I've only noticed that i can't type 's' in lower case and '#'. 's' in upper case works well. strange After that i recompiled the kernel with utf8 as default nls for me, all i did can be found here: http://es.gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Castellanizar_Gentoo still with the same trouble, someone know what could it be? Is this a problem in X or the console? In the localization guide it mentions an XkbLayout option for xorg.conf. http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/guide-localization.xml Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list -- Cualquier hijo de puta sabe lo que darte si tiene que dolerte, pero no cualquier hijo de puta saber lo que darte si tiene que gustarte. Yo soy sIbOk un hijo puta especial...!! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
sIbOk wrote: Hello, today i've updated coreutils, baselayout and new sysvinit. Now my locales are not working well since i've lost some letters/simbols like 's' or '#' etc I'm using iso8559-15 Since today i've been using /etc/rc.conf like this with no troubles: Most of these settings have been moved from /etc/rc.conf to various files in the /etc/conf.d directory. Take a look in there. -Richard -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
Richard Fish wrote: sIbOk wrote: Hello, today i've updated coreutils, baselayout and new sysvinit. Now my locales are not working well since i've lost some letters/simbols like 's' or '#' etc I'm using iso8559-15 Since today i've been using /etc/rc.conf like this with no troubles: Most of these settings have been moved from /etc/rc.conf to various files in the /etc/conf.d directory. Take a look in there. -Richard Yep, that's probably it. /etc/conf.d/keymaps should do the trick. Somebody needs to update all the howtos now. Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
please make sure you have read well the post before posting, an thanks for your time. of course i know that config files have been split... and i also have edited them. that's been explained in the first mail. i don't know which is the trouble, i've tryed editing them in different ways, it's not a howto problem as long as i know how to configure it all without reading them. something in keymaps is wrong but don't know what neither why because before updating the packages it worked well and the setting are teh same. and i have the troubles using unicode and iso8859-15 very strange, thanks for the support, and please don't reply without reading :) 2005/6/12, Zac Medico [EMAIL PROTECTED]: Richard Fish wrote: sIbOk wrote: Hello, today i've updated coreutils, baselayout and new sysvinit. Now my locales are not working well since i've lost some letters/simbols like 's' or '#' etc I'm using iso8559-15 Since today i've been using /etc/rc.conf like this with no troubles: Most of these settings have been moved from /etc/rc.conf to various files in the /etc/conf.d directory. Take a look in there. -Richard Yep, that's probably it. /etc/conf.d/keymaps should do the trick. Somebody needs to update all the howtos now. Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list -- Cualquier hijo de puta sabe lo que darte si tiene que dolerte, pero no cualquier hijo de puta saber lo que darte si tiene que gustarte. Yo soy sIbOk un hijo puta especial...!! -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
sIbOk wrote: /etc/conf.d/keymaps Código: # /etc/conf.d/keymaps # $Header: /var/cvsroot/gentoo-src/rc-scripts/etc/conf.d/keymaps,v 1.1.4.1 2005/02/19 02:13:53 vapier Exp $ # Use KEYMAP to specify the default console keymap. There is a complete tree # of keymaps in /usr/share/keymaps to choose from. KEYMAP=es euro2 #KEYMAP=es snip please make sure you have read well the post before posting, an thanks for your time. of course i know that config files have been split... and i also have edited them. that's been explained in the first mail. i don't know which is the trouble, i've tryed editing them in different ways, it's not a howto problem as long as i know how to configure it all without reading them. something in keymaps is wrong but don't know what neither why because before updating the packages it worked well and the setting are teh same. and i have the troubles using unicode and iso8859-15 very strange, thanks for the support, and please don't reply without reading :) Woa there. Most of us are just trying to helpful. IMO it was easy for a speed reader to miss that part mixed into your long email. Did you run etc-update. I bet that's the problem. Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
sIbOk wrote: i thanks your time to all, i run etc-update. I have 3 different Gentoo machines i updated them all and converted to unicode just because i planned a long time ago and they all work great escept the one that gave me first the error. I didn't miss anything, maybe there is some broken package althought revdep-debuild doesn't show. thanks again to all who read the post, and i ddin't mean to eb rude, just wanted to remark that before answering it's mportant to read everything well. thanks again :) Is /etc/runlevels/boot/keymaps a symlink to /etc/init.d/keymaps and does /etc/init.d/keymaps look okay? Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] updating sysvinit coreutils and baselayout broke some locales/letters
Zac Medico wrote: Zac Medico wrote: sIbOk wrote: i thanks your time to all, i run etc-update. I have 3 different Gentoo machines i updated them all and converted to unicode just because i planned a long time ago and they all work great escept the one that gave me first the error. I didn't miss anything, maybe there is some broken package althought revdep-debuild doesn't show. thanks again to all who read the post, and i ddin't mean to eb rude, just wanted to remark that before answering it's mportant to read everything well. thanks again :) Is /etc/runlevels/boot/keymaps a symlink to /etc/init.d/keymaps and does /etc/init.d/keymaps look okay? Zac Also, maybe for some reason you need to remerge sys-apps/kbd. Zac Yep, that's the next step. Make sure that 'rc-update -s' shows both consolefont and keymaps. I have them both starting in 'boot'. And yes, I wen't back and read your original message again (sorry about that), and you don't mention whether these are in your startup or not! ;- -Richard -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list