On Sat, 24 Jan 2004, Norbert Kamenicky wrote:
> Krikket wrote:
> > First,  I now have my new fresh Gentoo install up and running, with many
> > thanks going to people here.
> >
> > I've set a KOI8R console font, so I can read nice cyrillic characters on
> > file-names and stuff.  I've set the 8x16 font.  (I had the 8x8 font set
> > during the initial install, until I got the gui going, so things wouldn't
> > scoll off the screen so quickly!)
> >
> > But now I find that just about every font in Gentoo is *slightly* too
> > small for me to read.  Switching back from the 8x8 to 8x16 font didn't
> > make a whit's bit of difference, so I'm assuming gnome/kde pull their
> > fonts from somewhere besides rc.conf.
> >
>
> Yes, XFree86 uses different fonts/mechanism.

Good to know...

> > If someone could point me at the file I need to change to give me slightly
> > larger fonts across the board, it will be extremely appreciated!
> >
>
> Measure your display's horizontal and vertical dimensions in millimeters.
> Open /etc/X11/XFree86config[-4] in your favorite text editor
> and  add this line to Section "Monitor":
>
>       DisplaySize  horizontal-size-in-mm  vertical-size-in-mm

Thank you!  Things aren't quite as myopic now, but with some tweaking, I
may be able to improve things...

> > One other regional setting problem that I'm having is at some point during
> > the istall I was asked if I wanted to enter a code for the country
> > (region) and language.  Not knowing what data it wanted, other than two
> > two letter codes seperated by a '_', I guessed and entered 'us_us' as my
> > default.  I guessed wrong.  It probably should have been 'en_us' or
> > 'us_en' or some-such.  Going over the documentation again, I can't seem to
> > find where I stumbled across this.  Does anyone have any suggestions as to
> > where I should look?
>
> If u like to see which locales are supported, run this:
>
> qpkg -l glibc | grep locale | less
>
> So u had to put en_US  :-)

So I did.  But what's qpkg and how do you get it?  I tried an emerge and
came up with bupkis, so I double-checked with the portage tree on
gentoo.org, and similarly came up with nada.

Any idea what file I need to edit?

> > My system acknowleges the CD-ROM, but won't allow a user to mount
> > anything.  If I try to su, I get more errors, but I'm getting either
> > "mount point does not exist" or "can't find ... in /fstab or mtab",  Part
> > of the problem, I'm sure, is that I'm not using the right mount-point, but
> > I don't know what I should be doing here...  Therefore the howto request.
>
> man mount   is your friend
>
> I see, u started with linux yesterday, and all training u like to
> get from ML. It's not a good idea ...
> it'll take decades then :-)

Yes, man mount is your friend.  I even looked there.  And believe it or
not, I'm not trying to get all my knowledge from this list, but when the
basics fail me, I don't know where else to turn.  If you have additional
suggestions, I'm more willing to listen!  That was even what I was (and
still am) *asking* for, because I don't see anything on explaining Gentoo
and CD/DVD stuff.

One thing that I have learned from playing around with different linuxes
is that while the man files tend to be consistant across the varients, the
details sometimes change.  And it's those details that are currently
biting me in the ass.

Trust me on this one.  If I was tying to get all my data from here (or
even if this was the first place I turned to) my questions would be
*vastly* different.

Krikket


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