Hi -

Yes it's "normal", it's due to a slightly misbehaved package (i.e.
it's not our fault ;) - it causes no danger at all, though it would be
neater if we didn't get that message showing, since it can be
offputting...

Dan

2010/4/30 Rodrigo Chamusca <[email protected]>:
> I want to point out a message that appears on every start up:
>
> udevd [1086]: can not read 'etc/udev/rules.d/z80_user.rules'
>
> The [1086] changes to other values. I've took note of [1064], [1084], ... Is
> this normal/expected?
>
> Puredyne is really that great! I'm very excited about this distro. Ex: my
> Audiophile 2496 works perfectly (on Fedora 12 I simply could not get audio
> from it).
>
> Regards,
>
> Rodrigo Chamusca
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 29, 2010 at 8:00 PM, James Harkins <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> On Apr 29, 2010, at 7:42 AM, Rodrigo Chamusca wrote:
>>
>> I’ve a DSL connection and I utilize the D-Link DSL 500B, a very common
>> model in Brazil. Linux has the advantage (and the reputation) of being quite
>> straightforward to make computers “see” networks and the like. On Fedora,
>> all I had to do was: create a DSL entry, inform my login and password and
>> check the “connect automatically” box. ‘Voilà’: I am online. I’ve obviously
>> tried the same approach on puredyne, but no luck here. After many attempts,
>> I tried the « pppoeconf » command and now I’m not able to edit or add new
>> connections within “the icon besides the clock”  – sorry, I’m not in my
>> machine now and I don’t remember the correct terminology, I should have
>> written this yesterday, but it was late at night.
>>
>> No idea about this, but I'm interested in the solution. (I might need to
>> use pppoe later on.)
>>
>> Another issue: I have another hard drive (NFTS partition, with Windows
>> XP), how do I mount it? On the aforementioned distros, it was just a matter
>> of selecting it from a drop down menu (alongside the ‘home’ folder, etc) and
>> entering my password. I know that puredyne recognizes it, because I can see
>> it through « gparted ».
>>
>> This one I know :)
>> # if you don't already have a mount directory
>> sudo mkdir /media/win
>> sudo mount -t ntfs-3g /dev/sda# /media/win
>> (where /dev/sda# is the partition id that you see in gparted)
>> When you're done:
>> sudo umount /media/win
>> hjh
>>
>> : H. James Harkins
>> : [email protected]
>> : http://www.dewdrop-world.net
>> .::!:.:.......:.::........:..!.::.::...:..:...:.:.:.:..:
>> "Come said the Muse,
>> Sing me a song no poet has yet chanted,
>> Sing me the universal."  -- Whitman
>>
>> ---
>> [email protected]
>> http://identi.ca/group/puredyne
>> irc://irc.goto10.org/puredyne
>
>
> ---
> [email protected]
> http://identi.ca/group/puredyne
> irc://irc.goto10.org/puredyne
>



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