Re: [gentoo-user] Re: No /dev entries in recent stage3 snapshots?
Am Freitag, 23. Januar 2009 15:48:48 schrieb Grant Edwards: > On 2009-01-23, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote: > > On Freitag 23 Januar 2009, Grant Edwards wrote: > >> You are still able to see the output from all the init scripts? > > > > yes > > That's interesting, because on my systems, if /dev/console is > missing, then there is no non-kernel console output until most > of the way through the startup-process when udev starts. That reminds me of one thing: Are you still running baselayout 1? On a baselayout 2/openrc box udev is started at the very beginning of the userland boot process. Maybe that's the difference between Volker's and your system. Bye... Dirk signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: No /dev entries in recent stage3 snapshots?
Grant Edwards wrote: > On 2009-01-25, Grant Edwards wrote: > >> On 2009-01-24, Neil Bothwick wrote: >> >>> On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 05:55:10 +0100, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote: >>> >>> I have a server running that hets that null/console missing message every boot - and it does not hurt it at any way. >>> A missing /dev/console stops the boot process here. It boots >>> without /dev/null, but only after udev spews out a load of >>> messages. >>> >> Ah, not to worry: I've been assured in the gentoo forum thread >> that the problems we see when the root filesystem doesn't have >> proper /dev/null and /dev/console nodes aren't really >> happening: >> >> Neither /dev/null nor /dev/console are needed at boot-time, >> therefore their absence doesn't cause problems. >> > > For posterity's sake, one of the problems that wasn't happening > was that my root partition always had to be recovered at > startup -- it apparently wasn't getting properly unmounted > during shutdown. After re-creating the root partition's /dev > tree, that was cured. > > This leads one to suspect that the block device node for the > root partition (/dev/hda3 in my case) is also required along > with /dev/null and /dev/console for proper start-up and > shut-down. > > Well just to confirm that this is not happening, I ran into the same thing a good while back when I was transferring my system from one disk to another. I didn't copy /dev, /sys, /proc and something else. I had to reboot from the CD and copy all the /dev/stuff so I could boot. At the time I didn't know what I "didn't" have to have. Note there is a bit of sarcasm there. It appears that they are needed but some just "think" we don't. My rig, Abit NF7 mobo with a AMD 2500+ rig using udev like I guess everybody else is. Weird. Dale :-) :-)
Re: [gentoo-user] evince won't open PDFs
On Sunday 25 January 2009 05:49:31 Grant wrote: > >> For some reason, evince won't open PDFs anymore. I've tried different > >> versions of evince, poppler, and shared-mime-info, but evince says: > >> > >> "File type PDF document (application/pdf) is not supported" > >> > >> epdfview works, but it segfaults when trying to open shipping labels > >> from usps.com. Does anyone have any ideas on getting evince back to > >> normal? I did try deleting .gnome2/evince. > > > > Have you recently emerged evince/poppler/poppler-bindings ? > > > > To test if perhaps the version on the gentoo servers is currently bad > > I just now remerged them and did the suggested revdep-rebuild, which as > > expected rebuilt nothing. Everything worked fine; in particular, > > evince file.pdf > > worked. > > > > Perhaps you should remerge them in case one of yours is corrupted. > > > > Here is the beginning of my emerge showing the use flags > > > > allan gottlieb # emerge evince poppler poppler-bindings > > > > These are the packages that would be merged, in reverse order: > > > > Calculating dependencies... done! > > [ebuild R ] app-text/evince-2.22.2-r1 USE="dbus doc gnome > > gnome-keyring tiff -debug -djvu -dvi -t1lib" 1,592 kB [ebuild R ] > > app-text/poppler-bindings-0.8.7 USE="cairo gtk -qt3 -qt4 -test" 1,436 kB > > [ebuild R ] app-text/poppler-0.8.7 USE="jpeg zlib -cjk" 0 kB > > > > Total: 3 packages (3 reinstalls), Size of downloads: 3,027 kB > > > > Would you like to merge these packages? [Yes/No] > > It turns out evince, xpdf, and epdfview all segfault on the PDF > shipping labels produced by usps.com. The latest stable evince does > open other PDF files, although newer evince versions give me the "not > supported" problem. > > Has anyone successfully opened a usps.com shipping label? > > - Grant The problem is the stable version of poppler (app-text/poppler-0.8.7). I have upgrade it to app-text/poppler-0.10.3 and it is working fine now. You will have to run revdep-rebuild after updrading poppler. signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
[gentoo-user] Strange local connection requests from my laptop
My network's firewall is rejecting a bunch of attempts by my laptop to reach 192.168.x.x systems which don't exist. The requests are from and to very high port numbers. This must have to do with the p2p software I'm running (transmission), but I thought it was pretty creepy. Is that sort of thing expected from p2p software? - Grant
Re: [gentoo-user] evince won't open PDFs
>> For some reason, evince won't open PDFs anymore. I've tried different >> versions of evince, poppler, and shared-mime-info, but evince says: >> >> "File type PDF document (application/pdf) is not supported" >> >> epdfview works, but it segfaults when trying to open shipping labels >> from usps.com. Does anyone have any ideas on getting evince back to >> normal? I did try deleting .gnome2/evince. > > Have you recently emerged evince/poppler/poppler-bindings ? > > To test if perhaps the version on the gentoo servers is currently bad > I just now remerged them and did the suggested revdep-rebuild, which as > expected rebuilt nothing. Everything worked fine; in particular, > evince file.pdf > worked. > > Perhaps you should remerge them in case one of yours is corrupted. > > Here is the beginning of my emerge showing the use flags > > allan gottlieb # emerge evince poppler poppler-bindings > > These are the packages that would be merged, in reverse order: > > Calculating dependencies... done! > [ebuild R ] app-text/evince-2.22.2-r1 USE="dbus doc gnome gnome-keyring > tiff -debug -djvu -dvi -t1lib" 1,592 kB > [ebuild R ] app-text/poppler-bindings-0.8.7 USE="cairo gtk -qt3 -qt4 > -test" 1,436 kB > [ebuild R ] app-text/poppler-0.8.7 USE="jpeg zlib -cjk" 0 kB > > Total: 3 packages (3 reinstalls), Size of downloads: 3,027 kB > > Would you like to merge these packages? [Yes/No] It turns out evince, xpdf, and epdfview all segfault on the PDF shipping labels produced by usps.com. The latest stable evince does open other PDF files, although newer evince versions give me the "not supported" problem. Has anyone successfully opened a usps.com shipping label? - Grant
Re: [gentoo-user] evince won't open PDFs
Chris Thomas wrote: > Without looking it up, I'm pretty sure there's no pdf use flag. Make > sure Evince is listed as the default application for pdfs in your web > browser. > > -Chris > > On Sat, Jan 24, 2009 at 4:32 PM, Saphirus Sage wrote: > >> Grant wrote: >> >>> For some reason, evince won't open PDFs anymore. I've tried different >>> versions of evince, poppler, and shared-mime-info, but evince says: >>> >>> "File type PDF document (application/pdf) is not supported" >>> >>> epdfview works, but it segfaults when trying to open shipping labels >>> from usps.com. Does anyone have any ideas on getting evince back to >>> normal? I did try deleting .gnome2/evince. >>> >>> - Grant >>> >>> >>> >> I've always preferred xpdf just for simplicity, but be sure you have >> 'pdf' in your USE flags for make.conf either way. That would probably >> handle the error of pdf being an unsupported file type. >> >> >> > > Consult /usr/portage/profiles/use.desc and tell me that again.
Re: [gentoo-user] evince won't open PDFs
Without looking it up, I'm pretty sure there's no pdf use flag. Make sure Evince is listed as the default application for pdfs in your web browser. -Chris On Sat, Jan 24, 2009 at 4:32 PM, Saphirus Sage wrote: > Grant wrote: >> For some reason, evince won't open PDFs anymore. I've tried different >> versions of evince, poppler, and shared-mime-info, but evince says: >> >> "File type PDF document (application/pdf) is not supported" >> >> epdfview works, but it segfaults when trying to open shipping labels >> from usps.com. Does anyone have any ideas on getting evince back to >> normal? I did try deleting .gnome2/evince. >> >> - Grant >> >> > I've always preferred xpdf just for simplicity, but be sure you have > 'pdf' in your USE flags for make.conf either way. That would probably > handle the error of pdf being an unsupported file type. > >
Re: [gentoo-user] mail server
On Sat, 24 Jan 2009 19:54:05 +0100 laurent wrote: > I first just need my apache to send mails via mod_php and mod_neko. I'd also suggest using lite smtp client, like msmtp, which I find a bit more feature-packed and stable than ssmtp, while being just as easy to set up. And if you're still going to choose full-fledged MTA, keep in mind that you'll need a non-firewalled connection (at least to some ports) and reverse DNS record - so that if you type "host " (or "dig -x ") you'll get the correct domain name, otherwise nearly every mail service will consider you to be anonymous spammer and won't deliver any mail from your MTA. -- Mike Kazantsev // fraggod.net signature.asc Description: PGP signature
[gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Grant Edwards wrote: > One implication of that is that the filesystem is then not > allowed to move blocks around if they are part of an "active" > swap file? Not that I'm aware of filesystems that shuffle > blocks around while they're part of an open file, but one might > imagine something like that happening as part of some sort of > balancing algorithm. > I'm not sure if the swap can be moved around during normal use, but I do know that it shows up as an "unmovable" block in XP's defragmentation tool, suggesting that nothing is allowed to move it on disk at all, while it is in use (which, on Windows, means the OS is running). - -- ABCD -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iEYEARECAAYFAkl70wsACgkQOypDUo0oQOqDPgCfc78Ejvm96lonhVA581xCftXu c9UAoL+YzrNHQ8iJL+fCmAUlD5WG9s5w =KeKc -END PGP SIGNATURE-
[gentoo-user] Apply a patch to an emerge from the command line
I could have sworn there was a way to specify a patch to be applied to an emerge from the command line, something like: EPATCH=file.patch emerge packagename I've been searching Google and the mailing list but I can't find mention of it anywhere. Was it a figment of my imagination? - Grant
[gentoo-user] Re: No /dev entries in recent stage3 snapshots?
On 2009-01-25, Grant Edwards wrote: > On 2009-01-24, Neil Bothwick wrote: >> On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 05:55:10 +0100, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote: >> >>> I have a server running that hets that null/console missing >>> message every boot - and it does not hurt it at any way. >> >> A missing /dev/console stops the boot process here. It boots >> without /dev/null, but only after udev spews out a load of >> messages. > > Ah, not to worry: I've been assured in the gentoo forum thread > that the problems we see when the root filesystem doesn't have > proper /dev/null and /dev/console nodes aren't really > happening: > > Neither /dev/null nor /dev/console are needed at boot-time, > therefore their absence doesn't cause problems. For posterity's sake, one of the problems that wasn't happening was that my root partition always had to be recovered at startup -- it apparently wasn't getting properly unmounted during shutdown. After re-creating the root partition's /dev tree, that was cured. This leads one to suspect that the block device node for the root partition (/dev/hda3 in my case) is also required along with /dev/null and /dev/console for proper start-up and shut-down. -- Grant
[gentoo-user] Re: No /dev entries in recent stage3 snapshots?
On 2009-01-24, Neil Bothwick wrote: > On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 05:55:10 +0100, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote: > >> I have a server running that hets that null/console missing >> message every boot - and it does not hurt it at any way. > > A missing /dev/console stops the boot process here. It boots > without /dev/null, but only after udev spews out a load of > messages. Ah, not to worry: I've been assured in the gentoo forum thread that the problems we see when the root filesystem doesn't have proper /dev/null and /dev/console nodes aren't really happening: Neither /dev/null nor /dev/console are needed at boot-time, therefore their absence doesn't cause problems. [You must admit the argument is flawless -- though I still question the premise.] In order to get rid of my problems that weren't happening, I initially tried the "mount -bind" and "cp -a" commands that show up in /etc/issue when your /dev directory is hosed. That didn't help: after setting /etc/issue back to the default file and rebooting all the same problems still weren't happening (and /etc/issue was again modified to tell me to do mount -bind and cp -a to fix them). Then I tried booting with root in rw mode and init=/bin/bash and then doing a MAKEDEV generic-i386. (I found that recipe in an old mailing list somewhere.) MAKEDEV complained a lot about not being able to read /proc/devices. When I rebooted, I still had the all same problems not happening as before. I finally booted from a minimal install CD, mounted my root partition, removed its /dev directory completely and then re-created it by untaring ./dev from a good stage3 tarball. Now the system boots up smoothly. I feel like a bit of a fool expending so much effort getting rid of problems that weren't happening -- but, now the problems that weren't happening are gone, so I'm happy. ;) -- Grant
Re: [gentoo-user] {OT} Remote image editing (crop & rotate)
>> ... I wonder if there is an easier way than scp'ing each image >> to my laptop, opening it in gimp, editing it, saving it, and scp'ing >> it back to the HDTV system (especially sshd_config AllowUsers only >> allows my user and the user running gmpc is different). > > The obvious thing that springs to mind is to export the folder (containing > the music / images) on the HDTV system via NFS or Samba & mount it on the > laptop. Sounds like a good idea. Would one be better than the other? > I think there's a fuse implementation which allows you to virtually "mount" > over sftp. > > But really you need to tell us more before we're able to help. What else would you like to know? - Grant
[gentoo-user] ltmain.sh version 1.5.22
I'm getting the following error too much, many packages are no longer insalling with this problem ;o( >>> Emerging dev-libs/libmcrypt-2.5.8-r1 * libmcrypt-2.5.8.tar.gz RMD160 SHA1 SHA256 size ;-) ... [ ok ] * checking ebuild checksums ;-) ... [ ok ] * checking auxfile checksums ;-) ... [ ok ] * checking miscfile checksums ;-) ... [ ok ] >>> Unpacking source... >>> Unpacking libmcrypt-2.5.8.tar.gz to /var/tmp/portage/dev-libs/libmcrypt-2.5.8-r1/work * Applying libmcrypt-2.5.8-rotate-mask.patch ... [ ok ] * Running elibtoolize in: libmcrypt-2.5.8 * Applying install-sh-1.5.patch ... * Portage patch failed to apply (ltmain.sh version 1.5.22)! * Please bug azarah or vapier to add proper patch. * * ERROR: dev-libs/libmcrypt-2.5.8-r1 failed. * Call stack: * ebuild.sh, line 49: Called src_unpack * environment, line 2364: Called elibtoolize * environment, line 943: Called die * The specific snippet of code: * die "Portage patch failed to apply!"; * The die message: * Portage patch failed to apply! * * If you need support, post the topmost build error, and the call stack if relevant. * A complete build log is located at '/var/log/portage/dev-libs:libmcrypt-2.5.8-r1:20081226-103235.log'. * The ebuild environment file is located at '/var/tmp/portage/dev-libs/libmcrypt-2.5.8-r1/temp/environment'. * Searching the Gentoo Forums, I get most posts about this from 2005... this is upgrading a currently working install.
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: No /dev entries in recent stage3 snapshots?
On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 05:55:10 +0100, Volker Armin Hemmann wrote: > I have a server running that hets that null/console missing message > every boot > - and it does not hurt it at any way. A missing /dev/console stops the boot process here. It boots without /dev/null, but only after udev spews out a load of messages. -- Neil Bothwick Procrastinate now! signature.asc Description: PGP signature
[gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
On 2009-01-24, Stroller wrote: > > 3. Does creating the swapfile on a journaled filesystem (e.g. > > ext3 or reiser) incur a significant performance hit? > > None at all. The kernel generates a map of swap offset -> disk > blocks at swapon time and from then on uses that map to perform > swap I/O directly against the underlying disk queue, bypassing all > caching, metadata and filesystem code. I supposed that the NT kernel does something similar. One implication of that is that the filesystem is then not allowed to move blocks around if they are part of an "active" swap file? Not that I'm aware of filesystems that shuffle blocks around while they're part of an open file, but one might imagine something like that happening as part of some sort of balancing algorithm. -- Grant
Re: [gentoo-user] Trying to get Spamassassin Working
> Greetings, > > I am trying to get Spamassassin working. I am following this guide... > http://www.hurring.com/scott/howto/postfix_spamd/ > > The configuration on that page is very minimalist and that's how I want to > start off. I can get progressively more complex as I learn more but I want > to keep it as simple as possible for now. > > According to that guide I only need to add 5 lines to my > /etc/postfix/master.cf file ok, got it working, these two lines below need to be all one line... > smtp inet n - - - - smtpd > -o content_filter=spamassassin These 3 lines below need to be all one line. > spamassassin unix - n n - - pipe > user=nobody argv=/usr/bin/spamc -f -e > /usr/sbin/sendmail -oi -f ${sender} ${recipient} > okay, I will break it down one line at a time and state the problem with > that line. > --- > 1)This doesn't work... > smtp inet n - - - - smtpd > > I need to use the default setting in the file... > smtp inet n - n - - smtpd > --- > 2)This doesn't work... > -o content_filter=spamassassin > > My log says... > Jan 24 12:18:09 penguin postfix/master[11431]: fatal: > /etc/postfix/master.cf: line 24: bad transport type: > content_filter=spamassassin > --- > 3)I see no problems with this line... > spamassassin unix - n n - - pipe > --- > 4)This doesn't work... > user=nobody argv=/usr/bin/spamc -f -e > > My log says... > Jan 24 12:21:41 penguin postfix/master[11770]: fatal: > /etc/postfix/master.cf: line 107: bad transport type: argv=/usr/bin/spamc > --- > 5)This doesn't work... > /usr/sbin/sendmail -oi -f ${sender} ${recipient} > > My log says > Jan 24 12:23:31 penguin postfix/master[11919]: fatal: > /etc/postfix/master.cf: line 108: bad transport type: -oi > --- > > Anyone know what to do? > > > >
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
On 24 Jan 2009, at 17:22, Grant Edwards wrote: I still can't believe that Windows does it's swapping using a normal filesystem -- and by default it's the same filesystem used for system and application files. It seems like the filesystem code would end up being a serious bottleneck. > 3. Does creating the swapfile on a journaled filesystem (e.g. > ext3 or reiser) incur a significant performance hit? None at all. The kernel generates a map of swap offset -> disk blocks at swapon time and from then on uses that map to perform swap I/O directly against the underlying disk queue, bypassing all caching, metadata and filesystem code. http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/7/7/326 Stroller.
Re: [gentoo-user] {OT} Remote image editing (crop & rotate)
On 24 Jan 2009, at 19:08, Grant wrote: ... I wonder if there is an easier way than scp'ing each image to my laptop, opening it in gimp, editing it, saving it, and scp'ing it back to the HDTV system (especially sshd_config AllowUsers only allows my user and the user running gmpc is different). The obvious thing that springs to mind is to export the folder (containing the music / images) on the HDTV system via NFS or Samba & mount it on the laptop. I think there's a fuse implementation which allows you to virtually "mount" over sftp. But really you need to tell us more before we're able to help. Stroller.
Re: [gentoo-user] evince won't open PDFs
Grant wrote: > For some reason, evince won't open PDFs anymore. I've tried different > versions of evince, poppler, and shared-mime-info, but evince says: > > "File type PDF document (application/pdf) is not supported" > > epdfview works, but it segfaults when trying to open shipping labels > from usps.com. Does anyone have any ideas on getting evince back to > normal? I did try deleting .gnome2/evince. > > - Grant > > I've always preferred xpdf just for simplicity, but be sure you have 'pdf' in your USE flags for make.conf either way. That would probably handle the error of pdf being an unsupported file type.
Re: [gentoo-user] evince won't open PDFs
At Sat, 24 Jan 2009 12:09:32 -0800 Grant wrote: > For some reason, evince won't open PDFs anymore. I've tried different > versions of evince, poppler, and shared-mime-info, but evince says: > > "File type PDF document (application/pdf) is not supported" > > epdfview works, but it segfaults when trying to open shipping labels > from usps.com. Does anyone have any ideas on getting evince back to > normal? I did try deleting .gnome2/evince. Have you recently emerged evince/poppler/poppler-bindings ? To test if perhaps the version on the gentoo servers is currently bad I just now remerged them and did the suggested revdep-rebuild, which as expected rebuilt nothing. Everything worked fine; in particular, evince file.pdf worked. Perhaps you should remerge them in case one of yours is corrupted. Here is the beginning of my emerge showing the use flags allan gottlieb # emerge evince poppler poppler-bindings These are the packages that would be merged, in reverse order: Calculating dependencies... done! [ebuild R ] app-text/evince-2.22.2-r1 USE="dbus doc gnome gnome-keyring tiff -debug -djvu -dvi -t1lib" 1,592 kB [ebuild R ] app-text/poppler-bindings-0.8.7 USE="cairo gtk -qt3 -qt4 -test" 1,436 kB [ebuild R ] app-text/poppler-0.8.7 USE="jpeg zlib -cjk" 0 kB Total: 3 packages (3 reinstalls), Size of downloads: 3,027 kB Would you like to merge these packages? [Yes/No] Good luck! allan
Re: [gentoo-user] mail server
On 24 Jan 2009, at 18:54, laurent wrote: ... I first just need my apache to send mails via mod_php and mod_neko. If it's just for _outgoing_ email you'll probably get away with ssmtp. It's very easy to configure - look at /etc/ssmtp Stroller.
[gentoo-user] Trying to get Spamassassin Working
Greetings, I am trying to get Spamassassin working. I am following this guide... http://www.hurring.com/scott/howto/postfix_spamd/ The configuration on that page is very minimalist and that's how I want to start off. I can get progressively more complex as I learn more but I want to keep it as simple as possible for now. According to that guide I only need to add 5 lines to my /etc/postfix/master.cf file smtp inet n - - - - smtpd -o content_filter=spamassassin spamassassin unix - n n - - pipe user=nobody argv=/usr/bin/spamc -f -e /usr/sbin/sendmail -oi -f ${sender} ${recipient} okay, I will break it down one line at a time and state the problem with that line. --- 1)This doesn't work... smtp inet n - - - - smtpd I need to use the default setting in the file... smtp inet n - n - - smtpd --- 2)This doesn't work... -o content_filter=spamassassin My log says... Jan 24 12:18:09 penguin postfix/master[11431]: fatal: /etc/postfix/master.cf: line 24: bad transport type: content_filter=spamassassin --- 3)I see no problems with this line... spamassassin unix - n n - - pipe --- 4)This doesn't work... user=nobody argv=/usr/bin/spamc -f -e My log says... Jan 24 12:21:41 penguin postfix/master[11770]: fatal: /etc/postfix/master.cf: line 107: bad transport type: argv=/usr/bin/spamc --- 5)This doesn't work... /usr/sbin/sendmail -oi -f ${sender} ${recipient} My log says Jan 24 12:23:31 penguin postfix/master[11919]: fatal: /etc/postfix/master.cf: line 108: bad transport type: -oi --- Anyone know what to do?
[gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
On 2009-01-24, ABCD wrote: > There actually is a good reason (oddly enough) for Windows > using a file on the filesystem for its swap space. Because it > is a simple file on disk, if Windows realizes that the swap > file is almost full, it can expand your swap without having to > do things like repartition. This makes the "swap is full - > out of memory"-type problems less likely to occur While that's a valid point in theory, I've never had a "swap is full - out of memory" problem in all the years I've been running Unixes that swapped to dedicated partitions. In my experience the system usually slows to a standstill and requires drastic action long before swap fills up. > (unless it is "filesystem is full" as well :) ). That, on the other hand, I do run into quite regularly. So it seems to me that using a swap file rather than a paritition is increasing the liklehood of problems rather than decreasing it while at the same time adding both system overhead and instability. Surely it's easier to corrupt a swapfile that's in a normal, heavily-used filesystem than it is to corrupt a dedicated swap partition? The code that prevents one partition from "spilling over" into another is much, much simpler and more bullet-proof than the code that manages blocks/clusters within a filesystems. If I were to guess why Windows doesn't use a swap partition, it would be because floppy disks didn't have partitions. -- Grant
[gentoo-user] evince won't open PDFs
For some reason, evince won't open PDFs anymore. I've tried different versions of evince, poppler, and shared-mime-info, but evince says: "File type PDF document (application/pdf) is not supported" epdfview works, but it segfaults when trying to open shipping labels from usps.com. Does anyone have any ideas on getting evince back to normal? I did try deleting .gnome2/evince. - Grant
[gentoo-user] {OT} Remote image editing (crop & rotate)
Each ripped CD in my music collection is accompanied by a high resolution scan of the album's cover. There is a new plugin for gmpc that displays that cover art at full screen on my HDTV. As the huge cover art images appear on the TV, I notice one or more sides that need to be cropped, or that the cover needs to be slightly rotated. I'd like to be able to edit those images as I notice problems with them, but I wonder if there is an easier way than scp'ing each image to my laptop, opening it in gimp, editing it, saving it, and scp'ing it back to the HDTV system (especially sshd_config AllowUsers only allows my user and the user running gmpc is different). Any ideas? imagemagick comes to mind. Is there a script or even a GUI I could run on the HDTV system that might be able to crop and/or rotate quickly and easily? - Grant
[gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Grant Edwards wrote: > I still can't believe that Windows does it's swapping using a > normal filesystem -- and by default it's the same filesystem > used for system and application files. It seems like the > filesystem code would end up being a serious bottleneck. But I > long ago stopped trying to figure out why Windows does things... There actually is a good reason (oddly enough) for Windows using a file on the filesystem for its swap space. Because it is a simple file on disk, if Windows realizes that the swap file is almost full, it can expand your swap without having to do things like repartition. This makes the "swap is full - out of memory"-type problems less likely to occur (unless it is "filesystem is full" as well :) ). - -- ABCD -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v2.0.9 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iEYEARECAAYFAkl7Za8ACgkQOypDUo0oQOp8egCgwWyB4db6ZYJ9YwgvG/dq70Rq 64cAn3laOOtlhh7zN7ni85WpBYZDyLz6 =T1za -END PGP SIGNATURE-
[gentoo-user] mail server
Hi Gentoos, I want to install an e-mail server solution, based on postfix. I'm reading this how-to: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/virt-mail-howto.xml From a level simple to complexe I would like a solution that is not to hard at first to have time, to understand the basics, and have it working, and that could then be easy to extend to a more complex situation like multi domain hosting. I first just need my apache to send mails via mod_php and mod_neko. Thanks for advices. Laurent
[gentoo-user] Hugin, autopano-sift-C and it's not working anymore.
Hi, I recently installed Hugin and autopano-sift-C and the first couple times, it worked like a champ. Now, it gives me a error like this when I load images or tell it to try to match up my pics: > command: autopano-sift-c --maxmatches 10 /tmp/ap_res0eoHtu > "/data/Camera-pics/2009/PANORAMIC_Pics/Source-pics/2009-01-23-0011.jpeg" > "/data/Camera-pics/2009/PANORAMIC_Pics/Source-pics/2009-01-23-0012.jpeg" > "/data/Camera-pics/2009/PANORAMIC_Pics/Source-pics/2009-01-23-0013.jpeg" > "/data/Camera-pics/2009/PANORAMIC_Pics/Source-pics/2009-01-23-0014.jpeg" > "/data/Camera-pics/2009/PANORAMIC_Pics/Source-pics/2009-01-23-0015.jpeg" > "/data/Camera-pics/2009/PANORAMIC_Pics/Source-pics/2009-01-23-0016.jpeg" > "/data/Camera-pics/2009/PANORAMIC_Pics/Source-pics/2009-01-23-0017.jpeg" > failed with error code: 255 What I have done: 1: delete the .hugin file in my home directory. 2: emerge -C hugin and autopano-sift-C 3: re-emerge hugin, then re-emerge hugin and autopano-sift-C 4: tried to use the autopano-sift package with all its children. 5: emerge -C autopano-sift and go back to autopano-sift-C 6: pestered the stew out of Google. Tried other settings they recommended with no help. As I said, it worked the first couple times. Anybody have a clue why it stopped? I would think if it was a bad setting on my part that deleting the .hugin file would fix that. In preferences I have autopano-sift-c for the command and --maxmatches %p %o %i for the options. That is the default values. Ideas? Thanks. Dale :-) :-)
[gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
On 2009-01-24, Peter Humphrey wrote: > On Saturday 24 January 2009 15:35:32 Grant Edwards wrote: > >> I didn't have a spare primary parition to put the swap file >> on. I had a bunch of spare extended partitions but all the >> docs say you can't put the XP swap file on en extended >> paritition... > > Ah, I didn't know that. In Win98, I think it was, I used to > put it on drive E, which was a logical disk in the extended > partition. I didn't actually try it, so maybe I was wrong -- but I swear I read that somewhere (and it sounded like the sort of restriction one would run into under Windows). [some googling] I can't find any confirmation for what I claimed about swap files on logical paritions. I must have mis-read something or conflated it with the restriction that XP itself can't be installed on a logical partition. :/ It looks like I could have created a small logical partition for an NTFS filesystem in which I could have placed the swap file. I still can't believe that Windows does it's swapping using a normal filesystem -- and by default it's the same filesystem used for system and application files. It seems like the filesystem code would end up being a serious bottleneck. But I long ago stopped trying to figure out why Windows does things... -- Grant
[gentoo-user] Any ideas on this compile failure?
Does anyone have any ideas on this compile failure? It's for icedtea6 from the java-overlay: make[7]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/dev-java/icedtea6-1.3.1-r2/work/icedtea6-1.3.1/openjdk/control/build/linux-amd64/hotspot/outputdir/linux_amd64_compiler2/product' make[6]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/dev-java/icedtea6-1.3.1-r2/work/icedtea6-1.3.1/openjdk/control/build/linux-amd64/hotspot/outputdir/linux_amd64_compiler2/product' All done. make[5]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/dev-java/icedtea6-1.3.1-r2/work/icedtea6-1.3.1/openjdk/control/build/linux-amd64/hotspot/outputdir/linux_amd64_compiler2/product' cd linux_amd64_compiler2/product && ./test_gamma ./test_gamma: line 10: 10518 Killed ./${gamma:-gamma} -Xbatch -showversion Queens < /dev/null make[4]: *** [product] Error 137 make[4]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/dev-java/icedtea6-1.3.1-r2/work/icedtea6-1.3.1/openjdk/control/build/linux-amd64/hotspot/outputdir' make[3]: *** [generic_build2] Error 2 make[3]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/dev-java/icedtea6-1.3.1-r2/work/icedtea6-1.3.1/openjdk/hotspot/make' make[2]: *** [product] Error 2 make[2]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/dev-java/icedtea6-1.3.1-r2/work/icedtea6-1.3.1/openjdk/hotspot/make' make[1]: *** [hotspot-build] Error 2 make[1]: Leaving directory `/var/tmp/portage/dev-java/icedtea6-1.3.1-r2/work/icedtea6-1.3.1/openjdk/control/make' make: *** [stamps/icedtea.stamp] Error 2 - Grant
Re: [gentoo-user] Laptop Lid Close...
On Fri, 2009-01-23 at 02:14 -0500, Joshua Murphy wrote: > if radeontool or something will allow you to disable the display even > when you aren't in X, or without proper access to the display (like > xset requires) you might be able to even escape needing that xhost > setting. No way of testing it at all myself though. I use the dpms feature of sys-apps/vbetool to control the state of the display from a shell script called by acpid. It works even when X is not running and does not need access to the X display if X is running. Also, it works with graphics cards from multiple vendors, as it uses VESA extensions. From personal experience, I know it works with the Intel graphics chipset in my laptop (x86) and also with the Nvidia graphics card in my desktop (amd64). The latter does not have a lid to close, of course, but vbetool can still turn off the display. --Brandon Vargo
Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?
Steven Lembark wrote: >> OK folks, all have a seat please. I ran a full blown KDE on a 133Mhz >> machine with 256Mbs of ram. A friend if mine played Solitaire on it and >> it worked well. It even had sound on it. >> > > I started running fvwm on a 486 w/ 16MB of core and > a pair of 20MB disk drives (one RLL one MFM). Face > it: we've all become addicted to amounts of RAM that > didn't even exist on the planet 25 years ago, let > alone disk :-) > > But when was this? Mine was about a year ago or so. Dale :-) :-)
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
On Saturday 24 January 2009 15:35:32 Grant Edwards wrote: > I didn't have a spare primary parition to put the swap file on. I had a > bunch of spare extended partitions but all the docs say you can't put the > XP swap file on en extended paritition... Ah, I didn't know that. In Win98, I think it was, I used to put it on drive E, which was a logical disk in the extended partition. -- Rgds Peter
[gentoo-user] Re: Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?
On 2009-01-24, Steven Lembark wrote: > >> OK folks, all have a seat please. I ran a full blown KDE on a 133Mhz >> machine with 256Mbs of ram. A friend if mine played Solitaire on it and >> it worked well. It even had sound on it. > > I started running fvwm on a 486 w/ 16MB of core and > a pair of 20MB disk drives (one RLL one MFM). :) That sounds like my first linux setup, except I started with 8MB of RAM and both of the 20MB drives were MFM ST506-style drives. RLL was leading edge back then. I remember running SunOS and X on 68000 machines with 4MB of RAM. > Face it: we've all become addicted to amounts of RAM that > didn't even exist on the planet 25 years ago, let alone disk Yup. When I first started running Linux The only people who talked about a gigbyte of RAM worked at places like DEC setting up large clusters of machines that had resources a mere mortal couldn't even dream of. -- Grant
[gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
On 2009-01-24, Peter Humphrey wrote: > On Friday 23 January 2009 14:58:32 Grant Edwards wrote: > >> Mainly because I use ntfsclone to keep a bunch of backup copies of the >> NTFS partition, and having a 2GB swap file in every backup copy starts to >> eat up a lot of disk space. > > In the days when I ran Windows I used to have at least one > partition other than C and force the swap file onto it, with > fixed size. Then I could just omit that partition from the > backup. > > Perhaps it's still possible to do that; I don't know, but it > might be worth a try. Yes, it's still possible to do that. I didn't figure out I _should_ do that until it was too late and the disk was partitioned and several OSes installed -- I didn't have a spare primary parition to put the swap file on. I had a bunch of spare extended partitions but all the docs say you can't put the XP swap file on en extended paritition (unless you use something like swapfs, which will work with an extended partition). -- Grant
Re: [gentoo-user] "Error: circular dependencies"
>> This ebuild is from the java-overlay. Is it just a bad ebuild or can >> I fix this? I tried disabling the nsplugin USE flag with the same >> result. >> > 57 DEPEND="${RDEPEND} > 58 || ( >=virtual/gnu-classpath-jdk-1.5 > 59 dev-java/icedtea6 > 60 dev-java/icedtea6-bin > 61 ) > It comes from that line. It looks like it's for bootstrapping icedtea6, > which apparently can be done by itself or the two other alternatives. > emerging icedtea6-bin should fix this. It can then be unemerged when > you've emerged icedtea6 and from then on you can bootstrap updates with > the existing installation. Thank you, that worked. - Grant
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Why isn't sshd blocking repeated failed login attempts?
>> How can I accomplish this?: Use a non-standard port for yourself (e.g., , 34567). A port entry in your .ssh/config will handle that. With that back door you can set up any remaining rules on port 22. -- Steven Lembark85-09 90th St. Workhorse Computing Woodhaven, NY, 11421 lemb...@wrkhors.com +1 888 359 3508
Re: [gentoo-user] Any good instructions for creating a Live CD?
>In Google Books I found something called "Linux Live CDs:Building > and Customizing Bootables". It had the following link which is dead. > Did it move somewhere? I cannot find it yet. The book does a decent job of describing how to use gentookit to get a working CD -- they worked for me. -- Steven Lembark85-09 90th St. Workhorse Computing Woodhaven, NY, 11421 lemb...@wrkhors.com +1 888 359 3508
Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?
> OK folks, all have a seat please. I ran a full blown KDE on a 133Mhz > machine with 256Mbs of ram. A friend if mine played Solitaire on it and > it worked well. It even had sound on it. I started running fvwm on a 486 w/ 16MB of core and a pair of 20MB disk drives (one RLL one MFM). Face it: we've all become addicted to amounts of RAM that didn't even exist on the planet 25 years ago, let alone disk :-) -- Steven Lembark85-09 90th St. Workhorse Computing Woodhaven, NY, 11421 lemb...@wrkhors.com +1 888 359 3508
Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?
> I believe he means that generally speaking, trying to build OO from > source on a low-end (and especially low RAM) machine is ill-advised and > can often be the cause of build failures as OO is well known to require > a lot of RAM and hdd space while it compiles. He has plenty of disk. It may use a lot of virtual memory, but with sufficient swap it will [eventually] get done. -- Steven Lembark85-09 90th St. Workhorse Computing Woodhaven, NY, 11421 lemb...@wrkhors.com +1 888 359 3508
Re: [gentoo-user] Tips/Tricks for Gentoo on low-spec computer?
> I'm in the process of installing Gentoo on a rather old > machine. It's an old HP Pavilion with a 450MHz Celeron > Mendocino and 256MB of PC133 SDRAM. I'm using an nVidia PCI > FX6200 video board instead of the i810 on-board chip, and it's > got a decent hard drive (160GB). > > I was wondering if there were any particular tips/tricks for > getting the best performance out of such a machine. It's to be > used for basic word processing and a few games. Hopefully the > nVidia 6200 will allow OpenGL to run fast enough for something > like TuxRacer. > > I chose XFCE for the desktop along with both Abiword and > OpenOffice. I probably should have installed OOo from a binary > package, but I decided to build it just to see how long it > would take (so far it's at about 26 hours and counting). Fvwm is lightweight. Make a point of compiling the kernel without anything you don't need; if you might need something then make it a module. Don't run daemon's you don't really need. For example, log into the command line and use "startx" or "xinit" rather than having the thing boot into an X11 login. Use a large amount of swap compared to ram (with your drive maybe 2G) and avoid tmpfs for working storage. If all you're using the thing for is surfing or basic development then it should work fine. The old standard for using X11 was a minimum 12MB of core and 40MB disk. For a long time that was difficult, then IDE came along and big disks got cheaper :-) -- Steven Lembark85-09 90th St. Workhorse Computing Woodhaven, NY, 11421 lemb...@wrkhors.com +1 888 359 3508
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
On 23 Jan 2009, at 21:10, Paul Hartman wrote: ... From memory it's just to delete it, which is perfect. It would take too long to zero it out - I don't think that's the purpose. ... After further googling, it appears it *does* fill the pagefile.sys with zeros, and adds a significant delay to windows shutdown times. So it won't do anything for the OP in this case. I don't know why I said "from memory" before, I was surely just making the assumption. ISTM a bit daft, under Windows, to zero out the pagefile. If you have physical access to the computer, most anything in the swapfile will be available elsewhere on the hard-drive anyway. About the only thing you *might* get out of it is passwords, but that's not something for a very amateur hacker. I guess writing the whole routine to (free up swap memory, check the registry for this setting &) zero the swapfile not to have been a mere 5 minute job. How hard would it have been to add an option _just_ to delete it? This just requires freeing the inode, is surely less work, and would have been more useful to far more people. *sigh* Microsoft. Stroller.
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Howto share Linux swap partition with Windows XP
On Friday 23 January 2009 14:58:32 Grant Edwards wrote: > Mainly because I use ntfsclone to keep a bunch of backup copies of the > NTFS partition, and having a 2GB swap file in every backup copy starts to > eat up a lot of disk space. In the days when I ran Windows I used to have at least one partition other than C and force the swap file onto it, with fixed size. Then I could just omit that partition from the backup. Perhaps it's still possible to do that; I don't know, but it might be worth a try. -- Rgds Peter
Re: [gentoo-user] Deleted my kernel .config
On Sat, 24 Jan 2009 06:38:50 +0530, Man Shankar wrote: > > mount -oremount,ro /boot solves that problem for me. It's the last > > command in the update script I mentioned before. And there's always > > GRML, just in case :-) > > Since, /boot seldom requires work i have this in fstab > > /dev/sda1 /boot ext2noauto 1 2 That leaves the opportunity to forget to mount /boot when you should. Mounting it ro gives you a big fat warning if you try to do something silly. These days I rarely have a separate /boot, but I do have backups :) -- Neil Bothwick This screen intentionally left blank. signature.asc Description: PGP signature
Re: [gentoo-user] Removing PAM from my system, is it adviseable?
On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 00:58:20 -0500, James Homuth wrote: > I heard there were some programs that won't be emerged or won't work > properly if PAM is removed. An example given in the posted wiki article > is Open Office. Is that still accurate? There have been some OOo builds (mainly betas/rcs I think) that failed configure if PAM was not present. Installing PAM then removing it afterwards worked, but I don't think this is an issue with the stable builds, just a bug that got fixed -- Neil Bothwick Top Oxymorons Number 5: Twelve-ounce pound cake signature.asc Description: PGP signature
Re: [gentoo-user] Removing PAM from my system, is it adviseable?
On Fri, 23 Jan 2009 02:09:55 -0200, Norberto Bensa wrote: > On the other hand, learning PAM has its benefits. Yes, it allows you to make a more informed decision about whether to keep or remove it. -- Neil Bothwick Don't forget that MS-Windows is just a temporary workaround until you can switch to a GNU system. signature.asc Description: PGP signature