I run an SSD on my MCP61P so lack of NCQ has no impact
whatsoever--SSD's have no moving parts, and all seeks
are instantaneous.
While I haven't heard of NCQ improving read speed of SSDs, it can have
a significant positive impact on write speed for SSDs.
Stefan
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(if (= emacs-major-version 20)
(menu-bar-mode -1))
I recommend testing (fboundp 'menu-bar-mode) instead.
(if (= emacs-major-version 21)
(if window-system
(tool-bar-mode -1)))
And here I recommend testing (fboundp 'tool-bar-mode) and calling the
function regardless of
with ntpd crashes on my server. Time jumps forward one hour every time
this has happened. However I'm not convinced it's the hardware causing
Sounds like something is causing the one-hour jump, and that in turns
causes ntpd to go bonkers.
As for what causes this jump, I don't know. Some cron
with ntpd crashes on my server. Time jumps forward one hour every time
this has happened. However I'm not convinced it's the hardware causing
Sounds like something is causing the one-hour jump, and that in turns
causes ntpd to go bonkers.
As for what causes this jump, I don't know. Some
Hmm... I guess I'm going to have to test it in a minimal environment
where I'm reasonably sure there can't be some clever daemon
interfering while trying to do something useful.
Did you find the solution? And if yes, what was it?
I think the problem was hardware. At least I'm now using
Decent desktop environments allow you to use the window manager of
your choice.
Decency seems to be a dying breed, sadly ;-)
Stefan
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The problem with proprietary drivers is of course that they're
proprietary, but on top of that, they aren't as hassle-free to install
and update.
Stefan
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It is possible, but it's not easy. I tried installing a Linux
distro (don't remember which one) from a thumb drive in Developer
Mode and the BIOS recognized it but would not boot it because it
wasn't signed. Google has some way of allowing developer
self-signing, but I never looked into how
viskup@viskup:~$ awk '/Name|VmSize|VmPeak/' /proc/4186/status
Name: gnome-shell
VmPeak: 3537456 kB
VmSize: 3403068 kB
That doesn't show a memory leak.
Indeed, but we're talking about 3GB of memory here, which seems hard to
justify for such an application.
awk '/Name|VmSize|VmPeak/'
stun server is mainly used for Voice and Video due to their UDP in
nature. so that if UDP recipient want to response back with voice or
video packet it returns back to Stun and stun route back to our local
server. but the question is why?. if i have a public Ip which is
published behind
I don't know if he was referring to that FAQ or not.
*HOWEVER*, as a senior citizen moving from Windows(tm) to Debian(tm?),
I find the transition unnecessarily annoying.
I used http://goodbye-microsoft.org once and it went very smoothly.
AFAICT this site doesn't exist any more, but I have the
NM's only controversial because there are people who oppose change not
matter why it might be. The NM developers haven't done themselves any
favors by not providing server-type features like bonding...
No, it's also controversial for other reasons. In my case, I have
issues with it because it
Why bother with non-free software when we're talking about a technology
that's dying like BSD these days?
Because right now, realistically it's the only game in town if one wants
to watch flash content. When HTML5 comes along and I am able to get rid
of
Most probably it's the firmware you require. This can be provided to d-i
on a USB stick.
Another alternative is to do the install on another machine, and then to
move/clone the resulting partition.
Most of my Debian installs were done by cloning an existing system
rather than going through the
==
server1.shellva .INIT. 16 u- 102400.0000.000 0.000
mail.honeycomb. .INIT. 16 u- 102400.0000.000 0.000
thor.netservice .INIT. 16 u- 10240
Just to be sure in case I misunderstand and do something really stupid:
When pvdisplay says
april:/farhome/hendrik# pvdisplay
--- Physical volume ---
PV Name /dev/md0
VG Name VG1
PV Size 673.62 GiB / not usable 3.00 MiB
Allocatable
I'm trying to watch www.ctv.ca from a macbook pro (2GHz dual core with
ATI graphics) and am having problems where the video is going slow (I'd
estimate around 5fps). This is using Debian testing with the nonfree
Adobe flash player (obviously since gnash doesn't even display any
video at all).
But if the computer starts I do get a grub menu from the Ubuntu
distrobution. Would it be possible to use this grub setup from Ubuntu to
boot my pendrive usb ?
One way or another, your Ubuntu can read the pendrive, then you can
do it. There are various ways to boot over USB; by order of
Sadly, this can't be done in-place, so you'll either need to use mv to
replace /etc/conf.file with /etc/conf.file.new or repeat the loop (with
no substitution) to copy /etc/conf.file.new into /etc/conf.file.
It can be done inplace with `rm' in place or `mv':
(rm /etc/conf.file;
while
So to recap my original post, the basic requirements are:
- fanless mini PC
- it will run Debian
- production environment (reliability is important)
- good Linux support to facilitate fast deployment and low maintenance,
- avoiding non-free software (non-free firmware, out-of-tree kernel
not a necessity, though it is desiable :). A custom kernel that
doesn't work is obviously going to be a problem, but if it works well
enough then it would be fine for me. But I guess it does make a
The problem is: what will you do with your machine three year down
the road? Will you have to
Of course, the manufacturer distributes the GNU/Linux version of the
product with a proprietary driver which is hell to get working on
anything else than that specific Xorg+kernel combination.
I like to avoid that head-banging experience and the associated why did I
ever purchase this
I recently updated my Debian testing desktop (which moved it to Gnome 3)
and now the Adobe flash plugin doesn't give me any sound any more.
Luckily, Gnash gives me sound OK, but I'd still like to solve the issue
with the Adobe plugin for those sites that don't work with Gnash.
So, from what I
I'd love to get help here:
- how do I work around the problem so that Adobe's flash plugin gives
me sound?
- why is ALSA's dmix refusing connections (after all, its name claims
it's a mixer, so it should accept more than one input stream).
I would like to see the output of:
lspci -knn |
While I admire the work the Nouveau guys are doing, after suffering for
more than 4 years with an Nvidia GPU+chipset on my desktop, I just
replaced the motherboard with a one based on the AMD E350 fusion chip,
and suddenly all my problems are gone. One of the best $200 I've
spent recently.
Only
My USB-connected drive spins up every hour (or even half-hour).
This is a serious problem since it's a 3.5 drive, it's almost always
idle (I only use it once a day for backups) and it's not in a place
where I can easily plug it in and out.
Googling, I found a very similar looking problem that
My USB-connected drive spins up every hour (or even half-hour).
This is a serious problem since it's a 3.5 drive, it's almost always
idle (I only use it once a day for backups) and it's not in a place
where I can easily plug it in and out.
Googling, I found a very similar looking problem
My USB-connected drive spins up every hour (or even half-hour).
(...)
Any idea what it might be and how to find out and fix it?
IIRC, this setting can be defined using hdparm (-M flag and also
/usr/ share/doc/hdparm/README.acoustic) but as the man page/doc says,
the possible options for this
My USB-connected drive spins up every hour (or even half-hour).
(...)
Any idea what it might be and how to find out and fix it?
IIRC, this setting can be defined using hdparm (-M flag and also
/usr/ share/doc/hdparm/README.acoustic) but as the man page/doc
says, the possible options for this
thanks for replies! Is it possible to slide partition using the
tools included with e2fsprogs package as well?
The e2fsprogs tools only deal with the needs specific to
ext[234] partitions. Sliding a partition can be done for any partition
you like with `dd'.
Stefan
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The hard disk can have set (by default) embbeded routines that make the
disk to be awaked at a regular interval and external disks (those that
come with USB enclosures or NAS/SAN appliances) tend to do it to speed up
things (e.g., to run scheduled backup tasks).
For a NAS, I could agree. But
to find how often the head get unloaded, I have completely prevented
this effect to occur.
Notice that you have 2 problems:
1- Unloading.
2- Reloading.
From where I stand, the unloading is normal, harmless, and even
desirable so the real problem is: why is it re-loaded every 3 minutes?
I'd
I hardly call module size blows up to be no rationale for limiting the
number of CPUs.
Well, if now is set to 512, the problem was not that big, I mean...
solvable.
IIRC the Linux kernel handling of CONFIG_NR_CPUS has changed: it used to
allocate potentially large static data of size
Possibly someone out there has a working xorg.conf for this amazingly
long lived little laptop?
I use Debian testing on my X30 with an empty xorg.conf.
The switch to kernel mode setting (KMS) seems to have brought its
share of problems, tho: without KMS the i810 driver won't start any
more, and
So you use KMS and get good performance?
I'm not very sensitive to video performance, but I didn't notice any
particularly slow operation.
Stefan
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If one is so power consumption conscious to be suckered into a Green
(EARS) drive, then one needs to realize the CPU dissipates about 10
times the wattage/heat of a hard drive. Thus, concentrate your power
I have no idea what makes you so angry against green drives.
But I can assure you there
The first thing of notice is that the Load_Cycle_Count of the drive
heads increases every 8 seconds by default. As seen on the Internet,
this may pose a problem in the long run, since these drives are
guaranteed to sustain a limited number of such head parking cycles.
The number given
unfortunately that simple approach is harder to do with my renaming
scheme. So I would probably write a helper script that did the
options to convert and renamed the file and so forth.
for k in *.JPG; do
base=$(basename $k .JPG)
test -f $base.1024.jpg continue # skip if already
I have a 10 GB partition that is nowhere near full, less than 5 GB of data
on it (far less). Unfortunately, the partition I'd like to copy it to is
5 GB. I can do rsync -av but normally I'd use DD. Is there a way to copy
an image of just the files from one drive to another?
In the case
I have no idea what makes you so angry against green drives.
I am against using any drive, at this time, in Linux, with a native
sector size other than 512 bytes.
Again, I fail to see why you're so emotional about it. I understand you
don't recommend people buy such drives unless they know
The eToken is basically a smartcard that plugs into USB.
I still don't really understand the difference apart from it containing
a key that I match against. Which is in essence what I was asking to
do with a USB block device which looks much cheaper than the eToken.
Typically, the difference
# hdparm -I /dev/sdc | grep Sector size
Logical Sector size: 512 bytes
Physical Sector size: 4096 bytes
This is reported by the drive to hdparm. Only the 512 is used by the
kernel. It has no knowledge of the 4KB physical block size and can't
use it
I'm down on these drives due to the maniacal 8 second head park
interval, which likely does more mechanical damage than it saves power
in dollar terms.
There is simply no concrete evidence to back this urban legend.
In the WD20EARS I purchased this was in no way just a legend -- be it
MUST READ: Western Digital is unable to provide support for the
Unix/Linux operating systems outside of jumper configurations (for
EIDE hard drives) and physical installation support.
While I never expect any OS-specific support from hard-drive suppliers,
I find it offensive for a manufacturer
Read the ATA and SCSI specifications. Or ask on either mailing list.
In short, the drive presents its LBA addressing based on 512B sectors.
The kernel can't choose to ignore that--it's stuck with it. Since the
drive is presenting LBA based on 512B sectors, there is no way the
kernel can
Thanks, that is a perfect solution to my problem. Esp. since I am not
having much luck getting ntfs-3g installed and running.
Odd. For what it's worth I don't use ntfs much, but I tried ntfs-3g the
other day, and it was trivial: apt-get install ntfs-3g, then mount.
Stefan
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No. It is not. That's why I went to the trouble of downloading 2.6.20 from
kernel.org. These are my options in either kernel:
The stock 2.6.18-4-686 kernel has it enabled, but the 2.6.18-4-686-bigmem
doesn't have it at all (not even disabled).
Maybe that can help you,
Stefan who
So, let me ask you, when you drive the speed limit, you are skirting the
law. Or if in a 55MPH speed limit area and you drive 55MPH... exactly,
are you are skirting the law (and therefore staying within the limits of
the law) or are you breaking the spirit of the law and should be
punished
if you use code under GPL your program has too be under GPL.
That's the gist of it, although it's only if you distribute your program
that this comes into effect.
Also this is not really the end goal, but rather its means. The end goal is
to make it possible for anybody to
I say Patents BAD only if they are used for keeping progress from
happening.
Software patents are an unmitigated evil. However, attempting to fix a
patent problem with a copyright license is a serious error.
You're confused: while I expect most GPLv3 contributors find software patents
an
I see your point, the reason I am shocked is that Flash is not a web
standard as such verified by the Web Consortium but has become a de facto
standard as people rush to put stupid animations and graphics on their
websites. I agree with the Captalism comment to. The reason I use Debian
is
I need a few kernel modules that are not included in the stock kernel.
module-assistant makes it pretty easy to compileinstall them, but I still
wish it were even more transparent.
I.e. I'd like to be able to automatically compileinstall those modules for
every new kernel I install (and also
crash, given this, what would be really cool would be to partition the
system at install time using a slightly mean, but granular, best guess
layout [0] so things should fit in their partitions without too much wasted
space, then configure each partition as one mount point on one logical
I setup my rootfs as an LVM, the menu.lst of grub looks like this;
title Debian GNU/Linux, kernel 2.6.18-4-386
root(hd0,0)
kernel /vmlinuz-2.6.18-4-686 root=/dev/volume/root ro
initrd /my_init
savedefault
Error happens when the kernel tried to mount
That sounds like poor implementation, the critical bit is not to let it
iterate without it having worked the first time. I still don't see anything
wrong with the concept as long as it's implemented right, although I've
never dealt with a system on the scale you're talking about.
The problem
Try use /dev/mapper/volume-root instead.
I'm not sure why, but I recently had a similar problem where using
/dev/Debian/root didn't work but /dev/mapper/Debian-root did (even though
once the boot is over, /dev/Debian/root can be used just fine, it looks
like the alternate name is constructed
Is this a clue? When I try to use aptitude it wants to remove
150+ unused packages, including Gnome. Doesn't feel right
to me so I don't use it.
If `apt-get upgrade' suggested to remove `gnome'. I'd do the following:
apt-get install gnome
If that doesn't do anything, then I'd write down
low-resource: box only has 64 MB available.
Rock solid stable. A focus on good design and being bug-free over
adding 'features'.
I recommend ctwm.
But you'll have to go through editing a config file.
Stefan
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What tool can I use to extract some part of a pdf file?
In kpdf, I can copy a piece of the PDF image and save it, but it's only
saved as a bitmap, whereas I'd like to keep it in vector form.
Stefan
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When a USB disk is mounted by gnome-volume-manager, I can unmount it using
nautilus (via right clicking on the disk's icon), but I haven't figured how
to do it from the command line. Any hint?
Stefan
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What tool can I use to extract some part of a pdf file?
In kpdf, I can copy a piece of the PDF image and save it, but it's only
saved as a bitmap, whereas I'd like to keep it in vector form.
You don't ask much, do you?
No, indeed. Mac OS X's `preview' does it out of the box.
theory
AFAIK:
Actually, PDF is not a programming language, contrary to Postscript.
So it's much easier to deal with (and more difficult to introduce viruses
into it, among other things).
Really? Can you explain more about this? I thought PDF was a subset of
Postscript with some kind of compression and/or
Intel Celeron M 420
I'd recommend against any Celeron CPU. It's slow and not energy efficient.
A Turion64 ML-something is OK but an Turion64 MT-something is more
energy efficient, so check the details.
W.r.t GNU/Linux support I've come to the conclusion that it's a question of
luck more
as part of this project I want to rip all of our cds to mp3 or ogg
Of course. Note that if you you can get the necessary disk space,
I recommmend you use flac rather than ogg or MP3. This is much bigger (a
factor of 5 of so, I'd say) but has the advantage that it's lossless which
means that
I have given up on sane with my scanner.
I guess you mean xsane. If so, a bewildering interface, a badgering
licence message, and a lack of stability, make this a program to avoid.
Hmm... interesting. I started with the software that HP distributes with
my OfficeJet: a complete waste of
Hello after a while on this. I have tried xsane in Debian and Fedora until
I am blue in the face and I can't get it to work. I am starting to think
the only way to get a scanner to work in Linux is if you write the program
in assembler code and hire an idiot savant to configure it.
I get
Whenever I play a video with an Audio bitrate of 48000Hz in Totem or
VLC, the sound is very distorted, doesn't matter if it's in mp3 or AC3
format.
Video files with an audio bitrate of 44100Hz plays fine.
Odd, it's usually the reverse.
Sound card is an onboard (Asrock 939Dual-Vsta) C-Media
Not sure which part of the dmesg to copy so you can see it in full
here: http://fab621.googlepages.com/dmesg
Hmm... looks like the ALSA driver doesn't output the relevant info.
Anyway
So the way you describe your problem (48kHz sampled audio is OK, but 44.1kHz
one sounds bad) is odd.
Regulations prevent distribution = non-free
True, it's non-free by Debian standards. But I still would like to make
a distinction between blatantly non-free software, like the w32codecs,
and stuff licensed as free software, like libdvdcss.
Agreed. It would be good to distinguish between
apt-get install linux-image-2.6.18-4-686.
And try the 2.6.21 one while you're there: it may reduce your battery
consumption significantly.
Stefan
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I know the answer to this will probably hurt, but I thought I'd give it
a shot in any case. My notebook's battery life took a sudden drop from
around an hour to about 15 minutes. I is a 4800mAh battery.
Given the specs of your battery (10.8V 4.8Ah, i.e. 51Wh), an autonomy of one
hour means
How can I prevent udev from saving the MAC address of eth0 into the
persistent net rules file? I am using Debian Etch.
I added a file /etc/udev/rules/a10-monnier.rules which contains various
rules that I like (e.g. rename the firewire network interface to eth-fw0,
rename the wifi interface to
Still, if you're used to apt-get, I don't really see a reason to switch.
I always recommend aptitude, but never tell users to switch from apt-get
on a running system. If I should, please let me know the reasons.
The biggest benefit (at least until the new apt) would be the automatic
I took a leap of faith (or folly, yet to be seen) and installed
grub2. I did this in an attempt to move from Lilo to Grub (as I prefer
grub). However, I didn't realize that Grub2 is vastly different! It
seems to be installed correctly as I have a grub.cfg file that looks
correct for
Am I the only one who finds the gnome-power-manager to be
fundamentally flawed? A power daemon needs intrinsically to be
system-global and not specific to a particular login session.
This becomes obvious when there are several logins active at the same time
(on different virtual consoles),
I want to test how a program would run with a reduced physical
memory. The machine has currently 4 GB RAM running Debian. I'd
like to evaluate the performance of the system with 2 GB physical
RAM. Of course, I could remove on of the RAM modules. But, is
there also a way to disable the
is because there is a penalty for executing 32-bit code, one which is
There is none (if you use the 32bit subset of the AMD64 architecture).
But there is a penalty for using the x86 architecture instead of the
amd64 architecture.
This penalty is not specific to the Athlon64/Opteron/younameit,
So I installed a system where / and /boot are not on raid and low and behold
grub seemed to successfully install the boot sector and I could boot
the disks.
Making the /boot partition on a RAID is generally not possible with GRUB
(don't know about LILO). It supposedly can be done if the RAID
I don't have a card reader, but it sounds like that may not be such a bad
thing to get, except that it is probably more hassle to eject the SD card
and reload it into a reader and run the risk of damaging it from
frequent handling.
Contrary to HS I haven't found the card reader to be
Right now when I run 'apt-get -s upgrade' there are 172 programs in the
'not-upgraded' response. If I try to upgrade any one of them a bunch of
gnome programs are also upgrade but also apt-get wants to REMOVE
gnome-desktop-environment and gnome-themes among a few others.
I'd probably do:
1 -
Just remember to tell you editor to inserts spaces as tab and set
the tab width to something reasonable like 4.
Please don't. TABs are 8 spaces apart. Always have been, always will be.
People playing silly tricks with tab-width is the main reason why using TABs
in languages like Python is a
Looking in /etc, I see /etc/network/iface, is it here I fix that?
I don't see any such file. There is /etc/network/interfaces however.
man iface
man network
try man interfaces ;-)
Stefan
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Haskell defines TABs as being 8 spaces apart and I expect Python to do
the same.
Python should do it because Haskell does it??
Not because Haskell is so influential, but because the same causes tend to
result in the same effects.
Stefan
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Would have if I could have! But it wasn't a cd. It was an old cassette
tape feeding into the sound card, captured with ReZound.
There are *definitely* ways to do that with Linux. Someone asks
every 4-6 months on this list. Record players, not cassette
players, but the concept is the same.
So it's just a mix of network and network copy that seems to cause problems.
I hope that's better :-) Any ideas?
I'd try linux-kernel.
Stefan
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As you all know, Debian Etch released with Iceweasel instead of
Firefox. This is totally okay, but some applications (like X-Chat or
Gaim/Pidgin) still uses firefox %u command instead of iceweasel %u for
opening web URL addresses, from Gaim conversations and IRC channels.
It used to work in
I'm a big proponent of swap *files*. Once you allocate the whole
disk, there no room left over if you want to add another swap
partition, whereas you can add as many swap files as your heart
desires, whenever you need them.
I'd always heard that swap files are slower than swap partitions.
I read recently on this list that LVM is not portable across CPU
Don't believe everything you read.
Stefan
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I have been using Subversion for this very application for several
years; it works well.
Most revision control systems will do the job. And most of the post-CVS
revision control systems (other than Subversion) also allow you to commit
locally before sending the commit to the remote server.
I write all my texts in latex, use JabRef/bibtex to manage references,
subversion to keep track of things and to collaborate with coauthors,
and -- if I need to submit to a journal misguided enough only to accept
word, latex2rtf.
My wife works in a field where most journals want Word files.
I write all my texts in latex, use JabRef/bibtex to manage references,
subversion to keep track of things and to collaborate with coauthors,
and -- if I need to submit to a journal misguided enough only to accept
word, latex2rtf.
My wife works in a field where most journals want Word files.
I write all my texts in latex, use JabRef/bibtex to manage references,
subversion to keep track of things and to collaborate with coauthors,
and -- if I need to submit to a journal misguided enough only to accept
word, latex2rtf.
My wife works in a field where most journals want Word files.
I write all my texts in latex, use JabRef/bibtex to manage references,
subversion to keep track of things and to collaborate with coauthors,
and -- if I need to submit to a journal misguided enough only to accept
word, latex2rtf.
My wife works in a field where most journals want Word files.
Note that while there is a difference between GMT and UTC, mostly
computers are set to GMT. The M is for Mean time which smooths over
leap seconds that occur in UTC due to the jitter of the earth's
rotation. Check wikipedia for a more precise answer. Note, however,
that its unlikely that
My cd-rom is not recognized by the debian installer
because of the intel 965 chipset on my asus p5b
mainboard. I know there is a way to install from an
iso image on the hard drive but I am having problems
understanding how to get this to work. I currently
have mandriva installed and lots of
Does anyone have any recent experience, either good or bad, with any
specific laptops?
Just avoid ATI graphics cards, and nVidia as well (tho it's not as bad).
Integrated Intel graphics is often the best choice (best support under
GNU/Linux, best battery life as well).
How are they for
I have an HFS+ filesystem (on a powerpc-mac style partition) that I need to
grow. parted/gparted seem only able to shrink it. Is there some other tool
that's able to grow an HFS+ filesystem. I looked at tools under macosx as
well, but macosx is only able to resize an HFS+ partition if it's on a
I wanted a live Debian system on my USB key.
The Debian Live option is too static for my taste, I wanted a real live
system, upgradable via apt-get etc...
One option is to use a large enough USB drive and do a plain Debian install
on it. But my USB drive is only 128MB so it was not possible.
I
I know you said you want a plain Debian, but what about DSL ?
http://www.damnsmalllinux.org/
My understanding is that DSL offers some things I don't need (like
a desktop; I'm mostly interestd in this system as a kind of rescue drive)
and fails to provide me with the ability to just update it
You say that you have problems with apt-get. Have you tried aptitude at
the command line?
No. Googling for jffs2 mmap apt seemed to indicate that it's not specific
to apt-get, so I didn't even bother to try something else. Besides, I'm
used to apt-get and not to aptitude, so I actually
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