Re: apt showing all dependencies?
Michael wrote: I wondering if there's a way to show all the dependencies and sub- dependencies of package foo? apt-cache will show the dependencies for a particular package, but it doesn't show the dependencies of those dependencies. If I get your meaning, apt-rdepends is the package you want: "Description: Recursively lists package dependencies This utility can recursively list package dependencies, either forwards or in reverse. It also lists forward build-dependencies. The output format closely resembles that of `apt-cache depends`. As well, it can generate .dot graphs, much like apt-cache in dotty mode" --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: apt-get dist-upgrade
Jeff Elkins wrote: The following packages will be REMOVED: blt-common epiphany-browser gimp-nonfree kdelibs4-dev libcupsys2-dev mozilla mozilla-browser mozilla-mailnews mozilla-psm mozilla-xft I'm in a similar situation. aptitude (non-interactive) wants to remove libnss4 and libnss3 and automatically remove my mozilla packages. The situation is similar for apt-get, taking account of no tracking of automatically installed packages. Newer versions of libnspr4 and libnss3, as well as the mozilla-* packages are available. If you'll notice, also, the new mozilla-browser package adds about 6 new dependencies. Fortunately - running unstable here - I can resolve the situation by issuing the command: # aptitude -tunstable install mozilla-browser or # apt-get -tunstable install mozilla-browser Now, I consider my situation resolved. Perhaps something similar will work for you. You say that you have gone some time without updates. Perhaps you are running testing. I believe mozilla-xft as a separate package has been obsoleted for quite some time now in unstable. In your case the appropriate action may be: # apt-get install mozilla Of course use -t or specify a version if you want to override apt pinning. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Loading kernel modules at startup
John Van Lierde wrote: But I'm absolutely baffled as to how to get the modules to load automagically at boot. There are a bunch of utilities (some apparently obsolescent) and files (all of which seem to say that they are generated and not to be edited). I've poked through all the man pages that seem relevant, but it's just not making sense. What the lm_sensors documentation recommends doesn't fit what I've got. $ apropos modules [...] modules (5) - kernel modules to load at boot time [...] $ man modules The manual page should come with either the modutils or module-init-tools packages. Is that what you were looking for? --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Sid is Sid, before or after a release, right?
William Ballard wrote: I run Sid. Whenever Debian makes a major release, it doesn't affect me at all, right, because in theory I'm already running the same or later versions of everything that's being released. "The code name for Debian's development distribution is "sid", aliased to "unstable". Most of the development work that is done in Debian, is uploaded to this distribution. This distribution will never get released; instead, packages from it will propagate into testing and then into a real release [1]." I think as much is said somewhere more officially and more explicitly, but don't know just offhand. [1] http://www.debian.org/releases/unstable/ --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Home button not working in shell
Jacob Friis Larsen wrote: How do I make the Home button work as expected? Supposing you are referring to Bash, I'm going to guess the expected behavior when depressing the "Home" key is for the cursor to move to the first character of the editing (not necessarily visual) line. The simplest solution might be to become accustomed to using: -A: move cursor to first character -E: move cursor to end character Then see section Readline Command Names of the Bash manual (man bash) for additional default key bindings. They are similar to Emacs key bindings. Although you can also configure Bash to provide line editing similar to how vi would. But to actually fix the issue with the Home key, given your email host name, this may be a key map issue. I think we would first need to know whether you are using a shell through an X terminal emulator, or on the virtual console. If the former, I would look to solve the issue with 'xmodmap'. If the later, I would look to 'loadkeys'. Although there may be better or more appropriate solutions. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Toshiba suspend from command line
Ian Knopke wrote: How would I adjust the permissions so apm -s could be run by a normal user? Does this require me to adjust permissions to the /proc directory? How would I do that anyways? Since this is a laptop, I don't see any harm in adding the following line to you sudoers file (edit with visudo as root) to accomplish this: username ALL = (root) NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/apm -s Substitute for username, and the path to the apm binary if that isn't correct. I suppose you could also substitute your hostname for ALL. And, for my own curiosity, why can a windowmaker applet cause a suspend when the normal user can't? I imagine the executable is setuid root. It's hard to say for certain, not having used or seen it. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Toshiba suspend from command line
Ian Knopke wrote: I'd like to be able to put my toshiba laptop in suspend mode from the command line. Currently I can do it using the wmtuxtime applet in Windowmaker, that comes in the toshutils package. Is there a way to do this without the applet? I'm not familiar with that applet. Are you using APM or ACPI? Also, do you mean suspend to RAM, or suspend to disk? If you are using APM, see 'man APM' for the list of commands you can use with the command-line client 'apm' for 'apmd'. If you are using ACPI, 'echo [n] > /proc/acpi/sleep' where 'n' is the sleep state you desire to put the machine into. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: vim place marker
Craig Jackson wrote: I have read through the vim docs and definitely missed something (it's a tome). How do I configure vim to place a marker for each file edited and then open the file at that place the next time it is opened? Not a Debian question, but the kind of thing all debpeople should know. Surprisingly enough, I believe I answered this here not 2 weeks ago. Rather than copying and pasting, to find the answer execute: :help position The solution there worked for me, at least. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: script/app to compile statistics about disk usage?
Silvan wrote: I'm running out of room, and I'm sure I must have gigabytes of stupid junk laying around, but I'm not sure where I left all of it. - Every month or so I inspect my non-stable systems using the "cruft" package. - For packages not already managed by aptitude, repetitive applications of deborphan can be useful. - "apt-get clean" But then maybe these items are small potatoes to you. I have a difficult time filling up 5GB. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: can't read my mail
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: my screen is half the size of normal. this ha[ppens every nite Are you running X? Please elaborate on what you are doing leading up to the time you encounter this problem. Is either APM or ACPI involved? In the past I've had problems where after resume when X is running, only the top half of the screen will be visible, or the bottom half will be a mirror image of the top half. Usually this can rectified by switching to a virtual console and then back to X. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Thanks for Debian Installer
Steve Witt wrote: I used beta4 and it ROCKS! I really wanted to install woody on this machine but the woody installation couldn't deal with the IDE configuration of this computer, so I tried the new installer with sarge and it worked great. Is there an advanced option in the new installer to install woody? I swear I remember seeing at least an advanced option to install sid directly. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[OT] pci, 2d video card, with Free driver Xinerama support
It has been a while since I've used or put together any new computer other than pre-configured laptops. I've tried to create a little list of what I am aiming for. If anyone has had success along these lines, I would really appreciate any advice or recommendations: - Can drive 1792x1344 at a non-seizure inducing refresh rate - Reasonable 2d quality for development and productivity app usage pattern - Hardware 3d acceleration is not an issue; I don't need it, so nothing fancy - PCI (so that I can install 2) - Can install 2 and drive 2 monitors with Xinerama support - (Preferably) compatible driver in Debian sid XFree86, or will not taint kernel - ACPI suspend compatibility would be nice, but not required - Something I can still hope to find at a brick-and-mortar retail store would be nice as well, but not required - $80-100 USD per card (or less) if that is reasonable. Is it reasonable? This will be for a development workstation I am piecing together. Apart from 3d performance for games (which I can't bring myself to spend time on any longer), I find that I do not even know which brands or product lines to look to. Thank you for any advice, folks. --Chad -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Help Installing / Upgrading Cron
Aaron B wrote: Hi all. I've recently had problems installing / upgrading cron from apt-get. It seemed to be a problem with not being able to find /usr/bin/crontab while upgrading - so I removed cron, and then attempted to install it. Here is the output: Perhaps the most effective action you can take is to install apt-listbugs. Had you, you would have been alerted to this grave bug at the time of upgrade and could have elected to hold the package at its current version. When you do encounter bugs, the first, best place to look is usually the Debian bug tracking system [1]. There, you can lookup outstanding bugs against any package in the official Debian repositories. The bug you have identified is already reported against the cron package [2]. The page for this bug [3] lists an immediate solution. Alternatively, you can wait until the corrected package becomes available in the main repository or on your local mirror. [1] http://bugs.debian.org [2] http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?which=pkg&data=cron&archive=no [3] http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=261897 Best of luck then, --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Future of proprietary software [was: Is Linux Unix?]
Paul E Condon wrote: Or look at the situation another way. In the Open/Free software community there are a lot of true believers in a social mission for software. They seem to produce and maintain software for non-monetary reasons. In the business world there are a lot of people committed to paying their suppliers the least possible amount for the supplies that they need to operate their business. Open/Free software costs less than commercial software. Some businesses will move to using Open/Free software. They will reduce their cost structure. They will become more competitive in their respective industries because of their lower cost structure. The customer base of commercial software enterprises will wither and die. (Or maybe not die, just be bought out by a competitor with a lower cost structure.) Alternatively, commercial software houses might retool as suppliers of IT staffing and management for corporations. But they will give up on their licensed software business because they can't make money at it in the face of GNU/Linux competition. Prior to actually getting out of the business, they will give all sorts of self serving arguments as to why they are having trouble, but the truth is that the Open/Free software community doesn't need their services at the prices that they need to charge. Certainly there exists commercial, proprietary software today which tomorrow will be replaced - at least sufficiently replaced - and will no longer be profitable to produce. But unless you are making your software available under a license which prohibits or restricts commercial use, requires release of modified source as a condition to modified distribution, or requires release of modified source as a condition to even modification without redistribution, then it is difficult to see how your Free/Open development is doing anything to erode the future of proprietary software. Proprietary software developers today can develop and market their software for and on more platforms than ever before, and increasingly they can acquire high quality tools, and build upon powerful frameworks and libraries for free and without giving back to the community. But even _if_ Free/Open software development is exhausting the set of unsolved technological/software problems this means very little in an economic environment where producers thrive at least as greatly creating and marketing new _problems_, as they do solving legitimate ones. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: See what a weak password will get ya?
Scarletdown wrote: |< == K >< == X |> == P Anyone else care to add to this little list? 0 == O $ == S |-| == H |_| == U |_ == L \/\/ == W /\/\ == M |V| == M |\| == N |-o-| == tie fighter {-o-} == tie interceptor 8~~ ? 8-) ... ! --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Detaching and reattaching a process to different terminals?
Jon wrote: As I said, as you have to run screen first, this won't help with your current problem, but in the future it may. See the "detachtty" package. This should allow you to detach and reattach the already running process. And it doesn't carry with it all of the excess functionality of screen that it sounds as though you have no need for. --dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Tiny X pointer
Kirk Strauser wrote: > I use X 4.3.0 on a Debian/unstable system. It's running at 1600x1200 > (at 85Hz :) ) on a 19" monitor, and the display is perfect except > that my mouse pointer is tiny (smaller than 12pt fonts). I've been > using X for years but it's never occurred to me to want a large > pointer. Where should I look for that setting? Albeit you never would have guessed there is a package to do it. I didn't either, so I went to Google first. Give the big-cursor package a try; works for me. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Mozilla T-bird upgrade - wheres all my stuff!!??
Michael Sullivan wrote: I just upgraded mozilla thunderbird using apt (I run unstable) and now my folders and accounts and address book are not seen by the upgrade!!. Is it broke?? I can see my old info in ~.mozilla-thunderbird but the program isn't seeing the info as something it needs to use. I'm not looking forward to starting out with a clean slate. that would be bad. I guess you didn't happen to see the warning I posted to the list about this before upgrading. There is a manual fix listed in the second bug report [1] on this issue against the mozilla-thunderbird package. If you install apt-listbugs, at the time of upgrade or installation you should be notified of outstanding serious bugs against any affected packages. [1] http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=258747 dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Image viewer that support keyboard panning and zooming
* Tong* wrote: Is there a ready-made debian image viewer package/tool that supports keyboard panning and zooming? 'display' in the imagemagick package should do what you want. You'll want to at least look at the manual page before you do anything with it, or you will be frustrated. I just use xloadimage, but that doesn't support keyboard panning. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: what's the diff between 'aptitude upgrade' and 'aptitude dist-upgrade'?
cwinl wrote: hi all, i'm confused about several aptitude param. thank you all. I see that while dist-upgrade is documented in the aptitude documentation, it is not mentioned in the manual page. The aptitude manual page references the apt-get manual page ('man apt-get'). I suggest you take a look at that. The command descriptions are more complete, and as far as I am aware, accurate for aptitude as well. The differences between upgrade and dist-upgrade are described there as well as I could explain them to you. Note that the difference _is_ well documented in the aptitude documentation as well. You just have to look further. As you can see, the full aptitude documentation is referenced in the See Also section of the manual page as: /usr/share/doc/aptitude/html/index.html An equally adequate reference is available as: /usr/share/doc/aptitude/README If you still have questions about the respective behavior of these commands, feel free to ask. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: apt-get dselect-upgrade
Sam Halliday wrote: well i could easily use aptitude to purge packages... but since that is a pain if i have more than 5 packages which i uninstalled, i'd prefer to use a scripted approach. it's all too easy to type - instead of _, especially since _ on a packge will only - its dependencies. That you mention '-' and '_', I assume you are using aptitude in interactive (GUI) mode. Use the non-interactive mode: # aptitude purge ~c This will removed packages which are uninstalled, but still have configuration files (not purged). As I understand it, this is what you asked for. From /usr/share/doc/aptitude/README: ~c Matches packages which have been removed, but whose configuration files remain on the system (ie, they were removed but not purged). If you have installed the packages with "aptitude install" in the first place, then automatically installed dependencies will be removed as well. Even if you didn't install the packages with aptitude, you can use "aptitude markauto" to manually specify automatically installed packages. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Uh Oh... Prof requires ms word format
cecil wrote: cecil wrote: I just looked on the upcoming syllubus for my CS class. The prof requires ms word format zipped files for the assignments. What do I do to do that on linux? I guess I HAVE to install X now. :( Maybe I should get a different laptop? Is a 150 mhz machine with 2 gig hd and 32 meg ram going to be able to do the job? I'm worried now. There's nothing wrong with installing X. It's all Free, so use the best tool for the job. For many tasks I have nothing open but a single fullscreen terminal with no window decorations, but it is an xterm. For me, text in an xterm is faster, crisper, and at 1600x1200 is higher resolution than anything I can get on the console with my video card. I feel that I mentioned this a week or two ago when we were having a similar conversation on the list, but even if you were to use OpenOffice.org, whenever you need to turn in a .doc file converted from OOo (rather than a printed document), you are going to want to preview the .doc document on a machine running Windows, in genuine MS Word, and preferably the same version your instructor will be running. Either you will need to use a lab computer to do this, or use a friend's computer. Because if something doesn't work right, there are no excuses. You had access to a lab computer just like all the people who don't even have a personal computer, and you had access to the prescribed tools on those lab computers. Which operating system you will be running is going to be the least of your worries. You're _never_ going to get a higher grade because your completed assignment went through n esoteric conversions and was keyed in on a front panel. And if you have to worry about that, you are either going to need to spend that much more time on the assignment than everyone else, or you will be stressed and start to miss things. It is almost never worth accepting a lower grade because you did not use the prescribed tools for the job. CS has very little to do with learning how to operate any particular operating system. You will find many successful CS students who use only Windows, and the odds are that many of them will be smarter and more successful in school than you. It just doesn't matter that much. It really doesn't. Do something Linux or UNIX related at the hobbyist level, in school IT employment, or in an internship. I think you have 4 good options, which have already been covered: - Ask the professor whether you can turn in completed assignments in PDF format, and explain to him or her why you would prefer to. - Compose documents with LaTeX and convert to rtf. Then go to a lab machine and convert rtf to doc with MS Word, preview the doc file in MS Word and cocrrect any formatting issues, zip it, and turn it in (see packages latex2rtf and latex2rtf-doc). - Buy a slightly faster machine and from your campus computer or book store buy educational license copies of Windows 2000 and Office 2000 (or whatever). - Use a lab computer, and keep your machine for tinkering and other free-time pursuits, or for those assignments where it doesn't create more problems than are worth hassling with. Remember, even if you chose to buy a faster machine to run OpenOffice.org, at risk of getting a lower grade when it fails to open correctly or format just right, or display things in the right order, you will still need to go to a lab machine and preview the converted .doc file. And again, it is almost never worth taking that risk. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: How to setup sound under Debian
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I would like to understand how to setup sound under Debian. I am using a 2.6.6-1-686 kernel and I have noticed that there are no alsa modules for this kernel on the online repositories that I am using. So, how do I set it up? Are there any updated howtos? I see. You must mean that there is no alsa-modules-* package for 2.6.6-1-686 in the repository. I'm not using a Debian kernel image so I cannot say for certain, but probably the alsa modules were compiled with the kernel and included with the kernel-image-* package you are using (and are now in /lib/modules/`uname -r`/[...] If you are running stable, you'll probably want alsa-base and alsa-utils and alsaconf. If you are running testing or unstable, alsaconf should be included in alsa-utils. Install these packages and run /usr/sbin/alsaconf. From the alsaconf manual page: Alsaconf is a simple shell script which tries to detect the sound cards on your system and writes a suitable configuration file for ALSA. It will try to guess what GNU/Linux distribution you're running, and will act accordingly to the standards of that distribution, if specific sup- port is available. Alsaconf will write a modutils snippet which can be then used by modutils to load the correct parameters for your sound card. If successful, it may significantly reduce the time you need to spend getting it working. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Well, time to cut to the bone...
cecil wrote: Setting up power management, I can read up on it. Your mainboard's BIOS may or may not support ACPI, and may or may not be buggy. You might need to use APM, and you might only get partial or minimal support. Search the 'net for "Linux" + [your laptop make and model]. The memory, that too can be worked around. But does anyone know how much space the "base" install for debian takes up? I installed woody on a 486 laptop (8MB RAM) on Friday. Well, actually I took the hard drive out and imaged it on another machine, but anyhow... I'd have to look to be sure, but it was at ~88MB. It's a work in progress, and probably will end up with a source based distro on it (compiled on another machine). I'll probably install mozilla, xmms, and gnome, unless its too big. Some sort of simple office suite also, I guess. Disk footprint isn't the issue here: RAM is. But it will run. Perhaps someone can recommend a browser optimized for embedded/handheld devices. You might try one of the old Netscape Navigator/Communicator binaries. I believe they are available in the Debian contrib repository. There is also Dillo [1], which has an official Debian package as well. I'd like to know too for my 486 laptop. But I for one am doubtful OOo will even run in 32MB RAM. Have you considered EMACS or VI, and LaTeX? Hey, it only cost me 71 bucks for it; it's hard to beat that for a school computer. That is awesome for a functioning laptop. [1] http://www.dillo.org dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: XTerm resources: disabling bold characters
Thomas Dickey wrote: dircha <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: However, when I use the XTerm menu to change (as I do regularly) the font to Huge (10x20) or anything else and then later back to 7x14 (Medium, and also Default now), text is rendered using bold characters or overstriking (whichever of the two it is). I can reproduce this - looks like a bug. Essentially what's happening is that the first time it's using the resource settings, but the logic as I rewrote it around patch #181 (2003/10/26), lost the value of the bold font in the menu logic. > .Xdefaults contains: !! Use colors XTerm*VT100*colorMode: on !! Don't overstrike when font and boldFont are the same XTerm*VT100*boldMode: off That should work - my trace says both are the same size: VTRealize xtermLoadFont normal 7x14 same_font_size height 14/14, min 7/7 max 7/7 Will use internal line-drawing characters Will not use 1-pixel offset/overstrike to simulate bold XTerm*VT100*font: 7x14 XTerm*VT100*boldFont: 7x14 when switching back, it shows SetVTFont(i=4, f_n=, f_b=) xtermLoadFont normal 7x14 ...derived bold -Misc-Fixed-bold-R-Normal--14-130-75-75-C-70-ISO8859-1 same_font_size height 14/14, min 7/7 max 7/7 ...got a matching bold font same_font_size height 14/14, min 7/7 max 7/7 Will not use internal line-drawing characters Will not use 1-pixel offset/overstrike to simulate bold but see the f_b=, which tells me that it isn't using the original bold resource (will have to study & fix that). But the choice of bold font shouldn't be directly related to color. My trace shows me that colorAttrMode is initially off. Also colorBD (which I assume you meant to set). Setting those, I do get color for the bold attribute. So you can do that, and it should work. (The bug is still a bug - I'll fix that). This does what I wanted. There are enough options that I figured the odds were there was something I had missed. Thank you. And you're right of course. I will go ahead and copy the relevant text to bugs.debian.org against the xterm package so that it will be there in the event someone else encounters the actual bug here. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
XTerm resources: disabling bold characters
Hello, I am struggling with consistently disabling the use of bold characters in XTerm (xterm). When starting a new xterm (with no options) from an existing one, text is correctly rendered without bold characters and overstriking. Launching an xterm from my WM as: "xterm -font 7x14 -rv -sl 1000 -geometry 80x60+0+0" also results in the desired rendering. However, when I use the XTerm menu to change (as I do regularly) the font to Huge (10x20) or anything else and then later back to 7x14 (Medium, and also Default now), text is rendered using bold characters or overstriking (whichever of the two it is). Since I have color, and since at small sizes the bold characters are not well defined and are difficult to read, I would like characters with the bold attribute to render simply as color characters rather than bold characters. I believe I should be able to accomplish this with the colorBDMode option, but this does not produce the expected results. Instead, I have gotten it to work (in the limited way described above) with a combination of boldMode, font, and boldFont, where boldMode (off) as I understand it prevents the rendering of bold characters when font and boldFont are the same. Note: toggling the value of boldColors has no effect (which I suppose is expected). I'm not using TrueType fonts. I'd appreciate any help or direction. System and Configuration Info: XFree86 and XTerm from unstable. I start X from a console as: $ startx & logout .xinitrc contains the line: xrdb .Xdefaults .Xdefaults contains: !! Use colors XTerm*VT100*colorMode: on !! Don't overstrike when font and boldFont are the same XTerm*VT100*boldMode: off XTerm*VT100*font: 7x14 XTerm*VT100*boldFont: 7x14 XTerm*VT100*boldColors: off !! Display bold attribute as color instead of bold characters XTerm*VT100*colorBDMode: on !! Change definition of "Medium" font *fontMenu*font4*Label: Medium *VT100*font4: 7x14 Thanks, dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Pros/Cons Kde vs Gnome?
Steve Lamb wrote: Daniel Barclay wrote: Actually the shell is, for cases like "rm *.o". (That's why I wish graphical shells retained the advantages of command lines when they added the graphical advantages. I should have said "partial, non-continuious selections across a large list." Simple cases like *.o, yeah, shell does fine. I mean like a list of, 2-300 files which have no common denominator. Suddenly the globbing gets rather convoluted or you need to go through several passes whereas in a GUI selection you can just go down the list holding CNTL and SHIFT-select ranges and then execute one operation at the end. Right. That's when you bring up a dired buffer in emacs. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: how to comfig vim to hold the position that last access?
cwinl wrote: hi all, vim in redhat can 'remember' the position that you open a file last time. how to config vim in debian to do the same thing? Check :help position < *last-position-jump* This autocommand jumps to the last known position in a file just after opening it, if the '" mark is set: > :au BufReadPost * if line("'\"") > 0 && line("'\"") <= line("$") | exe "normal g'\"" | endif: See also :help au If you add :autocmd!, be sure to include it at the start, not end of your .vimrc. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: getting started with LISP
Phillip Garland wrote: "LISP" is a family of languages. There are three main existing LISP dialects: Common Lisp, Scheme, and Emacs Lisp. I use Common Lisp the most. If you want to learn Oommon Lisp I'd recommend installing the sbcl package, which is a Common Lisp compiler, and getting SLIME, a Lisp IDE for Emacs (http://common-lisp.net/project/slime/) from CVS (it isn't packaged for Debian yet since it hasn't had a real release yet). There are also numerous Common Lisp libaries in Debian that you can find with apt-cache search. Is Scheme a proper subset of Common Lisp? What do you make of the available Free software runtimes, compilers, and libraries for each: is Scheme primarily an "academic" language, whereas Common Lisp is where you need to go to find mature library support for database interaction, sockets, and X11 toolkits? I'd really appreciate any comments you have about that. I've been forcing myself to use and learn Emacs here even though I'm quite handy in vi/vim. Without learning Emacs Lisp, I'm really no better off with it than I was with vi: set a few trivial configuration options and master keyboard shortcuts to take advantage of built-in functionality. Thanks, dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Pros/Cons Kde vs Gnome?
William Ballard wrote: Fluxbox Desktop 1 w/ 4 gnome terminals & Gbuffy. Desktop 2 w/ Firefox full screen. Since you've given us all a look at your workspace, I'll make a few friendly recommendations. Maybe others have ideas as well. If you don't use anything like Gaim or GIMP, you might consider switching to ratpoison or ionII. The space between windows is really a waste. Of if you do, or just prefer something more conventional, if fluxbox allows you to you might disable the bottom toolbar and window tabs. Together these waste a considerable amount of valuable screen real estate. Also, I would disable window decorations altogether for the maximized firefox window. Or if fluxbox doesn't allow you to, you might consider switching to openbox (3.2 is in unstable). I think you'll find it has all of the features of fluxbox, without the ugly toolbar artifact from blackbox, and without the window tabs. It has changed a lot since 2.x. I frequently like to have several of my virtual desktops contain nothing but a maximized, undecorated xterm (with large font, for my straining eyes). And that brings up a second point. Why gnome-terminal? It's really a terrible waste of memory and processor resources, and from what I can see does nothing to justify its existence beyond integration with the full GNOME environment. Check top while you have output scrolling in one of the gnome-terminals. I think you'll be surprised. I recommend xterm or rxvt. You can change the font with the -font option. There are plenty of other useful options such as storing x number of lines for scrolling, and disabling scrollbars and using the keyboard/mouse wheel. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Pros/Cons Kde vs Gnome?
Micha Feigin wrote: Gnome and KDE are also bloated everywhere else, not just memory, they kill your cpu in the process also. No doubt. Is there anything worse than seeing top run in GNOME's terminal emulator consume ~4-6% CPU on a P4 1.7 Ghz machine? It has been a while now since I last tried GNOME, but I do remember that vividly. I like my xterm full screen (without window decorations) and snappy, thank you. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Pros/Cons Kde vs Gnome?
Cecil wrote: I am curious as to what the pros and cons would be of picking just one desktop and deleting the other. Please tell me which you prefer, and resons why. I have bothe kde and gnome now. Thanks, In GNOME try printing in the default installs of gpdf (PDF), ggv (Postscript), Epiphany (web browser), or Abiword (word processor) to name a few. Unless something has changed since last I checked, you get nothing but a text field that takes a command string for lpr. That is to say, you don't get a drop down list of configured local or network printers. That's awfully backward for a modern GUI environment. I choose neither. There are too many layers of automated cruft such that when something breaks or fails to work (and it always does), fixing or even identifying the problem is no simple proposition. The resource usage is sick. Just let me have a top level dot file in my home directory, one where I don't have to hassle with the redundancy of xml tags and 4 levels of nesting to modify simple behavioral attributes. Also, as a matter of principle I simply can not deal with a monstrous settings daemon wasting more resources than many GUI applications. Perhaps this can be taken care of at compile time, but the reason I don't use a source based distribution is because I'm not willing to take the time to hassle with that. So I do without, and don't much mind it. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: how to upgrade a debian system not connected to network
J.S.Sahambi wrote: I have a two debian/unstable systems (let us name them PC-A and PC-B). Both have got different packages installed. PC-A is connected to internet with 2 MBps link and so there is no problem in upgrading it regularly. PC-B is not connected to internet. So I whenever I need to upgrade the system I download the 5 CD's of sid form ftp://ftp.fsn.hu/pub/CDROM-Images/debian-unofficial/sid/ , burn then in RW-CDs and then upgrade the system. I want to know is there any method by which I can download the packages requiring upgrade for the PC-B in PC-A (remember PC-A and PC-B have different list of installed packages!)? If I can do that, I can copy the .deb files to /var/cache/apt/archives of PC-B via a portable usb-dsik and execute apt-get upgrade. Right, as was said already if there is any way you can connect the isolated computer to the internet connected computer, you could save yourself a lot of hassle. But if for whatever reason it must remain unconnected, then you'll want to get the .deb packages downloaded on PC-A for transfer to PC-B. apt-get has a -d option: apt-get -d install [package] which downloads a .deb to /var/cache/apt/archives/[package][version].deb So to upgrade everything on PC-B: 1. Get a list of packages (to upgrade) on B, to A. 2. apt-get clean on A to clear current package cache. 3. Feed the list into "apt-get -d install [...]". 4. Burn .deb packages from apt cache onto CDs. 5. Don't forget the repository list files. At that point I'll leave it. Really at 4 there you should figure out how to create an apt repository cdrom (similar to the Debian installation CDs). But I've never done that. Perhaps the debian-cd package is you need for this. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Getting boot not to hang if ethernet not plugged into modem
Kent West wrote: Cheryl Homiak wrote: Is there something one can put in /etc/network/interfaces or somewhere so that ethernet card coming up will be conditional.? Not really the best answer, but perhaps it might work in your case. You should be able to hit Ctrl-C when it hangs, and that particular script will abort, and the rest of the boot will then finish out. Well, since interfaces are brought up by /etc/init.d/network, I think you could also solve this by appending '&' to the two 'ifup -a' statements in the 'start' case of that script. Then your DHCP requests (which will go unanswered) happen in the background while boot continues. The only issue is if you have something else in the boot process that expects a network connection. On normal boot, when you are connected, these things might not happen properly if you don't wait for the network interfaces to be brought up. Maybe you could modify the script to bring up the 'lo' interface first, and then background the interface connected to the cable modem. I guess that makefile based bootup that was on Slashdot (I think) a few months back would come in handy here. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: ccing
Paul Scott wrote: s. keeling wrote: Or go with some 58 Mb monster that purports to be able to do everything. Choose your poison. A bit of exaggeration? I don't read my mail with OpenOffice which is about that size. Thunderbird is an order of magnitude smaller at under 8 Mb. Mutt and exim together are just under 1.5 Mb. And that "monster" can handle reading my mail on a remote/central imap server over ssl without dying and complaining about gnutls "something something" errors every few minutes, and without making me use imap as if it were pop. I used to use mutt when I did everything on a pop account, but when I switched, it failed, and I wasn't willing to take any more time to hassle with it. One of these days I might take the time to give it a second chance, but I hear emacs calling me... dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Save to Live CD
Keith O'Connell wrote: Ian Melnick wrote: I'd like to use a "live" cd and be able to save my stuff to it without requiring a separate medium. What I'd like to happen is partition a cd-rw so that the first part is from the iso that I'd download from somewhere, and the second part would be a writable filesystem (udf?) that I'd be able to mount as /home. First of all, given the speed that these things write/read at, is this idea realistic/possible? I know you said "without requiring a separate medium", but wouldnt an easier solution be a USB keyring drive for /home, /etc and other volotile files rather than what you are suggesting. I know its not what your asking, but it does go a long way towards whay you are trying to achieve. You speed issues with RW-CD would no longer be a problems as the CD can be RO from the start I checked the CD-Recordable FAQ [1], as I didn't quite know about this either. But I'm still not entirely sure what the correct way to do this is, or the correct terminology. You don't want to rewrite the entire disk every time; just your changes. Since there are no other takers, I'll tell you what I got out of it. So first, I think you want to write the boot image as the first session, and then close that session. The problem is that when you mount the disk, as I understand it, you will only get the last session written. The FAQ describes later sessions linking to files in previous sessions: "Most of the popular CD creation programs allow you to "link" one or more earlier sessions to the session currently being burned. This allows the files from the previous sessions to appear in the last session without taking up any additional space on the CD (except for the directory entry). You can also "remove" or "replace" files, by putting a newer version into the last session, and not including a link to the older version [2]." So what you need to do, I gather, is include the files for /home in a later session. And then always "link" the files from the first session as /. When it's time to save changes, then use the cdrecord "blank=session" option to blank the previous session, and rewrite it including the links, and including the newer files. Can anyone tell us whether we are on the right track here? [1] http://www.cdrfaq.org/ [2] http://www.cdrfaq.org/faq02.html#S2-5 dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Please advise me...
Cecil wrote: On Saturday 12 June 2004 08:33 pm, dircha wrote: > But how does OS X perform for the following things: Coding(various languages and sorts of apps) Can I run linux apps on it? I will be mainly coding on this little thing, email, and the usual things(research, research papers, etc) Does anyone code on this? Am I wasting my time thinking about using this as my code machine for the next 4-5 years? Well, I guess I didn't know what type of user you were. That you say you will be doing a lot of coding, I assume, from what you said above, that you are entering a Computer Science or Engineering program. Absolutely it is fine as a development machine. I've never owned an ibook, but even a Pentium (as in "586") is fine as a development machine. Performance isn't an issue here for what you will be doing. You just need to run vi, or maybe vim or emacs (if you want to really go all out). For the type of applications you will be writing for classes, compile performance isn't an issue either, and when it is, you will have access to more powerful remote machines. But since this is a major purchase, I wouldn't want you to end up disappointed, or at least not have unrealistic expectations. If you run Debian/Linux as your primary OS, the odds are that you will get no support from your school's IT support services. On your own you will have to figure out how to print on their (probably) Windows network to their Windows printer shares, and probably access file shares on a Windows network. If your school has a local Linux Users Group, perhaps you can go there for help with issues specific to your school's network resources. Also, you may have to turn in electronic documents that will render/format correctly as .doc documents in MS Word. There are little issues that come up with things like bulleted lists, outlines, and footnotes. But if you're prepared to deal with these issues as they come up, and willing to spend the time on them, I can't think of a platform more amenable to education than one for which you can change and see for yourself how it works and how it is coded right down to the bare metal. Linux/Unix familiarity or expertise have value in the workplace, too, and may qualify you for positions or opportunities that your classmates do not. I'll leave any advice on Mac OSX performance to someone else, as I'm not a mac person. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Please advise me...
Cecil wrote: I will be buying a new laptop for school. I would like to wipe windows off and put just debian on. I need a laptop that linux has full support for. I plan to make this purchase within the next 2 months. Can anyone advise me? The only other alternative is buying an apple ibook and they are pretty pricy. The main performance/efficiency bottleneck for Firefox/Thunderbird, Openoffice.org and the GNOME and KDE desktop environments and applications is initial load time. So be sure to get at least 1GB of RAM. A 1.2Ghz or 1.5Ghz Pentium M processor will do fine once applications are loaded. Then, rather than closing those monster applications or rebooting, you just suspend to disk, and resume. You should be able to be up and working for what is (should be) a power off state in less than 30 seconds. And so that brings me to my point. The most important thing for a laptop intended to run linux is that ACPI works and suspend-to-disk (whether that is software, or bios-helped) functions properly. Absolutely, your laptop's power management must be compatible with at least software suspend to disk under Linux. If you can include suspend-to-disk and resume into your regular usage pattern, you can go for one of this ultra portable 1.2Ghz or 1.5Ghz x86 laptops. I recommend against a "performance" laptop. The most important things for an education laptop purchase is portability/mobility and battery life. The 15.4", 1600x1200 screens on Dells are very nice, but when you have ~2-2.2hour (tops) real world battery life, it isn't worth it. Also, and trust me on this, you don't want your fans blowing away at high speed in a small lecture room. It irritates everyone else, and irritates you while you're at it. Fortunately I was able to keep my fan usage to a minimum by tweaking thermal behavior with the i8k (Dell laptop) kernel module. But in my experience, you will get significantly WORSE battery/thermal performance under Linux than Windows, and much more so if you plan to run something like GNOME 2.6 or KDE. When running top in your terminal emulator causes 4-6% constant CPU usage, you know you have a case of bloat on your hands. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Best Window Manager for the Job
Carl Fink wrote: On Fri, Jun 11, 2004 at 09:56:24PM -0500, Kent West wrote: No need to run a wm at all. I'm not sure how to set it up for all users, but for any one user, just set the ~/.xinitrc to have the single line in it "mozilla-firefox". I thought of that, too, as I posted, but what if a popup window opens? With no WM it'll have no controls, making it hard to close and impossible to move. Also, if someone exits they'll find themselves sitting at the shell prompt (or display manager prompt) and not know what to do. And once you allow popup windows, you need a taskbar (i.e. window list button bar). Errors, especially with javascript, with trying to force _everything_ to open in a new tab rather than a new window also I think give need for a taskbar. Now, to add something to the discussion, I'll suggest you use two tools: - oroborus as your window manager - fspanel or fbpanel as your taskbar oroborus doesn't do much more than manage windows; about as minimal as you will find that still behaves as a standard window manager and looks modern (that is, not ratpoison). No GTK or QT dependencies. fspanel is a taskbar, and nothing more; it has no GTK or QT dependencies. It will work fine if you don't use "virtual" (read: multiple) desktops. If fspanel is too quirky, then try fbpanel. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Upgraded to unstable - lost network connectivity
Bingo! Running "lsmod" in the working vs non-working config shows that a whole bunch of drivers are no longer being loaded after the dist-upgrade. Running modprobe to force the network drivers to be loaded restores network connectivity. So the question now is: why did dist-upgrade from testing to unstable mess around with the list of modules that are loaded at boot time? That's sort of a rhetorical question; I don't hugely care as I now have a working system [at least I can manually force the necessary drivers to be loaded on boot]. But presumably other people will be bitten by this too... I had thought perhaps your dist-upgrade had replaced your modutils with module-init-tools. Unless things have changed, modutils is for modules and 2.4 kernels. module-init-tools is for 2.5 and 2.6 kernels. If both are installed, there should be a script for each in /etc/init.d/ and by default linked into /etc/rcS.d/. Both use /etc/modules. Although as I understand it, if both are installed and you are using a 2.4 kernel, the module-init-tools script should fail and the modutils script will be used. To be sure, you could try putting an "exit 0" at the top of /etc/init.d/module-init-tools, or just temporarily remove it from /etc/rcS.d/. This way, I believe, you could ensure that modutils is being used. Note: This may all be different if you use modconf; I don't have that installed and don't remember whether it uses a different modules list. If this doesn't help, hopefully someone else will see this thread who would know right off just what you need. Presumably the list of modules to load on boot is just a config file floating around somewhere like in /etc. Or is it dynamically determined during booting [in which case the dynamic detection has been broken]? Well, that depends. Probably it is listed in /etc/modules. But see my above note on modconf. Also, if your nic is a pcmcia device, it might be being loaded with hotplug and listed in /etc/pcmcia/config. Or if you have something like the kudzu or discover packages installed, it might be being autodetected and configured during the boot process. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Upgraded to unstable - lost network connectivity
Simon Kitching wrote: I recently added unstable to my sources.list, and did a dist-upgrade. After some mucking around, I now have a working system again - except for networking. Does anyone have any ideas how I can get network connectivity back again? Where might I start diagnosing this problem? You sound like someone who has probably thought of this as the possible cause of the problem, but did you upgrade your kernel as well? Or even if you have not upgraded your kernel, but if the kernel driver for your nic was compiled as a module, have you checked whether the module is being loaded (lsmod), and if so, is it? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Apt-announce
Pedro M. (Morphix User) wrote: It would be very intesting the user could utilize Synaptic to recieve automatically information about the update of certain packages, to upgrade them . This is, mark the packages to recieve information about the package update (only of this/these package/s). While I've never used it, the apt-watch package looks promising. Have you checked whether it is similar to what you are looking for? Perhaps I didn't understand what you meant. Package: apt-watch Description: Monitor apt sources for upgrades apt-watch is a GNOME applet which will inform you when upgrades are available for your computer. It is similar to Windows Update or the Red Hat Network applet. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Thanks; introductions; my question.
Pigeon wrote: On Mon, May 31, 2004 at 10:51:16PM -0500, dircha wrote: The case for (b) is inaccurate... the filesystem *will* be readable under Windoze, but will contain a whole bunch of files and directories as opposed to a single file called something.iso. I'm betting it's (a), and all you need to do is copy the .iso file back off the CD onto your hard disk, then burn another CD from the file on the hard disk, but this time tell Nero to burn it as an image. I stand corrected. Is the Debian installer image just a ISO9660 file system? I guess I've never (myself, explicitly) mounted (or "loaded", as it were) one under Linux or Windows; I ordered my Woody CDs by mail back when and went from there. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Thanks; introductions; my question.
Howard Levine wrote: I have learned that the CD that I had burnt at the public library is an ".iso" image and is unusable, whereas I could have programmed NERO to reinterpret the image when it was created. Is the ISObuster utility proper to make this usable or must I download again? Welcome. Perhaps your problem will be obvious to someone here who has used NERO, and if so I will yield to their advice. So you've downloaded a Debian installation image as an .iso file. Your scenario would seem to be one of the following two, although I'm not quite sure which, and I don't quite understand why you would need to use this ISObuster utility (which I've never heard of, actually, but just looked it up). a) You now have a CD with a regular, Windows-readable filesystem, that contains a file named [name].iso. b) You now have a CD which does not have a Windows-readable filesystem, but rather an image written from a .iso. If (a), then you already have the .iso file. You don't need to re-download anything, you just need to write it to a CD as an image rather than as a file in a filesystem. (Perhaps you meant "write again"?) If (b), then, assuming you have downloaded a Debian installation image, and the image file is not corrupted, you should be all set to install Debian. If your computer supports booting from CD (BIOS setting), configure your BIOS to boot from the CD drive, insert the CD, and you can begin the installation. Did I understand your meaning? Feel free to ask here for any installation questions, and someone will be glad to answer your question or direct you to the proper resource. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: problems with sound
Eric Cheney wrote: Hi People. I am trying to get a box up and running and am stuck with sound problems. I compiled a new 2.6.6 kernel kernel.org and the kernel seems OK. The sound card is a sound blaster live and I compiled that into the kernel; along with the mixer and stuff. I'm using ALSA. On boot, the kernel recognizes the sound card. However, when in GNOME I test the usage of the card with XMMS. I get an error message that pops up that says o You sound card is configured properly o You have the correct output plugin selected o No other program is blocking the sound card OK, I checked /dev/dsp and it is there. Also, I'm doing this as root, so I don't think it is a permission problem. I've searched the net via google and the debian mail archive and either I'm missing points people have made, or I dunno. I'm stuck. I've heard good things about alsaconf (in alsa-utils), although I've never used it myself. It will attempt to automatically generate a configuration for your card. You'll need to execute it as root. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Reset sound card in alsa?
Paul Galbraith wrote: Every once in a while when I boot my machine, my sound card only produces noise and I need to reboot again to get it cleared up. Does anyone know of a way to reset (for lack of a better word) my card so that I don't need to reboot the machine? I'm using 2.4.25 kernel with sarge alsa packages. If it's actually a physical state of the card needing to be reset, then I suppose you would need driver support for that. Have you tried just removing and reinstalling the modules, e.g. modprobe and modprobe -r? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Thunderbird/Firefox rendering without borders and scrollbars
Kent West wrote: dircha wrote: [borders in gtk+ apps not showing up after a suspend/resume] Have you tried a different window manager? Have you tried a different user? These quick tests might give you a clue as to where the problem lies. Good idea; I tried a few additional things here. I'm starting X with startx. Test 1: On your recommendation, I tested this as root user without any window manager. I removed the X related . files from /root; there are no GTK+ or X app related . files in its home. To test without a window manager as root, I put the following in /root/.xinitrc: xterm -geometry 80x60+600+0 & mozilla-firefox I then started X as root, executed a suspend-to-disk, and then resumed. The rendering errors still exist in mozilla-firefox. Test 2: Start X as my normal user. Start mozilla-thunderbird. Execute suspend-to-disk. Resume. Then, I kill X and restart it. GTK+ applications render correctly again. So, while simply restarting the application does not solve the issue, reboot also is not necessary. I suppose this means it is something stored in the X server. I don't know much about this, but as I recall hearing, widget components are stored in the X server as "pixmaps". I assume this would include things that are missing such as scrollbar "up" and "down" arrow faces. And yet icons in the application still display. Also, how would this explain the lack of borders (which I assume are just drawn as primitives)? This is really beyond me. Perhaps this is a genuine bug? I no one has any ideas, I'll try cross-posting this on debian-laptop. It's more likely there that I would find people who might have experienced something similar I imagine. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Thunderbird/Firefox rendering without borders and scrollbars
dircha wrote: After resuming from suspend-to-disk (ACPI sleep state 4), Thunderbird (mozilla-thunderbird in sid) and Firefox (mozilla-firefox in sid) render their interfaces without borders and scrollbars. Both applications otherwise function correctly. Another update on my troubleshooting efforts. I didn't have any other gtk+ applications installed. So, I tried install gvim (vim-gtk). The rendering error after resume is present in gvim as well. And so, this is not an XUL issue, but rather a gtk+ issue. Has anyone else encountered this? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Thunderbird/Firefox rendering without borders and scrollbars
After resuming from suspend-to-disk (ACPI sleep state 4), Thunderbird (mozilla-thunderbird in sid) and Firefox (mozilla-firefox in sid) render their interfaces without borders and scrollbars. Both applications otherwise function correctly. I'm using the default themes for both applications (whichever is installed by default), and the default theme for gtk+ (whichever is used when you have no theme packages installed). Dialogs which popup in the applications also are rendered without borders. However, default submit-style buttons are rendered correctly once they have been activated by moving the mouse over them. As are scrollbars. Restarting the applications does not solve the problem. Executing xrefresh does nothing either. Resizing and similar operations have no effect. However, rebooting does solve the problem. Obviously this is not an ideal solution, as I use suspend-to-disk to avoid rebooting. I'm not sure just how to figure out what is going wrong here. Is there some way to force a library to be reloaded from disk? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: OT - trivial programming language
Micha Feigin wrote: On Sat, May 29, 2004 at 04:50:09PM -0500, dircha wrote: Actually the best method when collaborating on someone else's work is to adopt their coding style. If its a joint work then you should a agree on a coding style in the first place. On my last job, every new programmer had as part of the training to read the coding style specifications for the company, and in properly collaborated projects its supposed to be very hard to notice which parts were written by which programmers. I concur! Hence, I conclude: The best proposal is to mandate a fixed tab width or spaces per indent level, and mandate wrapping for a fixed column width. I'm ready to argue that this should generally be 4-character spaces and 80 column wrapping. But then probably no one else would have read through to the end of my post either - better your succinct summary. %) dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: OT - trivial programming language
Kai Grossjohann wrote: Steve Lamb <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: if (foo){ if (bar){ foreach $foo (@bar){ while $foo < $baz{ some really long and convoluted computation here } } } } Now expand that out to someone's preferred 8 per line (ew) and you'll see that the "some really long and convoluted computation here" is wrapping. On my screen it looks reasonable, on someone else's it looks like crap. Well, nothing that couldn't be solved with a somewhat wider window. Many people like to have windows wider than 80 columns. (I prefer 80 columns, myself.) This is not an adequate response to scenario's similar to what Steve illustrates here. I will elaborate below. It is because of this mixing of tabs and spaces that people rigidly say that tabs should never be changed from 8 character widths. The style I'm proposing is designed to make it possible to change tab width! It does not work. Consider the problems created with a code file created by a user who prefers 8-character-width tabs _and_ 80 columns. Now, when someone who prefers 4-character-width tabs and 80 columns wishes to collaborate on this document, he or she will find lines wrapped at ~65-75 characters as they were originally wrapped for 8-character-width tabs and 80 columns. In this case the 4-character-width tabs user has only one option to retain a style acceptable for use by the 8-character-width tabs user. He or she must wrap lines such that for a given line, were it displayed with 8-character-width tabs, it would still fit within 80 columns. First, this requires that the user perform a tab width calculation for each wrapping to determine where it would wrap were it displayed with 8-character-width tabs. Second, this defeats the original intention of the 4-character-width tabs user in using 4-character-width tabs: to use a indent width he or she can more easily follow visually and while at the same time making more effective use of 80 columns for complex code. As illustrated by Steve's example above, in either direction of conversion, your proposal may as well be to mandate that the tab width and column width of the original environment for all collaborating users, because for your proposal to work, you must deny the user the ability to reap the advantages of his or her preferred environment. The best proposal is to mandate a fixed tab width or spaces per indent level, and mandate wrapping for a fixed column width. I'm ready to argue that this should generally be 4-character spaces and 80 column wrapping. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: OT - Tabs vs. Spaces in a Debian system
Micha Feigin wrote: On Fri, May 28, 2004 at 12:00:03PM -0600, Monique Y. Mudama wrote: On 2004-05-28, [EMAIL PROTECTED] penned: Your editor may not display tabs as the same number of characters as my editor does. Then set it to that if you wish to read the file. Both vim and emacs as examples also let you set tab size for only the current file and also set it in a comment so it will always use that tab size when you open that file. Looking at the previous 10 messages in my debian-user list folder, I think it's time we call this what it is and put a stop to it. Hence, the subject line. For editing any reasonably complex and interesting code the problem of tabs and spaces is nullified due to the necessity of line wrapping. Changing the number of spaces per indent level requires re-parsing the document and re-wrapping. Changing the number of tabs per indent level requires re-parsing the document and re-wrapping. However, many other text processing utilities either do not provide for the adjustment of the character width of tabs, or the means of doing so is obscure or not well documented. Using tabs requires additionally the configuration of these other utilities. Further, while tabs can reduce uncompressed document size, if you are concerned about document storage size then you will compress the document. Compressed, the difference between using tabs and using spaces is insignificant. Therefore: 4 spaces per indent level and 80 columns. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: books on debian
Fernando Cardenas wrote: I am still new to linux, can somebody suggest me books on debian? Thanks. Have you checked the Debian Documentation page [1] yet? There are very few Debian-specific books - and I know of none more useful than what is already available electronically. Look in /usr/share/doc/[package] for documentation on installed packages. Some packages have a separate [package]-doc package with additional or full documentation on [package]. These separate documentation packages are usually listed in the "Suggests:" field for the package they provide documentation for. Use the apropos command to search installed man pages. The manpages-dev package may be useful to you as well. Is there anything more specific you are looking for? [1] http://www.debian.org/doc/ dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Dynamic DNS Setup
Paul Johnson wrote: Support <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: Can debian support dynamic dns ? Where can I find the info and how to configure it ? If we're talking about dyndns.org's services, I would suggest http://www.dyndns.org/ or nntp://news.dyndns.org/dyndns.general for more information. Right. As I recall I used the ddclient package when I needed to use dyndns.org for a while. There were no problems. The help links from your dyndns.org account page will get you to the configuration help. I don't have an account any longer I'd have a better link for you. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: I would like to have my own sources.list
Juan Carlos León Centurión wrote: We have some packages .deb and want to have our own sources.list like deb http://ourownserver.org/ ./ Can anyone send me any howto about it? It's somewhat confusing that you say, "to have our own sources.list". Do you mean that you want to set up your own apt repository - i.e. that you would include in the sources.list file and could use apt-get to install packages from? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Debian, rpm and corporate world
Paul Johnson wrote: Dominique Dumont <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: Currently there is big chicken and egg problem with Debian in the corporate world. Corporate guys want to be able to install software from ISV (like Oracle). ISVs only provide their proprietary software as rpm because not many corporation ask for Debian. Corporation do not ask for Debian because most ISVs don't provide Debian packages. IMHO, the only way to break this circle is to provide a way to install rpm that doesn't look like a hack. What's wrong with, "Make me a Debian package or lose a customer?" I'd venture to guess: We're sorry, but we can not presently justify the costs of maintaining a Debian port. Perhaps if one of our larger customers express an interest in it... dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: exim removed ?
Support wrote: How to removed exim from Debian server ? When I try using dpkg to removed it ..it show there was some program is need .. I interpret you to mean that you are attempting to remove the exim package using the dpkg tool, without installing an alternative MTA. I assume you are using dpkg to attempt to remove the package because you have already tried to do so unsuccessfully with apt-get. dpkg will likely report that other installed packages depend upon exim or an alternative MTA and none are to be installed. If you actually wish to remove dpkg and install no alternative MTA, execute as root: # dpkg --force-depends -r exim This should cause the dependency error messages to be treated only as warnings, and removal of the exim package will proceed. If other errors arise, see the dpkg manual page for other --force- options. However, I would suggest as an alternative to package removal that you merely prevent exim from running. To prevent exim from running at system initialization, execute as root and approve each of the following: # rm -i /etc/rc*.d/*exim To prevent the exim cron job from running remove /etc/cron.d/exim or comment out its contents. To de-configure exim, execute as root: # dpkg-reconfigure exim and choose option '5' to leave exim unconfigured. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: How can I install with unmet dependencies
Michael D. Crawford wrote: dircha said to try apt-get update again. I did, and it didn't help. I think maybe the packages are OK for i386, but not for the powerpc which I'm using. It was just an hour or two ago that I previously updated. I'm baffled on that. The mirror I use as well as packages.debian.org reports a libxft-dev that depends libxft2 (= 2.1.2-6) for all architectures except hurd-i386. I also tried "apt-get install libxft-dev", which I wouldn't have expected to do anything, as it was already installed, but it did try to install it. However, it didn't work, because overwriting Xft.h with Xft1.h is not allowed: Preparing to replace libxft-dev 2.1.2-5 (using .../libxft-dev_2.1.2-6_powerpc.deb) ... diversion of /usr/X11R6/include/X11/Xft/Xft.h to /usr/X11R6/include/X11/Xft/Xft1.h by libxft-dev Removing `diversion of /usr/X11R6/include/X11/Xft/Xft.h to /usr/X11R6/include/X11/Xft/Xft1.h by libxft-dev' dpkg-divert: rename involves overwriting `/usr/X11R6/include/X11/Xft/Xft.h' with different file `/usr/X11R6/include/X11/Xft/Xft1.h', not allowed dpkg: error processing /var/cache/apt/archives/libxft-dev_2.1.2-6_powerpc.deb (--unpack): subprocess pre-installation script returned error exit status 2 This appears to be reported already in the bug database for libxft-dev [1]. Installation should work, but some upgrade scenarios appear not to. You could try installing the deb with: # dpkg --force-overwrite -i /var/cache/apt/archi... (it's either --force-overwrite or --force-overwrite-diverted that you need) Or remove it then reinstall: # dpkg --force-depends -r libxft-dev # apt-get install libxft-dev That should be correct. You might need to check the dpkg manual if it complains about something else. [1] http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/pkgreport.cgi?pkg=libxft-dev -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: How can I install with unmet dependencies
Michael D. Crawford wrote: Testing for powerpc has broken dependencies. I'm trying to install clamav, but both apt-get and dselect complain that the wrong version of libxft2 is installed. libxft-dev depends on it. Neither of these have anything to do with clamav, so I tried removed libxft-dev, but then that set off a chain reaction that would likely have uninstalled half my system. How can I install clamav in the face of broken dependencies? Trying the suggested apt-get -f install doesn't help. Here's my messages: pishi:/home/mike# apt-get -d install clamav libclamav1 clamav-freshclam clamav-base Reading Package Lists... Done Building Dependency Tree... Done You might want to run `apt-get -f install' to correct these: The following packages have unmet dependencies: libxft-dev: Depends: libxft2 (= 2.1.2-5) but 2.1.2-6 is to be installed W: No priority (or zero) specified for pin E: Unmet dependencies. Try 'apt-get -f install' with no packages (or specify a solution). Try "apt-get update" again. libxft-dev: Depends libxft2 (= 2.1.2-5) is no longer true. libxft-dev is now at 2.1.2-6 and depends on libxft2 =2.1.2-6 dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: APT
Ramona Piotrkowski wrote: APT, I do not know how in the hell you installed this Filesystem into my computer? I never ordered it or wanted it in my system but it's there and it's causing me a great deal of problems? Please send me a link allowing APT to be removed from my computer, I do not want to have to get in touch with the company that deals with companies that hack into other company by placing files into others company. While you are doing this could you find out what the hell is a Captexe, until this evening this also was never in my computer which is also cause me a great deal of problems, I have checked throughout the internet looking for it's home until I ran into you. Correct these problems by May 18, 2004 for I will have to report you as a hacker. Welcome to the [EMAIL PROTECTED] [1] mailing list. This is a public, non-moderated list for the discussion of use and support of the Debian operating system [2]. "apt" is a package within the Debian operating system. It contains tools which facilitate the installation, removal, and manipulation of other software applications within a Debian system. To remove apt [3] from your Debian system, from a root prompt execute: # apt-get --purge remove apt You will see a warning message indicating that the operation you are about to perform is dangerous and could leave your Debian system inoperable. You should not proceed unless you are certain you understand what you are doing. To remove an extraneous Filesystems from your computer I recommend you install the parted [4] package. For a thorough discussion of the use and limitations of parted, see also the parted-doc [5] package. As an interim solution you may wish to consult the manual for the "dd" command. To destroy an extraneous Filesystem and its contents, I believe from a root prompt you might execute: # dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/hd[a][n] Where for [a][n] is substituted the alphanumeric-numeric pair denoting the hard disk partition on which the extraneous Filesystem resides. **Warning** This will destroy all data in and including the Filesystem residing on the specified partition. Please note that executing either of these commands against the Filesystem containing your Debian system may leave your Debian system unbootable or otherwise inoperable. It is seriously recommended that you not do this unless you are certain you understand what you doing. [1] http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/ [2] http://www.debian.org [3] http://packages.debian.org/stable/base/apt [4] http://packages.debian.org/stable/admin/parted [5] http://packages.debian.org/stable/doc/parted-doc [6] http://www.gnu.org/software/fileutils/doc/manual/html/fileutils.html#dd%20invocation dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Can rpm packages from other linux distribution be used on Debian?
On Wed, May 12, 2004 at 05:40:51PM +0800, Rick wrote: Hello People: Our product is base on redhat,I will porting it to Debian,but in this system,many procedure depend redhat rpms,for example: glibc-2.3.2-11.9.i386.rpm, perl-5.8.0-88.i386.rpm,etc.. At the start,I wanted to try install these rpm packages(from redhat) On debian,but I found that thers is a lot work to do,some rpm packages even can't be installed on it.(perhaps these rpms packages from redhat can't be used on debian at all).I think 2 ways to settle this problem,But I am not sure these ways is doable,and I wish to get some advices about it.these problem are: 1. Use a certain tool to translate these packages(glibc*.rpm..) from redhat to rpm packages that can be used on debian.Is there such tools exist on debian? 2. On Debian,after I install rpm,rpm DB and deb DB exist,Can I make some mapping bettwen betwwen rpm DB and deb DB? when I run rpm command,the OS will invoke debian DB.for example: # rpm -qv gcc package gcc is not installed #dpkg -l |grep gcc ii gcc-3.03.0.4-7The GNU C compiler. # this means gcc*rpm isn't installed but gcc*deb is installed on debian. after I make this mapping,I can use rpm to access deb DB. # rpm -qv gcc gcc-3.0 # if this way is feasible,How to do it? I am a new debian user,not too familiar with this OS, If above ways are impossible,is thers other ways to attain my purpose? As someone else mentioned, look at the "alien" Debian package for conversion from .rpm .deb. But that is hardly adequate for reliable, professional software. You should consider a more realistic option: 3. Genuinely *port* your software to the Debian platform. While glibc 2.3.2 and perl 5.8 are not available in the current Debian stable release (Woody), it's rather unlikely that your software *needs* those components in those versions - i.e. whether it is more or less a matter of recompiling. But then you know that. Or even if not this, somehow you're going to need to provide security updates for these libraries your software needs. These packages aren't going to reliably install with alien or rpm unmodified. So if you're going to officially support the port of your software to Debian (which seems to be part of the definition of "port"), you are going to need to distribute these packages to your users yourselves, and distribute security updates of these non-official packages yourselves. Since you will be doing this anyhow, why not simply maintain these packages as .deb packages in the versions your users will need, in the form of backports [1] for Debian stable (Woody)? [1] http://www.backports.org dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Back up a Windows box w/o Samba?
Silvan wrote: Here's the deal. Dad has two boxes. His computer, a WinME box, and Mom's new computer, which is running Debian Sarge. She's learning how to use a computer for the very first time, and learning Linux from day one. Kinda cool. :) He wants to back up about 10 MB of stuff to her computer periodically. The trouble is Samba. I started setting that up, and it didn't take long before I got sick to my stomach. I know it can be done because I've done it before, but it just sucks. Everything about networking with Windows is retarded. Basically anything I could run on Cygwin and then wrap up in such a fashion that Dad can click on and icon and have the process happen by magic. Better still if I can get Cygwin to mail me (locally, or via SMTP) to let me know how it's going. OK: user-initiated transfer of files from (A) a WinME machine to (B) a Debian Sarge machine. Assuming they are both on the same local network, you don't have to worry about saving bandwidth. And 10MB is not much. So unless you know of a standard free rsync for Windows, just use the PuTTY package. Don't bother with cygwin. 1. Install ssh daemon on (B). 2 Install PuTTY on (A). 3. Choose (3a) or (3b). 3a. Put .bat script on (A) to zip files, prompt for password, and transfer files with command-line scp from PuTTY. 3b. Generate SSH keys. Put .bat script on (A) to zip files, and transfer files with command-line scp from PuTTY. 4. Make shortcut on (A) to .bat script. Bam! dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Script execution at boot time..
Ishwar Rattan wrote: I understand that there is documentation. I have looked at it but have not had success. If you can help, please do so. # vi /etc/init.d/rclocal #!/bin/sh /etc/init.d/ssh start /home/mine/iptablerules Make it executable: # chmod ug+x /etc/init.d/rclocal Symlink the script to run on multi-user boot # ln -s /etc/init.d/rclocal /etc/rc2.d/S99rclocal By default, your system boots into runlevel 2. Runlevels 3, 4, and 5 are not used on your Debian system unless you choose to configure and use them. But I should ask: why did you choose this rclocal method rather than simply placing a symlink to /etc/init.d/ssh in the desired runlevel? In fact, at package installation time, ssh should have created such links for you. Going the route you are, will you be doing anything to ensure that your ssh daemon is properly stopped at reboot (runlevel 6) and halt (runlevel 0)? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Xserver
Hasse Bylov wrote: I've tried SuSE Linux and it worked perfect for me, but a friend told me some great things about Debian, so I wanted to try it out... The whole FTP-install went perfect. Well now I've got this problem with the X-server (see the log-files attached. Btw, I think it's the XFree86.0.log you might wanna have a look at) - Linux won't start X while the display settings are false. I couldn't identify any drivers for my (onbord ASUS) graphics card. I tried selecting VGA, but it didn't go well. With SuSE there was no problem at all (except it couldn't find a "real" gfx-driver, but it worked fine all right - in a res. of 1280x1024, 24bits @ 75Hz). Apparently you are installing woody. You may have to investigate for yourself (Google, etc.) whether XFree86 4.1.0 supports your graphics card (I assume you know the make and model). 4.1.0 is a few years old now. If your card is relatively recent or common, your best bet may be to post a thread to the list with its make and model in the subject line. Hopefully you'll be able to get in touch with someone who is successfully running a similar card. But do try giving Google a go first. I don't think anyone here is going to pretend that automated detection or present (or even past) hardware is one of the strengths of woody. If it turns out that your card is not supported under 4.1.0, you'll need to look into either pulling Xfree86 out of unstable, or (more preferably) using a back port of a new version of XFree86. Feel free to ask about that here. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: apt-get dist-upgarde error: can't perform configuration on initscript
Aryan Ameri wrote: I downloaded the weekly debian Sid CDs produced by fsn.hu and added those 14 CDs to my sources.list using apt-cdrom. Then I proceded to upgrade my woody/ Sarge/Sid mixture to Sid. Everything seemed to work fine, I resolved a couple of problems with 'apt-get -f install' and then issued the 'apt-get dist-upgrade' command, it asked me to put the first CD in the drive, I did, everything seemed to go fine; but then I received the following error: E: Internal Error, Could not perform immediate configuration (2) on initscripts I Googled a bit and followed the instructions on http://www.lugod.org/ mailinglists/archives/vox-tech/2003-06/msg00339.html which means I installed a couple of libdb3 and libpam packages using dpkg -i. But my problem wasn't solved and I couldn't find any more meaningful reference using Google. Your situation is not good. It's difficult to know just in what state your system is in, and so I'm not sure that I can give the best advice. You've encountered a serious error. The general idea is to get your system back to a state where you can install and upgrade packages again. You should get your system functioning again first, and only then worry about completing the upgrade. Is your system in the process of attempting to install the version of the "initscripts" package? If so, it appears that the sid version you have of the package is broken. To remove the initscripts package you might try: # dpkg -r initscripts or # dpkg --purge initscripts You may need to add the appropriate --force-[] or --force-all option - it's all risky. If you aren't familiar with it, take some time to read through "man dpkg" so that you can be confident in what you are doing. "initscripts" does not exist in woody. I believe in woody its functionality is provided as part of the woody version of the "sysvinit" package. However, if you remove "initscripts", you will want to put "sysvinit" back. If sysvinit has already been upgraded to its sid version, then your situation is even worse, because one thing that Debian does not (in my experience) handle well is downgrading packages. In this case, you would need to remove sysvinit, and then install the woody version of sysvinit again by either: # apt-get -tstable install sysvinit or: # apt-get install sysvinit/stable Note that this could leave your system unbootable. Be sure that you have a recovery disk with "chroot" handy. So long as you have this, you can almost always recover your system. It is just a matter of how much tinkering you are willing to do. If you can get your system back to a state where you can install and upgrade packages, try performing an "apt-get upgrade" before you do "apt-get dist-upgrade" (if you do at all). Note that if you have limited bandwidth, trying to keep up with updates in sid may not be realistic, and may leave you with a system that is substantially less secure than your woody system. There are other options than a full dist-upgrade for installing newer packages for selected software. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: rpm and Debian
Rick wrote: Can I use rpm command to access deb DB? rpm is available in the Debian package of the same name (rpm). However, any packages you install with the rpm command will not be managed by the Debian package management system. .deb is the native package format of a Debian system. You can attempt to convert .rpm packages to .deb packages using the tools available in the alien package. However, conversion will not always be successful and may not produce the results you expect. It is best to install software on your Debian system from .deb packages. If you can not locate a .deb package for the software you wish to install in the official Debian repositories [1], you can also try apt-get.org [2] for third-party apt repositories of all types or backports.org [3] for third-party apt repositories for the stable distribution only. If you need assistance configuring your system to install software, feel free to consult the Debian manual [4], search the list archives [5], or ask here on the list. [1] http://packages.debian.org [2] http://apt-get.org [3] http://www.backports.org [4] http://www.debian.org/doc/debian-policy/ [5] http://lists.debian.org dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: suggested/recommended packages
Rick Pasotto wrote: Packages often suggest or recommend other packages. Is there a program that will check what I currently have installed for any suggested or recommended packages that I do *not* have installed? When a program is initially installed I may have no need for one or more of the suggestions but then not be aware of it when it becomes useful. List any package which suggests packages not installed: $ aptitude search ~i~Bsuggests List any packcage which recommends packages not installed: $ aptitude search ~i~Brecommends Then, to see whether you are missing anything good: $ aptitude show [package] On woody you may need to use apt-cache for the "show" operation. I don't think the woody version of aptitude supports it. Is this what you had in mind? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Installing Debian Stable with Software RAID
Jeremy Brown wrote: Does anyone have any pointers on getting software RAID working in Debian, preferably pre-install? Can it be done at all? You could try the "Software Raid Documentation" message [1] posted last week. [1] http://lists.debian.org/debian-user/2004/05/msg00315.html As for whether the referenced document is useful or not, that isn't something I can answer. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Installed webmin using apt-get
Michael Banta wrote: So I guess I either don't run an ldap module for webmin, or I uninstall the .deb package and download a tarball of the lastest version that supports the ldap module. If I choose option number 2, then I will not be able keep webmin update via apt-get, right? I would have to just reinstall new tarball versions as they become available, right? Looking at the dependencies of webmin in the official unstable repository, you may be able to install webmin from unstable without needing to upgrade more than libpam-runtime. But I am not sure of that; you would have to try it out. Better, a search for webmin at backports.org [1] turns up an apt repository with webmin 1.110 for woody. Are you familiar with using non-official apt repositories? Ask here if you need help making the decision. [1] http://www.backports.org/package.php?search=webmin dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: edit pdf's
Kevin Mark wrote: On Tue, May 11, 2004 at 01:01:16PM -0400, Matt Price wrote: thanks for the flues folks. pdftohtml -- which I confess I *did* already know about, sorry, should havesaid so -- won't work so well for me, i odn't think; these are scanned-in texts from the jstor journal collection, and it's important I keep the pages in order... as ,er, someone mentioned earlier (don't have the thread in front of me at the moment), a complex process involving gimp and pdftops seems to be the best bet, but it's insanely labour-intensive for long documents, so I may forego the whole project. thx all though. you mentioned something that caught my eye as it relates to a need in FOSS that a friend of mine is looking for. A replacement for the PAPERPORT product that allows for scanning in multipage docs, with the ability to annotate pages, store ocr data with pages and to search the archive as well as have a 'desktop environment app' that can show the virtual folders of document with document thumbnails. PAPERPORT uses pdf as their new format. Has anyone considered making such an apps? There are many lawyer offices that would like this as well as people who deal with large collections of document repositories. I don't seem to have the root of this thread any longer. However, have you looked into using pdfimages to extract the images and then gocr to extract the text from the images? You might want netpbm too if you go that route. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: aptitude farted?
Silvan wrote: -aptitude install checkinstall Reading Package Lists... Done Building Dependency Tree Reading extended state information Initializing package states... Done Reading task descriptions... Done The following packages are unused and will be REMOVED: kapptemplate kbabel kbugbuster kcachegrind kdesdk-kfile-plugins kdesdk-misc kdesdk-scripts kompare kuiviewer poxml umbrello valgrind valgrind-calltree The following NEW packages will be automatically installed: installwatch The following NEW packages will be installed: checkinstall installwatch 0 packages upgraded, 2 newly installed, 13 to remove and 0 not upgraded. Need to get 46.9kB of archives. After unpacking 20.9MB will be freed. Do you want to continue? [Y/n/?] Do I want to continue? Of course not, dolt. Back to apt-get. Execute the following to list packages considered to to automatically installed: $ aptitude search ~M This can happen in cases where you've installed several applications as part of a "meta" package - a package which exists just to make dependencies on a group of apps - and then uninstalled the top level meta package. This is the expected behavior. I don't use KDE, but I know there are a number of Debian KDE packages of this sort. Correct this manually by executing: # aptitude unmarkauto [package] If you think that you can track this down to a legitimate bug, that would be a helpful thing to get fixed. I have not encountered a similar error, myself. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: 2.6.5 -- I broke the internet
Emma Jane Hogbin wrote: smeagol:~ 19:49:46 $ sudo ifdown eth1 Ignoring unknown interface eth1=eth1. smeagol:~ 19:50:48 $ sudo ifup eth0 Ignoring unknown interface eth0=eth0. That error almost always indicates that you lack the appropriate line for the device in /etc/network/interfaces. Are you certain that your eth0 line hasn't been changed or commented out? So long as the line is there, even if you do not have the correct kernel module for your card loaded, you usually will not get that error. You would get something like "No such device", or "Bind socket to interface: No such device". Between: > smeagol:~ 19:50:33 $ sudo /etc/init.d/pcmcia start > Starting PCMCIA services: cardmgr[2318]: watching 3 sockets > done. and > smeagol:~ 19:50:59 $ sudo ifup eth1 > ifup: interface eth1 already configured , probably hotplug has attempted to configure your wireless card, and has done so incorrectly. Does the configuration displayed by the intervening "ifconfig" have the correct parameters for your wireless network? But that's another issue. You should determine what is wrong with your (PCI?) ethernet card first, as that is more likely a much simpler issue. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: HD recovery & debian installation mirroring (& others)
Paladin wrote: I'm sorry for this type of mail, but I can only use webmail... I don't think I will be able to get that file now... unless doing some hard recovery of the disk. I was able, in the begining, to read the full disk and I did a "dpkg --get-selections" and saved the result, but I think this won't be enough, right? Hrm. So far as I know dpkg --get-selections should be the same as dpkg -l, which lists all currently installed packages. The output from both is identical on the system I am sending this from. I have a operable Debian system, I'm using it to try to recover the disk. But without that file maybe I could grep it? Does recover work on a disk without partitions? I'm sure there are many sophisticated tools for recovering data from faulty disks and corrupted file systems, but I have no experience with them. You can, however, use the "dd" command to get at the raw binary data and then see whether you can track down the file you need. But I'd recommend against this. Instead, you might want to start a new thread (or rename this one) with a name like "Recovering data from a corrupted disk". Good luck. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Secure OS's
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I guess what I mean by a secure os is an os whose packages themselves are secure, obviously if someone doesn't set up a server securely, it doesn't matter how secure the packages are. Like wise, if a person set up a server keeping security as a priority, all their efforts are for naught if the package is built insecurely, (like the common buffer overflow). I know that debian releases security patches that solve many of these issues, when the come up. However, this process leads me to believe that the packages in general are not built with security in mind (which makes sense because most people programming an editor are probably not terribly concerned about curious users monkeying around with their programs too much). How important of an issue do you guys feel this is and do you think projects like bastille are important towards this effort? Also, I do not know of any other debian compatible security packages and would love to learn more about them. Whether or not a software application itself is security-minded is primarily a judgment call about the application's developers, its security model, and its maturity. You say, "all their efforts are for naught if the package is built insecurely, (like the common buffer overflow)". This is usually not the domain of the distribution or packager. When 99.9% (eh?) of the development work is done by the upstream developer, looking elsewhere to make security judgments about the software would seem to be a mistake. Just because a software application has been packaged in a distribution for 6 years, does not mean that it is in any way secure or even "more secure". It may have a user base of 10 people. That the software is available as a .deb tells you very little beyond an expectation that it will be version compatible with the rest of the distribution. The distribution package - the .deb - is security neutral. Further, I do not believe there is a 1:1 correspondence between software which is packaged and software which it is worthwhile to divert people resources to for development or testing. Shouldn't development and testing resources be allocated by the upstream developers and those who fund them? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: HD recovery & debian installation mirroring (& others)
Paladin wrote: Where can I get a detailed list of all packages installed and how can I use it to reinstall Debian? And, if its in /var, what programas do you suggest me to use for recovering this directory from the broken HD? Since Saturday its state has just got worse and even gpart doesn't recognize the partitions due to some bad sectors! /var/lib/dpkg/status Look for packages with a "Status:" field of "install ok installed". The "Package:" field is the name of the package. Do you have an operable Debian system that you can look at to get the format of records in this file so that you can write up a quick script to do it for you? Can you still mount the partition? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: [SPAM] Re: openldap and debian
Michael Banta wrote: I'm using apt to try to install openldap. However it shows packages that need to be installed that do not make sense to me. Like: xfree86-common xlibs I don't run x-windows, why would it need a xfree86 anything? Also I assumed that it install Berkeley db for a database(as a dependency). It does not attempt to do do. I am installing from official sources(debian). I did apt-get install ldap-server and apt-get install slapd, both say they need to install these files. The xfree86 stuff. I don't even have x installed. OK. ldap-server is a virtual package provided by slapd. Using "apt-rdepends slapd" (package: apt-rdepends), it appears that the X dependencies are being pulled in by the libiodbc2 package. Basically this should be considered a bug. However, for what it's worth, libiodbc2 only has this dependency in stable/woody. The libiodbc2 library does not list these dependencies in the unstable version. I assume that the xlibs and libgtk1.2 dependencies for libiodbc2 are just compile time options for libiodbc2. So, that leaves three options. One is to use libiodbc2 from testing or unstable. However, since pulling in libiodbc2 from testing or unstable would (from what I can tell) involve upgrading your libc6 to testing or unstable, that really isn't an option. A second option is to recompile the libiodbc2 package for woody and configure whichever compile-time options are needed to not include support for whatever is pulling in those dependencies. A third option is to download the .deb for your architecture from http://packages.debian.org/stable/libs/libiodbc2 and force install it with dpkg without installing those dependencies. I would think it should still run. Maybe others see something that I've missed. Which of these options sounds best to you? Ask here if you need assistance with whatever you choose. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: openldap and debian
Michael Banta wrote: I'm using apt to try to install openldap. However it shows packages that need to be installed that do not make sense to me. Like: xfree86-common xlibs I don't run x-windows, why would it need a xfree86 anything? Also I assumed that it install Berkeley db for a database(as a dependency). It does not attempt to do do. What is the name of the package you are attempting to install, and are you installing it from an official debian source, or a third party apt repository? This will be helpful to help figure out how to get it to do what you want. Using "apt-cache show [package name]", does the package you are attempting to install list xfree86-common and xlibs as Depends: or only as Recommends:? If this is the problem, while for aptitude I know the /etc/apt/apt.conf option to prevent treating recommended packages as dependencies, I do not recall how to do this with apt-get. I believe that dselect provides for this as well. Are you handy with dselect? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Openssh
Michael Banta wrote: I just installed a new Debian box and I want to add OpenSSH (server and client) to the machine. I have an updated list of apt packages, but I cannot seem to find the package. apt-get install ssh does not work. I have been searching on the internet for which source list I should add to sources.list, but have been unsuccessful. deb http://ftp.us.debian.org/debian woody main (substitute country code as appropriate) In order to receive security updates be sure to include: deb http://security.debian.org/ woody/updates main These two lines are all you will need if you want to stay with official debian stable. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Recently-used document list
Is there a desktop environment independent way of getting a recently used file list... something that might complement Debian's menu system (package: menu)? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: google type of search for a desktop
Kamaraju Kusumanchi wrote: Hi all I am wondering if there is a software which performs google's search on (and only on) the files of a desktop running debian linux? I am aware of utilities such as grep, find, locate etc, but prefer a google's interface. For ex, I can seach for a string, and then click on the link to access the file etc., Is there any program which does this or some variation of it? What type of files are you looking to index? If you want to index the txt and html documentation in /usr/share/doc/*, I suppose I can see something beyond grep, find, and locate as being useful. You might check whether the htdig and htdig-doc packages meet your needs. A full search-engine/indexing system such as this is easily scalable to multiple systems. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Newbie-ish question: centralized debian place for X startup programs?
Jaime Herazo B. wrote: Hi. This is a kinda newbieish question. I'm fond of wmaker, but from time to time i get and try out other windowmanagers, mostly in my quest for The One True Flashy Desktop, something to show-off linux to other people so they all go "wow!" :) The problem is that i want to keep starting some stuff on X startup, like a messaging client, some monitoring stuff, and other things. But i wanna do it independently of the windowmanager chosen. Is there a standard debian place for stuff like this? like a $HOME/.startup file or something like that? that isn't dependant on the windowmanager? if not, what would be a good place to start looking for this? Use .xinitrc or .xsession. I believe using .xsession is supported by the most startup options - i.e. whether you use xinit, startx, xdm, or whatnot (but then why bother with a display manager for a personal system?). For an example with a very informative (and thorough) explanation, see /usr/share/doc/xfree86-common/examples/xsession.gz (on sid, but should be there in woody too). I usually start X with startx on this computer, and currently my .xinitrc looks like (a few lines commented out I don't use anymore): #xsetroot -solid black xloadimage -center -onroot -border black img/Fire_eye_1600x1200.jpg xset r rate 250 40 #wmcpu & #wmitime & #wmnd & openbox X will close once the openbox process is terminated. If I wanted to, say, after the xset line launch xclock or maybe xload, I would write it as "xclock &". The '&' (background) is important for anything that does not return immediately (xloadimage and xset return immediately after performing the specified operation). Otherwise execution of the script would stall on xclock and not get to openbox until xclock terminated. It should be fairly straightforward, but ask if you have any questions, or have in mind any nifty things that you would like to be able to do with it. Debian really supports a very large number of window managers and X utilities apart from standard GNOME and KDE bulk. And if you want to run openbox3, I will gladly sing its praises! Although for me it is a close call between openbox, window maker, fluxbox, and afterstep. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: spawn of debian: choosing a live-boot CD distro
Will Trillich wrote: ultimately what we're after is a debian-based install that does server functions (email, web, database) that has GOOD DETECTION ROUTINES at install, such as knoppix morphix lilbranet mepis xandros any opinions on using these to detect hardware, install, and serve, serve, serve? we have direct experience with knoppix and morphix -- both have good hardware detection, but insist on installing all kinds of desktop/gui stuff. trying to get a woody (or sarge, for that matter) up and running on our raid server was a morass wed on't want to try again soon. morphix detected everything, we installed, and then set runlevel 2 to NOT launch any X apps. isn't there a cleaner way without having to be a brilliant hardware guru? It sounds as though your problem is in installing Debian on diverse systems rather than having to go through the hassle of installing it on a lot of machines, so I'm sure you don't want to here "just image the drives". You say that you don't want GUI/desktop software. With morphix, have you considered using its main/mini module system to create a customized morphix boot CD appropriate for headless operation with the services you need, or even creating your own mini modules for it? All of the other live CDs you list bill themselves as Desktop distributions. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: debian running out of threads
dircha wrote: You might need to recompile glibc. But first you should do some sanity checking to be sure that you are running up against hard limits. Oh, and before you start looking into that, don't overlook just lowering the value of -Xss passed to the JVM. You've probably tried that, but if you haven't, and you think it would be helpful, well, I hope your solution is that simple. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: debian running out of threads
hanasaki wrote: executing "ulimit" from the bash shell reports "unlimited" and bash "ulimit -a" gives the same output for my account as for root. I have googled for bugs and found nothing looking relevant. The JVM memory allocations are much below system resource max. Know of any way to find out how many threads a process uses and how many are free vs. available for use? Hrm. Well, I can tell you what I know just now for starters. You might need to recompile glibc. But first you should do some sanity checking to be sure that you are running up against hard limits. To get the number of threads per process: - In Java: ThreadGroup.getParent() until null, then ThreadGroup.activeCount(); should correspond 1:1 with native threads. - Native: passing -L or -m to ps should get you a threads listing (count the lines or write a script to do it for you I suppose). For hard limits, there is /proc/sys/kernel/threads-max. Or grep /usr/include/bits/local_lim.h for 'THREAD'. local_lim.h is "Minimum guaranteed maximum values for system limits." _POSIX_THREAD_THREADS_MAX is threads per process _PTHREAD_THREAD_THREADS_MAX I think is max total Precisely how this number is related to /proc/sys/kernel/threads-max, I personally am not quite sure. You can update (echo # >) the value of /proc/sys/kernel/threads-max during runtime. But if that doesn't work, and it looks like you are running up against the limits in local_lim.h, then probably you will need to recompile glibc. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: debian running out of threads
hanasaki wrote: The below configuration is running out of threads. This is indicated by Netbeans 3.6 (a Java ide - www.netbeans.org) reporting "out of memory error, cant make new native thread". The interesting thing about this is that it began right after I upgraded from gnome2.4 to gnome2.6 After killing the netbeans/java task, even simple unix processes cannot get enough resources to run (ex: kill, ps, ls ...) It was necessary to goto a root account to kill the ide process. config debian - unstable gnome 2.6 - from debian packages kernel 2.6.5 1 gig ram AMD Barton 3000+ Free RAM = 20Meg physical and 1gig Swap Netbeans 3.6 Java JDK 1.5Beta1 I don't use Netbeans, but two things you might try: - Check that your aren't running up against a limit specified with the 'ulimit' command (see: man bash). - If you are doing something like allocating 768+ MB to the JVM, try _deceasing_ this value so that there are more resources available for native threads. I'm going to guess that running a GNOME 2.6 desktop takes more resources than running a GNOME 2.4 desktop (although I run neither). That it began after the upgrade probably indicates nothing other than that it exacerbated the problem. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: serious apt error after aptitude catastrophe
Matt Price wrote: gaah, forgot to add: downgrading libc6 leads to terrible system-breaking conflicts. tried switching to aptitude and, while I was't looking, aptitude started to uninstall a whole slew of fundamental packages from my computer! now I have to reinstall them, but the Sid glibc backage seems to have aserious conflict with sysinit: Note, selecting libc6 instead of glibc-2.3.2.ds1-11 Suggested packages: glibc-doc 1 packages upgraded, 0 newly installed, 0 to remove and 753 not upgraded. 2 packages not fully installed or removed. Need to get 0B/4211kB of archives. After unpacking 20.5kB of additional disk space will be used. (Reading database ... 136582 files and directories currently installed.) Preparing to replace libc6 2.3.2.ds1-10 (using ../libc6_2.3.2.ds1-11_powerpc.deb) ... Unpacking replacement libc6 ... dpkg: error processing /var/cache/apt/archives/libc6_2.3.2.ds1-11_powerpc.deb (--unpack): trying to overwrite `/etc/default/devpts', which is also in package initscripts Errors were encountered while processing: /var/cache/apt/archives/libc6_2.3.2.ds1-11_powerpc.deb E: Sub-process /usr/bin/dpkg returned an error code (1) Is there a trick for getting around a fundamental conflict like this one? My system is pretty well disabled at the moment (e.g., I'm missing "less" and can't install it!any clues? So you can still run dpkg? You can see that the package is located at /var/cache/apt/archives/libc6_2.3.2.sd1-11_powerpc.deb. And that it is failing on the step '--unpack'. Look in 'man dpkg' to understand what the --unpack step is. Then look for the --force- option to try to force it to install, if installing it is what you want to do. But you say that you tried to downgrade libc6? Do you want to install this package, or are you trying to set it not to be installed? Your system is definitely recoverable though, so don't worry. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: NIC War
Ian Melnick wrote: What else can I try? Try googling for "arp_filter hidden" and related things; there are a few archived discussions that will come up, although I don't know whether any of them will be useful. Also, look through some of the other arp related options in the Documentation/networking/ip-sysctl.txt This really seems like something you might have better luck with on a more specific list (i.e. non-Debian). You might try searching or asking on the kernel mailing lists. Sorry. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: How to 'apt-cache search'&'apt-file search' by distr
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Just a thought. Do I need to edit my /etc/apt/sources.list (I assume aptitude is using this too) prior to checking out packages in other distributions? i.e. do I need to add url for sid in the sources.list if I want to check out packages in experimental? Yes, aptitude uses your /etc/apt/sources.list as well. 'aptitude search' searches the local cache created by 'aptitude update'. Only packages in repositories listed in /etc/apt/sources.list are available to search or install. If you are using packages from experimental, you may need to list the unstable/sid repository. experimental, as you might know, isn't a complete distribution. Packages in experimental may need to satisfy dependencies from unstable/sid. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: How to 'apt-cache search'&'apt-file search' by distr
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: apt-cache show fontconfigDisplays fontconfig version to be 2.2.2-1 [code:1:565f94e986]aptitude show ~Astable ~nfontconfig[/code:1:565f94e986] [code:1:565f94e986]aptitude show ~Aunstable ~nfontconfig[/code:1:565f94e986] [code:1:565f94e986]aptitude show ~Aexperimental ~nfontconfig[/code:1:565f94e986] All the above three display fontconfig version to be [b:565f94e986]2.2.2-2[/b:565f94e986]. Does that mean fontconfig is version 2.2.2-2 in all distributions? Why the difference in version displayed by apt-cache and aptitude? That's odd. It certainly may be an error in aptitude. fontconfig apparently does not exist in stable. Because joining the two search options as you have is supposed to AND the result of each, in the case of ~Astable, nothing should be returned. Also, I'm not sure how to explain the difference in version number reported, although it may arise from the following situation reported by packages.debian.org: Package fontconfig * testing (utils): generic font configuration library 2.2.2-2: alpha arm hppa i386 ia64 m68k mips mipsel powerpc s390 sparc * unstable (utils): generic font configuration library 2.2.2-2: alpha arm hppa i386 ia64 m68k mips mipsel powerpc s390 sparc 2.2.2-1: hurd-i386 fontconfig is still at version 2.2.2-1 on the hurd-i386 platform. apt-cache must be reporting this version, while aptitude is reporting the version for the remaining platforms. These appear to be errors and inconsistencies in aptitude. I don't know what else to tell you. I was not aware of these before. I will check the bug list for the package and report this if it has not been already. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: NIC War
Ian Melnick wrote: nic1: ipA, macA nic2: ipB, macB On the network attached to nic1 one you send an arp request: "who-has ipA tell x.x.x.x" where "ipA" is the ip you believe is assigned to nic1. nic1 does not respond. nic2 responds with: "ipA is-at macB". Yes, this is what's happening. Take a look at arp_filter in /usr/src/linux/Documentation/networking/ip-sysctl.txt (assuming /usr/src/linux is your unpacked kernel source). " arp_filter - BOOLEAN 1 - Allows you to have multiple network interfaces on the same subnet, and have the ARPs for each interface be answered based on whether or not the kernel would route a packet from the ARP'd IP out that interface (therefore you must use source based routing for this to work). In other words it allows control of which cards (usually 1) will respond to an arp request. 0 - (default) The kernel can respond to arp requests with addresses from other interfaces. This may seem wrong but it usually makes sense, because it increases the chance of successful communication. IP addresses are owned by the complete host on Linux, not by particular interfaces. Only for more complex setups like load- balancing, does this behaviour cause problems. arp_filter for the interface will be enabled if at least one of conf/{all,interface}/arp_filter is set to TRUE, it will be disabled otherwise Namely the description of the default option (0). Now, I've never come accross this problem myself, but does it seem plausible that the default behavior here is creating the problem for you? Maybe I misunderstand your situation. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: NIC War
Ian Melnick wrote: The only problem was, external requests coming in weren't going anywhere. There's some kind of switch at the "main office" that forwards requests from the "external IP" to the "internal" one, which is what my first NIC was set up for. When we used arping and other monitoring tools, it showed the second NIC responding---when a request was made for the MAC of the first NIC, the second card would respond with its MAC. I think this had been happening all along, according to arpwatch's flip-flop reports, but maybe this is different. This seems to be the problem. Forgetting external requests for now, this seems to be something that should not be happening. Let's try to isolate it. nic1 and nic2 are on the same machine nic1: ipA, macA nic2: ipB, macB On the network attached to nic1 one you send an arp request: "who-has ipA tell x.x.x.x" where "ipA" is the ip you believe is assigned to nic1. nic1 does not respond. nic2 responds with: "ipA is-at macB". Is this what is happening? If this is occurring, and proxy_arp is not enabled, doesn't this seem to indicate a serious problem? At the time of this flip, according to the local machine is the assignment still as follows (still correct)? nic1: ipA, macA nic2: ipB, macB The first NIC works fine, AFAIK, since you can use arping to ping it via its MAC. However, when you ping it via its IP, the other card responds. Again, I've manually set the arp table on the server machine and on the client I used to ping it, but it didn't help. I tried disabling the second nic to see if the first one would then correctly reply to arp requests again, and it did---only problem was, external requests still weren't coming in. I also changed the gateway of the second nic to be the same as the first nic, to avoid the second one going through it. Didn't help. What do you think, could this indicate a problem with nic2 or its driver? Are nic1, nic2, and nic3 all the same model and using the same drivers? Have you tried replacing nic2 with a nic you know to work, or if you know nic3 to be working, temporarily with nic3? dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: woody to sarge?
Sven Hoexter wrote: On Mon, Apr 19, 2004 at 11:59:41AM -0400, Sarunas wrote: What would be the proper way of upgrading a Debian system (2.4 kernel, sendmail, apache, mysql) from Woody to Sarge? Is editing /etc/apt/sources.list (replacing stable with sarge) and apt-get updating + upgrading supposed to do the job? Yes it is. Hope you know what you're doing with all consequenzes. Anyway if you would only like to update several packages thing about backports(.org). Or make yourself familar with pinning. I echo this. You should really enable apt pinning and keep important services such as SSH and your MTA in stable/woody so that you will get timely security updates. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: How to 'apt-cache search'&'apt-file search' by distribut
David Clymer wrote: On Sun, 2004-04-18 at 13:57, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: What arguement should I use with 'apt-cache search' and 'apt-file search' to specific the distribution? Eg. If I want to search for source packages (or normal packages) in unstable distribution, what would the complete command for 'apt-cache search' and 'apt-file search'? AFAIK, you cant restrict your apt-cache search by branch. I think it just searches all package lists fetched from the sources in your /etc/apt/sources.list. However, if you know the package name, you can use apt-cache policy to see a list of all available packages (from all branches) with the specified name along with their versions, apt-get sources, and installation status. aptitude allows you to do this. Used as a command line tool (rather than in curses-gui mode) I find it to be a welcome improvement over apt-get for most uses. Following is a simple form to do what you want: 'aptitude search ~Astable~n' or, 'aptitude search ~Astable~d' ~A ~n ~d Read /usr/share/doc/aptitude/README for the full list of available search modifiers. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Mozilla Thunderbird questions
Kevin B. McCarty wrote: Hi all, I switched from pine to Thunderbird last week, and there are two issues that are really frustrating me. I would be using mutt myself but it frequently flakes out for imap over ssl, which is unacceptable, so I gave up on it for now. 1) How can I get Thunderbird to insert a text file into the body of an email that I'm writing? In pine this is just Ctrl+R, but in Thunderbird the only way I've found is to cut-n-paste from an editor window. Needless to say, this is undesirable for large files. (Selecting Attach from the toolbar or File->Attach from the menu only lets me send the file as an attachment.) There isn't any extension [1] available to do this either. Unless you have the time to learn how to write this as an extension I believe you are out of luck. [1] http://texturizer.net/thunderbird/extensions/ dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Modular Kernel:Wat should be modules,wat should be built
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I would appreciate some elaboration on what kernel module loader does exactly, since none of the modules get loaded automatically during runtime. Understanding this will perhaps help to decide which features will stay as a module and which are the ones that will be built in. I have never used automatic loading, but from what I have heard, it will work in cases such as loading filesystem modules and netfilter (iptables) target modules. I'd imagine it does not work in cases of modules for particular network interface cards, because it is not able to unambiguously determine which is the appropriate module to load (although perhaps it ought to be able to in the event that there is only a single such module). dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Modular Kernel:Wat should be modules,wat should be built-in?
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: When configuring the kernel (via make xconfig), what is the general guideline as to what should be kept as modules, and what should be built-in? It depends upon what you are compiling the kernel for. But generally if you are compiling a kernel for a single system, you can just as well compile only what your system needs to function, but possibly compile as a module: - modules specific to a removable device (usb, pcmcia, firewire) - netfilter modules that may or may not always be needed, depending on your iptables configuration You might add to this: - modules for your display cards - modules for your sound cards - modules for your network cards Anything that you may want to run your system without, or might swap for another component. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: eth0 dissappeared after install
Sarah Trefethen wrote: I installed a base image (testing, kernel 2.4.25-1) on a dell Latitude D500 (laptop with centrino package) with no problem. Essential hardware was all detected nicely and I was able to use my ethernet device to connect to my friendly local DHCP server and download additional packages and perform a full range of networky type tasks. After the first reboot, however, trying to bring up the ethernet devices yields this: "error when getting interface flags, no such device" Anyone have any hints for me? I'm new to this. It has been a while since I have done a "first reboot", but try the following: Do you know which kernel module is required for your network card? If so, test it by "modprobe ", and if it works add it to /etc/modules. If you don't know which module is required, execute 'modconf' (as root) to select the module that matches the description of your card. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: print kernel tree from make xconfig?
Matt Price wrote: anyone know whetheri t's possible to print out the lovely display of the kernel module tree from "make xconfig"? I would like to have an annotated copy (what modules are required on which machines for what purposes, etc...). do a screen grab out of gimp maybe ? unfortunately one screen length won't do it. I can improvise, but I'd love to have the whole tree printed outi n front of me sometimes... The section breakdown and naming information for menuconfig and xconfig is specified in the "Kconfig" files in the kernel source tree. From these files and the generated .config, you can derive the structure you see in menuconfig or xconfig, with the configured options. A script to parse this information and generate an expanded kernel config tree to text would be fairly straightforward. I'd recommend perl. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: woody -> sarge dist-upgrade woes
Jerry Spicklemire wrote: The following packages have unmet dependencies: e2fsprogs: PreDepends: libblkid1 (>= 1.34-1) but it is not installable PreDepends: libss2 (>= 1.34-1) but it is not installable PreDepends: libuuid1 (>= 1.34-1) but it is not installable coreutils: PreDepends: libacl1 (>= 2.2.11-1) but it is not installable PreDepends: libattr1 (>= 2.4.4-1) but it is not installable dpkg: PreDepends: dselect but it is not installable sysvinit: PreDepends: initscripts but it is not installable PreDepends: sysv-rc (>= 2.85-2) but it is not installable or file-rc (> 0.7.0) but it is not installable" This is after trying synaptic, apt-get, dselect, and getting deeper into trouble, at every step, with essentially the same results, a non-functioning system. Try installing each of these predepends individually to determine just what the problem is, i.e.: "aptitude -t testing install libblkidl". Once you determine the problem, attempt to resolve it directly. If somehow you have managed to your system into a state where apt-get/aptitude can not resolve these conflicts, you can resolve them manually by removing or installing packages directly with dpkg, and the proper --force option if necessary. It may take some tinkering, but your system should be recoverable. Do this before you give up and reinstall the system. I've successfully resolved many similar difficulties in this manner. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Re: Distribution Upgrade
Curtis Vaughan wrote: So, before I reboot, I just want to be sure that I have lilo.conf set up right. What specifically should I do? Remove the install= line, or put something like install=menu.b? Yes, you should be able to safely remove the 'install=' line if you have upgraded to LILO > 22.3 and just wish to use the standard red ncurses-like menu to make a selection at boot time. Then you would probably want to run LILO again: i.e. execute 'lilo' as root. dircha -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]