[gentoo-user] ebuild package recompile
Currently I find I am doing a lot of patching across multiple systems to get the functionality I require. One of the more anoying problems is that ebuild package clean removes all the existing package. There does not seem to be an equivalent to make clean in the ebuild command. Is there a way to just make clean a package, but leave all user patches in place so a ebuild package compile can recompile after changes ? BillK -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: A suggestion for bacula
On Saturday 26 November 2005 02:47, Harry Putnam wrote: [...] Bacula goes looking for them in /var/tmp/**bacula* and of course they are long gone. Bacula relies on its temp directory for other interesting functions too, it can build a bootable ISO using your running kernel, for example. I've written a little page in my personal wiki with an HOWTO for Gentoo to build a bootable cdrom using Bacula scripts, next week I can provide an english translation if anyone interested. So a gentoo user will end up with nothing backed up and wondering what they did wrong. Especially if they don't notice the give away address, and it isn't that obvious because `bconsole' output is pretty primitive and it will not be on the screen long. It also means the restore part is a non starter too since nothing got backed up. Apparently someone maybe me needs to go thru the bacula ebuilds and make them a little more like what bacula devel people expect. Or fix it so it works for us. Right, but maybe it's sufficient to replace original README with a Gentoo version; in other words, IMO it would be easier to document it, rather then tweak/patch ebuild. ciao Francesco -- Linux Version 2.6.12-gentoo-r9, Compiled #2 Wed Aug 24 18:43:16 CEST 2005 One 1GHz AMD Athlon 64 Processor, 2GB RAM, 1958.63 Bogomips Total aemaeth -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: A suggestion for bacula
-BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE- Hash: SHA1 Francesco Talamona wrote: I've written a little page in my personal wiki with an HOWTO for Gentoo to build a bootable cdrom using Bacula scripts, next week I can provide an english translation if anyone interested. Well, I am interested. :) - Hope that meets the anyone requeriment :) - -- Arturo Buanzo Busleiman - www.buanzo.com.ar Consultor en Seguridad Informatica / Dominio Digital TV - Da FOSS man! KTP Consultores - info AT ktpconsultores.com.ar Romper un sistema de seguridad los acerca tanto a ser hackers como el encender autos puenteando los convierte en ingenieros automotrices. -BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE- Version: GnuPG v1.4.1 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Thunderbird - http://enigmail.mozdev.org iD8DBQFDiFkNAlpOsGhXcE0RAkqJAJ41gwCnprxLIvamIzOiyt+2Mh0ASwCggpNy OfPApED8LindmtRN7S1AQZk= =zMBa -END PGP SIGNATURE- -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] How does Portage prioritze emerges in emerge world?
OK, I take it back. I said that the situation of upgrading a kernel with the 'symlink' USE flag active occurring at the same time as a (particular) program needing to compile against a configured kernel was not likely to occur all that often, but I was wrong. It's happened again today, but with a different program than the ones I normally keep an eye on. The good thing is that I (think I) see what the problem is. The problem is that Portage emerges the new kernel before (almost) everything else, without regard for whether the 'symlink' USE flag is active, and whether or not any of the other programs proposed to emerge need to compile against a configured kernel source-- or rather, the currently-running kernel, which the symlink most likely pointed to before Portage changed it via a previous emerge. Honestly, there's really no reason (that I can see) to emerge a kernel source before everything else, since the kernel source is useless until at the very least configured, and preferably compiled and installed, and since you're in the middle of an emerge -uwhatever world, you can't reasonably configure and compile the new source until the entire operation is finished. Yeah, OK, technically you can, but it's not really something that an ordinary person would do, I think. And if the 'symlink' USE flag is active, emerging the kernel sources before everything else-- which may include packages that must compile against a configured kernel, with the assumption that the /usr/src/symlink points to such a kernel, which it no longer does because the symlink has been changed during a previous emerge and you have not had time to configure the newly-emerged kernel-- is a real problem. I just had to open another term, su to root, run MC to change the symlink-- and got it wrong because I had a second unconfigured kernel (2.6.14-r2; 2.6.14-r3 was being installed) that I forgot I had not yet upgraded to), so had to change the link again to the *real* running kernel (2.6.14) and emerge --resume. And of course I'll have to eventually change the symlink back manually in order to actually manage the new kernel. Which means I have to remember to do that-- which is not the point of having the 'symlink' USE flag active. It seems to me that this could all be avoided if Portage emerged a new kernel *last* in the list if the 'symlink' USE flag is active for kernel emerges-- then everything in the list that needed a configured kernel would have one (the currently-running kernel), the emerge would complete normally, and the symlink would be changed at the end of the procedure so that my next operation could be to upgrade the kernel, which seems to me a reasonable and ordinary order of operation (emerge -u** world, then configure and compile new kernel and run module-rebuild). Am I doing things wrong, or is this a valid enhancement request for b.g.o? Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: How serious is revdep-rebuild failure
Harry Putnam [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: conftest echo works root # ./conftest echo works works Seems to have worked as expected. Looking at qpkg -v -I|grep gcc root # qpkg -v -I|grep gcc sys-devel/gcc-3.3.5.20050130-r1 * sys-devel/gcc-3.4.4-r1 * sys-devel/gcc-config-1.3.12-r4 * Is it normal to have 2 versions installed? Would a more recent version be likely to solve the cross-compiler problem? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] How does Portage prioritze emerges in emerge world?
On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 14:06:02 +0100 Holly Bostick [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: | Am I doing things wrong, or is this a valid enhancement request for | b.g.o? Unlikely to happen... Dependency resolution doesn't work that way. -- Ciaran McCreesh : Gentoo Developer (The one that looks before leaping) Mail: ciaranm at gentoo.org Web : http://dev.gentoo.org/~ciaranm signature.asc Description: PGP signature
Re: [gentoo-user] How does Portage prioritze emerges in emerge world?
Holly Bostick wrote: OK, I take it back. I said that the situation of upgrading a kernel with the 'symlink' USE flag active occurring at the same time as a (particular) program needing to compile against a configured kernel was not likely to occur all that often, but I was wrong. It's happened again today, but with a different program than the ones I normally keep an eye on. The good thing is that I (think I) see what the problem is. The problem is that Portage emerges the new kernel before (almost) everything else, without regard for whether the 'symlink' USE flag is active, and whether or not any of the other programs proposed to emerge need to compile against a configured kernel source-- or rather, the currently-running kernel, which the symlink most likely pointed to before Portage changed it via a previous emerge. Honestly, there's really no reason (that I can see) to emerge a kernel source before everything else, since the kernel source is useless until at the very least configured, and preferably compiled and installed, and since you're in the middle of an emerge -uwhatever world, you can't reasonably configure and compile the new source until the entire operation is finished. Yeah, OK, technically you can, but it's not really something that an ordinary person would do, I think. I like to manage the kernel sources myself so I always keep a kernel package in package.provided. mkdir -p /etc/portage/profile echo sys-kernel/gentoo-sources-2.6.14-r3 /etc/portage/profile/package.provided And if the 'symlink' USE flag is active, emerging the kernel sources before everything else-- which may include packages that must compile against a configured kernel, with the assumption that the /usr/src/symlink points to such a kernel, which it no longer does because the symlink has been changed during a previous emerge and you have not had time to configure the newly-emerged kernel-- is a real problem. I just had to open another term, su to root, run MC to change the symlink-- and got it wrong because I had a second unconfigured kernel (2.6.14-r2; 2.6.14-r3 was being installed) that I forgot I had not yet upgraded to), so had to change the link again to the *real* running kernel (2.6.14) and emerge --resume. And of course I'll have to eventually change the symlink back manually in order to actually manage the new kernel. Which means I have to remember to do that-- which is not the point of having the 'symlink' USE flag active. It seems to me that this could all be avoided if Portage emerged a new kernel *last* in the list if the 'symlink' USE flag is active for kernel emerges-- then everything in the list that needed a configured kernel would have one (the currently-running kernel), the emerge would complete normally, and the symlink would be changed at the end of the procedure so that my next operation could be to upgrade the kernel, which seems to me a reasonable and ordinary order of operation (emerge -u** world, then configure and compile new kernel and run module-rebuild). Am I doing things wrong, or is this a valid enhancement request for b.g.o? Holly The portage developers will not add a special case for kernel packages, so any reordering/prioritization would have to be done in a generic way that is usable for any type of package. Also, it seems desireable to compile against the latest kernel that is installed. Perhaps it would make sense to have a default kernel config that is used to configure the kernel sources automatically (make oldconfig; make modules_prepare) after a new kernel is installed? Something like this could be done ebuild postinst phase (when symlink is created). It is planned for future versions of portage to have pre/post phase hooks, which will allow users to define actions such as this via /etc/portage/bashrc: http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.portage.devel/1107 Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] what package has moc-qt3?
On Fri, 2005-11-25 at 17:50 -0500, Chris Bare wrote: I'm trying to build a qt based application from source and it's looking for a binary called: moc-qt3 Can anyone tell me what package I have to emerge to get that? I've searched, but so far only uncovered that it is in the qt3-dev-tools package on debian. -- You have x11-libs/qt installed yes? -- Steven Knight [EMAIL PROTECTED] and tho' We are not now that strength which in old days Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are,-- One equal temper of heroic hearts, Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. -- Ulysses by Alfred Lord Tennyson --- -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] How does Portage prioritze emerges in emerge world?
Zac Medico schreef: Holly Bostick wrote: I said that the situation of upgrading a kernel with the 'symlink' USE flag active occurring at the same time as a (particular) program needing to compile against a configured kernel was not likely to occur all that often, but I was wrong. It's happened again today, but with a different program than the ones I normally keep an eye on. The good thing is that I (think I) see what the problem is. The problem is that Portage emerges the new kernel before (almost) everything else, without regard for whether the 'symlink' USE flag is active, and whether or not any of the other programs proposed to emerge need to compile against a configured kernel source-- or rather, the currently-running kernel, which the symlink most likely pointed to before Portage changed it via a previous emerge. snip The portage developers will not add a special case for kernel packages, so any reordering/prioritization would have to be done in a generic way that is usable for any type of package. Also, it seems desireable to compile against the latest kernel that is installed. . OK, I understand this to some extent (meaning I get it that Portage is not going to be revised in this way), but I must question that last statement, it seems desirable to compile against the latest kernel that is installed. The latest kernel that is *installed* (as opposed to the latest kernel whose source is emerged, regardless of whether it's configured, compiled, or installed) is the one I'm booted into, and while I presumably intend/want to upgrade to the newly emerged kernel at some reasonably soon point, I don't necessarily want to do it *right that minute*, nor am I necessarily going to avoid rebooting until such time as I have installed the upgraded kernel. Perhaps it would make sense to have a default kernel config that is used to configure the kernel sources automatically (make oldconfig; make modules_prepare) after a new kernel is installed? Something like this could be done ebuild postinst phase (when symlink is created). It is planned for future versions of portage to have pre/post phase hooks, which will allow users to define actions such as this via /etc/portage/bashrc: This sounds great, but what about the kernel I'm booted into, against which the module will *not* be compiled, if I have to reboot before actually configuring/compiling/installing the new kernel? The kernel modules will not be upgraded for that kernel (because the upgrades compiled only against the future kernel), and while that won't precisely break the old kernel (hopefully, since the old modules should still be good, though I cannot vouch for all circumstances), it means I don't have the upgraded modules for the currently-running kernel. After all, module-rebuild will re-build all the modules against a newly-compiled kernel; I don't need to build some limited subset of said modules against the new kernel source at the time I emerge the new kernel source, since I will build all of them at the end of the operations which make the new kernel actually available for use. What I do want is to build the upgraded modules against the currently-running kernel, which I expect to be using for some short additional period of time (until I compile and install the new kernel, which may be hours or days in the future). It would be nice to then have the future kernel source prepared for compilation and installation automatically (by redirecting the symlink), so that said compilation and installation goes on a next-to-do, asap list of sorts, but I'm not essentially forced to drop everything in order to compile the new kernel source *right now* in order to use the upgraded modules, which may be mission-critical in some respect (if the upgrade fixes functionality that I need working). Maybe the issue is really that the 'symlink' USE flag is obsolete in some respect, since it appears that automatic redirection of the /usr/src/linux symlink can often cause more problems than it solves, since the user cannot really know ahead of time whether a kernel module is going to upgrade in the same operation as a new kernel source is going to be emerged (which is not the same as installing a new kernel, of course). I guess I'll turn off the USE flag and manage the symlink directly, but it seems like there ought to be a better way. http://thread.gmane.org/gmane.linux.gentoo.portage.devel/1107 Thanks for the link. Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] what package has moc-qt3?
On Fri, 2005-11-25 at 17:50 -0500, Chris Bare wrote: I'm trying to build a qt based application from source and it's looking for a binary called: moc-qt3 Can anyone tell me what package I have to emerge to get that? I've searched, but so far only uncovered that it is in the qt3-dev-tools package on debian. -- You have x11-libs/qt installed yes? yes: * installed packages [I--] [ ] x11-libs/qt-3.3.4-r8 (3) could this be what I'm looking for? /usr/qt/3/bin/moc and the package I'm building is expecting a different name? -- Chris Bare [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] How does Portage prioritze emerges in emerge world?
Holly Bostick wrote: This sounds great, but what about the kernel I'm booted into, against which the module will *not* be compiled, if I have to reboot before actually configuring/compiling/installing the new kernel? You can get pretty close to your desired behavior (merge kernel last) if you simple mask kernel package versions greater than the one that is currently installed. mkdir -p /etc/portage echo sys-kernel/gentoo-sources-2.6.14-r2 /etc/portage/package.mask That way, portage will not attempt to upgrade it until you tell it that you are ready, by removing the mask. And yeah, if USE=symlink causes problems, don't use it (in my suggested scenario above it might be useful though). Zac -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] PHP
I currently have the dev-php/php installed on my Gentoo machine. I am thinking of moving up to php 5 and must use the new dev-lang/php. Is the dev-lang/php pretty stable? Is there anything I should know before I make the switch? Thanks, Jeff -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Slots
I have just realized about programs that can be installed in slots. Is there a way for me to find out what programs are installed in more than one slot on my computer? Can I tell if a particular program in a slot is still needed? Thanks, Jeff -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] How does Portage prioritze emerges in emerge world?
Zac Medico schreef: Holly Bostick wrote: This sounds great, but what about the kernel I'm booted into, against which the module will *not* be compiled, if I have to reboot before actually configuring/compiling/installing the new kernel? You can get pretty close to your desired behavior (merge kernel last) if you simple mask kernel package versions greater than the one that is currently installed. mkdir -p /etc/portage echo sys-kernel/gentoo-sources-2.6.14-r2 /etc/portage/package.mask That way, portage will not attempt to upgrade it until you tell it that you are ready, by removing the mask. And yeah, if USE=symlink causes problems, don't use it (in my suggested scenario above it might be useful though). So the ultimate conclusion is that I can either 1) disable the symlink USE flag and manage the redirect manually, which would enable me to download any kernel at any time without concern for whether a kernel module was upgrading in the same operation; or 2) manually mask kernels, which would enable me to upgrade any kernel modules at any time but force me to manually oversee the availability of kernel upgrades and manually enable them (and re-disable them following said upgrade). I guess I'll go for option 1, but the long and the short of it is that complete automation is unavailable and my only choice is what I prefer to manage manually. OK, then. sigh Thanks. Holly -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] World File
I was reading a different thread about the world file does not necessarily contain all of the programs installed, if they are installed from a dependency. Is there a way to see what programs are installed on the machine which are not in the world file? Thanks, Jeff -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] World File
Yes, /var/db/pkg will have information about every package installed (in the subdirectories). The world file has things that you want to always be there, or you installed manually.On 11/26/05, Jeff Grossman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:I was reading a different thread about the world file does not necessarily contain all of the programs installed, if they areinstalled from a dependency.Is there a way to see what programs areinstalled on the machine which are not in the world file?Thanks,Jeff --gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list-- Steven Susbauer
Re: [gentoo-user] World File
Jeff Grossman wrote: I was reading a different thread about the world file does not necessarily contain all of the programs installed, if they are installed from a dependency. Is there a way to see what programs are installed on the machine which are not in the world file? Thanks, Jeff Sure, use equery. Like so: equery list -- [Name ] :: [Matan I. Peled] [Location ] :: [Israel] [Public Key] :: [0xD6F42CA5] [Keyserver ] :: [keyserver.kjsl.com] encrypted/signed plain text preferred -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: World File
Great. Thanks for the information. I was not aware of that directory. Steven Susbauer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Yes, /var/db/pkg will have information about every package installed (in the subdirectories). The world file has things that you want to always be there, or you installed manually. On 11/26/05, Jeff Grossman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I was reading a different thread about the world file does not necessarily contain all of the programs installed, if they are installed from a dependency. Is there a way to see what programs are installed on the machine which are not in the world file? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] World File
On Saturday 26 November 2005 17:37, Jeff Grossman wrote: I was reading a different thread about the world file does not necessarily contain all of the programs installed, if they are installed from a dependency. Is there a way to see what programs are installed on the machine which are not in the world file? That is correct, to see poke around in /var/db/pkg for quickness, or take the support method and use equery. -- Mike Williams -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] was passwd now dialup and/or loop
Hello everybody, Well, seems I must emerge system to get to passwd. I maybe could find the distfiles I need on the universal-install iso but wouldn't you know it? theres no loop module on the min-install to do the job. OK, so I oughta be able to dialout to the webby world and emerge system that way. Wrong! When I run pppconfig, I get no ui. So I go look for pppconfig no ui on my back up unit(where I am now). Too weird! So I copy over the ppp config files _word_for_word from the backup to the new unit. Now the thing dials out to ? The modem lights flicker as they should but nothing can be pinged. BTW, ifconfig reveals the loopback device as well as ppp0. Any dialup hackers out there? -mw __ Yahoo! Music Unlimited Access over 1 million songs. Try it free. http://music.yahoo.com/unlimited/ -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: How serious is revdep-rebuild failure
On 11/26/05, Harry Putnam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Harry Putnam [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: conftest echo works root # ./conftest echo works works Seems to have worked as expected. Looking at qpkg -v -I|grep gcc root # qpkg -v -I|grep gcc sys-devel/gcc-3.3.5.20050130-r1 * sys-devel/gcc-3.4.4-r1 * sys-devel/gcc-config-1.3.12-r4 * Is it normal to have 2 versions installed? Yes. Gcc is slotted, so it is normal to have more than one version installed. Would a more recent version be likely to solve the cross-compiler problem? 3.4.4-r1 is the most recent version available for ~x86. The only thing I can think of that might fix it would be an emerge -e system. But could you post the first 200 lines of /var/tmp/portage/mod_php-4.4.0/work/php-4.4.0/config.log? Maybe there is an answer there... -Richard -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Slots
On 11/26/05, Jeff Grossman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I have just realized about programs that can be installed in slots. Is there a way for me to find out what programs are installed in more than one slot on my computer? Can I tell if a particular program in a slot is still needed? emerge --prune --pretend world will tell you all packages that have more than one version installed (ie. slotted). As for finding out whether a particular version of a slotted package is still needed or not, well, you could do: emerge --prune pkg emerge -Dv world revdep-rebuild But the above is a bit dangerous, and could break your system. Be careful. -Richard -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: World File
Matan Peled [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Jeff Grossman wrote: I was reading a different thread about the world file does not necessarily contain all of the programs installed, if they are installed from a dependency. Is there a way to see what programs are installed on the machine which are not in the world file? Sure, use equery. Like so: equery list That is a handy little tool. Thanks for the information. May I ask, what is the number in the parenthesis? I would assume it is the slot number of the install. If I am something installed in more than one slot, is there a way for me to know if I can safely remove it? Thanks, Jeff -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: Re: Home Network Printing
Hlp! Michael Kintzios wrote: From:: Oliver Friedrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Home Network Printing Date: Fri, 25 Nov 2005 11:58:27 +0100 Michael Kintzios wrote: I created a new printer on hostname1 and also named it Compaq-HP. I set the ipp address to ipp://hostname2.STUDY/ipp but I kept getting errors telling me it can't resolve the address. AFAIR the IPP-Adress has to be: ipp://[Host]/[PrinterName] in your case this would mean: ipp://hostname2.STUDY/Compaq-HP I'm afraid I had no success. I tried using the address as you suggested above but it says unknown host . . . perhaps I should add it in my hostname file, but my netgear router which acts as the nameserver should know where to go? In any case, when I changed it to the IP address of hostname2 box (192.168.0.3) I got this: I [25/Nov/2005:20:23:13 +] [Job 56] Connecting to 192.168.0.3 on port 631... I [25/Nov/2005:20:23:13 +] [Job 56] Connected to 192.168.0.3... D [25/Nov/2005:20:23:13 +] [Job 56] Getting supported attributes... E [25/Nov/2005:20:23:13 +] [Job 56] Destination printer does not exist! E [25/Nov/2005:20:23:14 +] PID 13299 stopped with status 1! Anything else I should try? -- Regards, Mick -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: Slots
Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On 11/26/05, Jeff Grossman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I have just realized about programs that can be installed in slots. Is there a way for me to find out what programs are installed in more than one slot on my computer? Can I tell if a particular program in a slot is still needed? emerge --prune --pretend world will tell you all packages that have more than one version installed (ie. slotted). As for finding out whether a particular version of a slotted package is still needed or not, well, you could do: emerge --prune pkg emerge -Dv world revdep-rebuild But the above is a bit dangerous, and could break your system. Be careful. Thanks for the information. That is one are where I think Gentoo can definitely improve. Making it so you can tell if removing a package will kill anything. I would imagine this is probably not an easy task though. Jeff -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slots
On Sat, 26 Nov 2005 11:10:31 -0800 Jeff Grossman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Thanks for the information. That is one are where I think Gentoo can definitely improve. Making it so you can tell if removing a package will kill anything. You can check whether the package you intend to remove is a dependency of another package ;-) You can do it with equery depends package. Cheers, Renat -- Probleme kann man niemals mit derselben Denkweise loesen, durch die sie entstanden sind. (Einstein) signature.asc Description: PGP signature
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Re: Home Network Printing
Mick wrote: Hlp! Michael Kintzios wrote: From:: Oliver Friedrich [EMAIL PROTECTED] To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Home Network Printing Date: Fri, 25 Nov 2005 11:58:27 +0100 Michael Kintzios wrote: I created a new printer on hostname1 and also named it Compaq-HP. I set the ipp address to ipp://hostname2.STUDY/ipp but I kept getting errors telling me it can't resolve the address. AFAIR the IPP-Adress has to be: ipp://[Host]/[PrinterName] in your case this would mean: ipp://hostname2.STUDY/Compaq-HP I'm afraid I had no success. I tried using the address as you suggested above but it says unknown host . . . perhaps I should add it in my hostname file, but my netgear router which acts as the nameserver should know where to go? In any case, when I changed it to the IP address of hostname2 box (192.168.0.3) I got this: I [25/Nov/2005:20:23:13 +] [Job 56] Connecting to 192.168.0.3 on port 631... I [25/Nov/2005:20:23:13 +] [Job 56] Connected to 192.168.0.3... D [25/Nov/2005:20:23:13 +] [Job 56] Getting supported attributes... E [25/Nov/2005:20:23:13 +] [Job 56] Destination printer does not exist! E [25/Nov/2005:20:23:14 +] PID 13299 stopped with status 1! Anything else I should try? Just a shot in the dark. Are you using cups? If so, you may have to edit the cupsd.conf on the printer host to allow connections to cupsd from other hosts. There is a whole section in cupsd.conf that deals with access. Very similar to the apache config file. Cheers, Kevin -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: Slots
At 21:10 2005.11.26., you wrote: Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: On 11/26/05, Jeff Grossman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I have just realized about programs that can be installed in slots. Is there a way for me to find out what programs are installed in more than one slot on my computer? Can I tell if a particular program in a slot is still needed? emerge --prune --pretend world will tell you all packages that have more than one version installed (ie. slotted). As for finding out whether a particular version of a slotted package is still needed or not, well, you could do: emerge --prune pkg emerge -Dv world revdep-rebuild But the above is a bit dangerous, and could break your system. Be careful. Thanks for the information. That is one are where I think Gentoo can definitely improve. Making it so you can tell if removing a package will kill anything. I would imagine this is probably not an easy task though. Jeff maybe there should be some options when updating and emerge tries to bring in new slot, see, now i have qt3 and qt4, qt3 was emerged as kde dependence but nothing depends on qt4. so there waste of time and space unless i don't need qt4 for development or whatever. am i right? martins -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: masked package woes
Nick Rout nick at rout.co.nz writes: Bugzilla 92501 was the original request. By the look of the CVS tree this ebuild has NEVER been in portage. How it got on your system can only be explained by you. Where/how do you look at the portage tree in the full complement of packages that are available or what's not in the portage tree? Does one just look in /usr/portage/distfiles or some other special directory, or is there a place where one can peruse the entire tree regardless of what they have install on a gentoo system? If you think it is in portage on some of your systems you can verify by looking in the directory I only said this because 'emerge -s jffnms' has previously shown the package (in red) as masked. Plus this page was created: http://dev.gentoo.org/~angusyoung/docs/jffnms/docs/jffnms.html ls /usr/portage/net-analyzer/jffnms/ No, this dir does not exist. If you want to build it why don't you download the ebuild from the bugzilla site and put it in your overlay? The overlay process is well documented, I am not going to burden this list with yet another explanation. I guess I have no other choice. I wonder why it wass abandoned before it was ever finished? It doesn't look abandoned to me, the last post was on 19 October 2005, when a new version of the ebuild was posted. OK, I confused see the package with 'emerge -s jffnms' with it being masked but in the official tree of packages Lots of new evuilds get posted to bugzilla, not as many ever come out the other end. Once you have tested it don't forget to go back to the bug and report back on your experience. OK James -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] How does Portage prioritze emerges in emerge world?
On Sun, 27 Nov 2005 06:47, Holly Bostick wrote: 1) disable the symlink USE flag and manage the redirect manually, which would enable me to download any kernel at any time without concern for whether a kernel module was upgrading in the same operation; or snip I guess I'll go for option 1, but the long and the short of it is that complete automation is unavailable and my only choice is what I prefer to manage manually. OK, then. sigh Thanks. Holly Yeah it would be nice if there was a system to manage this, but your solution works for me too and its relatively easy to remember what you need to fix when you do a kernel upgrade. I get the feeling that automating this sort of thing is non-trivial. Besides... are we gentoo users or what?! ;) -- Ozmosis: The inability of one's job to live up to one's self-image. -- Douglas Coupland, Generation X: Tales for an Accelerated Culture -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Security problem? - Apache access.log has: CONNECT ... 200
I just have noticed that my Apache2 access.log has few entries: 220.189.234.182 - - [27/Sep/2005:03:21:59 -0600] CONNECT 202.165.103.38:80 HTTP/1.1 200 17505 61.232.83.75 - - [09/Oct/2005:04:33:26 -0600] CONNECT 66.135.208.90:80 HTTP/1.1 200 25952 59.40.34.187 - - [09/Oct/2005:19:05:40 -0600] CONNECT 210.59.228.72:25 HTTP/1.1 200 17368 66.219.100.118 - - [18/Oct/2005:02:04:00 -0600] CONNECT mx2.ToughGuy.net:25 HTTP/1.0 200 30192 213.180.210.35 - - [26/Nov/2005:12:09:14 -0700] CONNECT 213.180.193.1:25 HTTP/1.0 200 16916 These IP's are mostly from Russian or Chines hackers. My proxy is not enabled in /etc/conf.d/apache2 APACHE2_OPTS=-D DEFAULT_VHOST -D SSL -D PHP4 Anybody has similar entries. According to Apache explanation: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/1.3/misc/FAQ.html#proxyscan 200 would indicate that somebody is using my apache as proxy, but how? -- #Joseph -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] PHP
On 11/26/05, Jeff Grossman [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Is the dev-lang/php pretty stable? Is there anything I should know before I make the switch? I'm running 5.0.5. It's lovely. Just follow the upgrade guide (http://svn.gnqs.org/projects/gentoo-php-overlay/file/docs/php-upgrading.html?format=raw) and you should be peachy. Watch the USE flags, and the overlay wiki [http://svn.gnqs.org/projects/gentoo-php-overlay/] is your friend. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: How serious is revdep-rebuild failure
Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: /var/tmp/portage/mod_php-4.4.0/work/php-4.4.0/config.log Some stuff after 200 lines looks like it might be pertinent so posting 250 lines. I hope you see something: This file contains any messages produced by compilers while running configure, to aid debugging if configure makes a mistake. configure:1656: checking host system type configure:1756: checking for gcc configure:1869: checking whether the C compiler (gcc -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -L/usr/X11R6/lib -ltiff -L/usr/lib) works configure:1885: gcc -o conftest -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -L/usr/X11R6/lib -ltiff -L/usr/lib conftest.c -lxmlparse -lxmltok 15 /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/3.4.4/../../../../i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/ld: warning: libmysqlclient.so.12, needed by /usr/X11R6/lib/libxmlparse.so, not found (try using -rpath or -rpath-link) configure:1911: checking whether the C compiler (gcc -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -L/usr/X11R6/lib -ltiff -L/usr/lib) is a cross-compiler configure:1916: checking whether we are using GNU C configure:1925: gcc -E conftest.c configure:1944: checking whether gcc accepts -g configure:1977: checking whether gcc and cc understand -c and -o together configure:1992: gcc -c conftest.c -o conftest.o 15 configure:1993: gcc -c conftest.c -o conftest.o 15 configure:1998: cc -c conftest.c 15 configure:2000: cc -c conftest.c -o conftest.o 15 configure:2001: cc -c conftest.c -o conftest.o 15 configure:2028: checking how to run the C preprocessor configure:2049: gcc -E conftest.c /dev/null 2conftest.out configure:2109: checking for AIX configure:2136: checking if compiler supports -R configure:2151: gcc -o conftest -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -L/usr/X11R6/lib -ltiff -L/usr/lib conftest.c -R /usr/lib -lxmlparse -lxmltok 15 gcc: unrecognized option `-R' /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/3.4.4/../../../../i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/ld: /usr/lib: No such file: File format not recognized collect2: ld returned 1 exit status configure: failed program was: #line 2144 configure #include confdefs.h int main() { ; return 0; } configure:2169: checking if compiler supports -Wl,-rpath, configure:2184: gcc -o conftest -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -L/usr/X11R6/lib -ltiff -L/usr/lib conftest.c -Wl,-rpath,/usr/lib -lxmlparse -lxmltok 15 /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/3.4.4/../../../../i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/ld: warning: libmysqlclient.so.12, needed by /usr/X11R6/lib/libxmlparse.so, not found (try using -rpath or -rpath-link) configure:2210: checking for re2c configure:2239: checking whether ln -s works configure:2264: checking for gawk configure:2298: checking for bison configure:2332: checking bison version configure:2342: checking for flex configure:2376: checking for yywrap in -lfl configure:2395: gcc -o conftest -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -L/usr/X11R6/lib -ltiff -L/usr/lib conftest.c -lfl -lxmlparse -lxmltok 15 /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/3.4.4/../../../../i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/ld: warning: libmysqlclient.so.12, needed by /usr/X11R6/lib/libxmlparse.so, not found (try using -rpath or -rpath-link) configure:2419: checking lex output file root configure:2440: checking whether yytext is a pointer configure:2459: gcc -o conftest -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -L/usr/X11R6/lib -ltiff -L/usr/lib conftest.c -lxmlparse -lxmltok -lfl 15 /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/3.4.4/../../../../i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/ld: warning: libmysqlclient.so.12, needed by /usr/X11R6/lib/libxmlparse.so, not found (try using -rpath or -rpath-link) configure:2483: checking for working const configure:2537: gcc -c -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer conftest.c 15 configure:2562: checking flex version configure:2578: checking whether byte ordering is bigendian configure:2671: checking whether to force non-PIC code in shared modules configure:2808: checking for pthreads_cflags configure:2871: checking for pthreads_lib configure:3002: checking for AOLserver support configure:3243: checking for Apache 1.x module support via DSO through APXS configure:3546: checking for Apache 1.x module support configure:4381: checking for mod_charset compatibility option configure:4518: checking for Apache 2.0 filter-module support via DSO through APXS configure:5340: checking for Apache 2.0 handler-module support via DSO through APXS configure:6163: checking for Caudium support configure:6493: checking for CLI build configure:6553: checking for embedded SAPI library support configure:6756: checking for Zeus ISAPI support configure:6986: checking for NSAPI support configure:7327: checking for PHTTPD support configure:7556: checking for Pi3Web support configure:7885: checking for Roxen/Pike support configure:8154: checking for Servlet support configure:8672: checking for thttpd configure:8898: checking for TUX configure:9132: checking for webjames configure:9553: checking for chosen SAPI module configure:10458: checking for
[gentoo-user] Re: How serious is revdep-rebuild failure
Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Is it normal to have 2 versions installed? Yes. Gcc is slotted, so it is normal to have more than one version installed. Do I need two versions?. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] wvdial: dialup for users
I have tried alot of approaches. Wvdial is superior for detecting hardware: it found my modem on ttyS14, where other approaches hadn't found it. What I cannot seem to do is set up for my family to dial in from their accounts. I have tried changing permissions of various kinds, adding user to dialout, etc. UNCLE! Alan Davis
[gentoo-user] BT Mouse failed
I have a cheap BT mouse I have used for at least a year on my Dell 8600 with kde. It has worked well, and pretty much just worked, with a little adjusting on the hcid.conf from googleing around. Now it suddenly fails after an -uvDa world that I ran last friday I think. It connects but just for a second. My Dell Axim still connects via BT and works as expected. Any one else have seen this, any ideas?? Mike -- Michael W. Holdeman Powered by Gentoo Linux www.gentoo.org | Kernel 2.6.11-ck8 | Win4Lin 5-1-20 netraverse.com | Win4LinPro 6.1.1-03 win4lin.com | | -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] best filesystem for Gentoo
Hi List, Any comment on the best filesystem to use for Gentoo running a webserver, I prefer more speed and less journaling, is there a standard? -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] wvdial: dialup for users
Alan E. Davis wrote: I have tried alot of approaches. Wvdial is superior for detecting hardware: it found my modem on ttyS14, where other approaches hadn't found it. What I cannot seem to do is set up for my family to dial in from their accounts. I have tried changing permissions of various kinds, adding user to dialout, etc. UNCLE! Alan Davis Well, I use ppp and the comand pon and poff. It works pretty well. emerge ppp and then config with pppconfig. To connect, pon, to disconnect, poff. That would be as root, there should be a way to make users do it though. I'm not sure how. Now wvdial, it dials out, then sits for a minute, then disconnects with the error that my password is wrong, which is crap because it is correct. I only got wvdial to work once on another rig. It has never worked on this one though. Anybody have a clue on that one? I just like to have options in case it pours instead of just a little shower. My $.02 and a question as well. Dale :-) -- To err is human, I'm most certainly human. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] best filesystem for Gentoo
Colin Copley wrote: Hi List, Any comment on the best filesystem to use for Gentoo running a webserver, I prefer more speed and less journaling, is there a standard? I don't run a webserver or anything but if you don't want journaling, ext2 may be good. I don't think it has any journaling at all. Of course, there are a lot of file systems out there to pick from. I use reiserfs on all mine and it works well, even when the power fails. It also does fine on a Compaq Proliant 6000 server with quad 200MHz CPUs. It is a slow rig but I don't think the journaling takes up that much CPU time. It always shows 0%. It's a thought, until a serious guru comes along. ^_^ Dale :-) -- To err is human, I'm most certainly human. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: masked package woes
Richard Fish bigfish at asmallpond.org writes: The entire tree is in /usr/portage. For example, all possible net-analyzer packages are /usr/portage/net-analyzer. find /usr/portage -name '*.ebuild' will show you all ebuilds in the tree, masked or not, installed or not. Compare this to what you actually have installed under /var/db/pkg. This make things more clear. Also, the portage CVS tree can be viewed at: http://www.gentoo.org/cgi-bin/viewcvs.cgi/?root=gentoo-x86 OK I only said this because 'emerge -s jffnms' has previously shown the package (in red) as masked. Plus this page was created: http://dev.gentoo.org/~angusyoung/docs/jffnms/docs/jffnms.html Ok, but view his blog here: http://dev.gentoo.org/~angusyoung/blog/ Notice the statement ...which I hope to add to portage in the near future. Cool. It is entirely possible (but incorrect) to place ebuilds downloaded manually into the /usr/portage tree. It is also possible (and correct) to place those ebuilds into PORTAGE_OVERLAY. Yes, I'm following these instructions: http://gentoo-wiki.com/HOWTO_Installing_3rd_Party_ Ebuilds#ebuild:_A_Safer_Approach You (or someone else with root access to the system) must have done one or the other on the system that shows it as available. Yes it was a long time ago, and I just do not remember. Nobody else has root on the system. Thanks for the help, Everyone James -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] best filesystem for Gentoo
Colin Copley wrote: Hi List, Any comment on the best filesystem to use for Gentoo running a webserver, I prefer more speed and less journaling, is there a standard? Probably can't go wrong with ext2 (personally, I'd still go with ext3 because you get faster fscks during bootup, right?). Ext2/ext3 have been around for a long time, there are lots of tools written to work with them, supported in most (all?) linux distros. I'm sure there are good arguments for using Reiser, XFS, JFS, etc, but I haven't gotten comfortable enough about them to make the switch away from ext2/ext3. -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] CyMotion keyboards
Gary Richards wrote: I think somebody on this list was looking for one of those new Cherry CyMotion Linux keyboards. There's a new seller on eBay that has them. http://cgi.ebay.com/Cherry-CyMotion-Master-Linux-Keyboard-Tuxs-Revenge_W0QQitemZ5834892820QQcategoryZ4706QQssPageNameZWDVWQQrdZ1QQcmdZViewItem Just in case whoever that was is still interested...NFI YMMV -Gary R That was me and still interested and thank you very much! Tony -- Those who would give up essential Liberty, to purchase a little temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety. -- Benjamin Franklin -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] what package has moc-qt3?
On Sat, 2005-11-26 at 12:00 -0500, Chris Bare wrote: You have x11-libs/qt installed yes? yes: * installed packages [I--] [ ] x11-libs/qt-3.3.4-r8 (3) could this be what I'm looking for? /usr/qt/3/bin/moc and the package I'm building is expecting a different name? -- That would be my guess. Can you tell the program you're trying to install which moc to use? If not, I would say create a symlink between /usr/qt/3/bin/moc to moc-qt3 and this should do the trick. Chris Bare [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- Steven Knight [EMAIL PROTECTED] and tho' We are not now that strength which in old days Moved earth and heaven, that which we are, we are,-- One equal temper of heroic hearts, Made weak by time and fate, but strong in will To strive, to seek, to find, and not to yield. -- Ulysses by Alfred Lord Tennyson --- -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] wvdial: dialup for users
Alan E. Davis wrote: I have tried changing permissions of various kinds, adding user to dialout, etc. Add them to tty group ;) -- Norberto Bensa 4544-9692 Ciudad de Buenos Aires, Argentina -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] best filesystem for Gentoo
On Sat November 26 2005 11:48 pm, Thomas Harold wrote: Colin Copley wrote: Hi List, Any comment on the best filesystem to use for Gentoo running a webserver, I prefer more speed and less journaling, is there a standard? Probably can't go wrong with ext2 (personally, I'd still go with ext3 because you get faster fscks during bootup, right?). Ext2/ext3 have been around for a long time, there are lots of tools written to work with them, supported in most (all?) linux distros. I'm sure there are good arguments for using Reiser, XFS, JFS, etc, but I haven't gotten comfortable enough about them to make the switch away from ext2/ext3. For a server, I'd stay away from reiserfs, as it does appear to have serious fragmentation over time- this is becoming more and more apparent. Check this thread out on Gentoo forums- I posted links to a lot of good info. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-401591-start-0.html With ext3, you might want to set the dir_index feature when you format, as this allows diretory B=Trees to be used, and really helps with the big performance drawback this FS has. This might be your best bet for a webserver- rock solid, really good speed (with the dir_index option), and virtually no fragmentation over time. If you deal with lots of really large files, xfs might serve your circumstance better, as it performs much better. It really depends on what you are using your system for, and what types of files/directories reside on each partition. For example, reiserfs (and R4) do much better than the others with lots of really small files. But as stated, plan on doing periodic tarball partition and save on another media/reformat partition/copy back all data procedures to defrag the reiserfs partition to maintain top performance. There is as yet no decent repacker for reiserfs that I know of. This is contrary to what most people believe about all Linux file systems, but for reiserfs, this is becoming an accepted fact. It does get seriously fragmented over time, though probably not as quickly as a FAT or NTFS windows partition. Robert Crawford (wrc1944- on the forum) -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] wvdial: dialup for users
There are a couple of groups that you need to add your users to. - dialout and uucp. Reading the message at the end of emerging wvdial tells you this. Also reading the ebuild gives you the same information. I am not criticising you, thiose messages flash by very quickly, and reading the ebuild is not everyone's first port of call, but if I educate one person to read the documentation and save one query to the list i guess my job is done :-) PS don't forget you have to log in again after you have been added to a group. and id is a good command to see what groups you are in. On Sun, 27 Nov 2005 12:15:15 +1000 Alan E. Davis [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: I have tried alot of approaches. Wvdial is superior for detecting hardware: it found my modem on ttyS14, where other approaches hadn't found it. What I cannot seem to do is set up for my family to dial in from their accounts. I have tried changing permissions of various kinds, adding user to dialout, etc. UNCLE! Alan Davis -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] wvdial: dialup for users
On Sat November 26 2005 9:15 pm, Alan E. Davis wrote: I have tried alot of approaches. Wvdial is superior for detecting hardware: it found my modem on ttyS14, where other approaches hadn't found it. What I cannot seem to do is set up for my family to dial in from their accounts. I have tried changing permissions of various kinds, adding user to dialout, etc. UNCLE! Alan Davis Try these thread on the forums- I posted my experience with wvdial- it should fix your problems. http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic.php?t=112214highlight= or: http://forums.gentoo.org/viewtopic-t-160597-highlight-wvdial+wrc1944.html -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: How serious is revdep-rebuild failure
On 11/26/05, Harry Putnam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: /var/tmp/portage/mod_php-4.4.0/work/php-4.4.0/config.log Some stuff after 200 lines looks like it might be pertinent so posting 250 lines. I hope you see something: This file contains any messages produced by compilers while running configure, to aid debugging if configure makes a mistake. configure:1656: checking host system type configure:1756: checking for gcc configure:1869: checking whether the C compiler (gcc -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -L/usr/X11R6/lib -ltiff -L/usr/lib) works configure:1885: gcc -o conftest -O2 -march=pentium4 -fomit-frame-pointer -L/usr/X11R6/lib -ltiff -L/usr/lib conftest.c -lxmlparse -lxmltok 15 /usr/lib/gcc/i686-pc-linux-gnu/3.4.4/../../../../i686-pc-linux-gnu/bin/ld: warning: libmysqlclient.so.12, needed by /usr/X11R6/lib/libxmlparse.so, not found (try using -rpath or -rpath-link) Ah, here is a problem. A broken library dependancy. I don't know what package libxmlparse is a part of, but it is linked against libmysqlcliient.so.12, which does not exist now. Run equery belongs /usr/lib/libxmlparse.so, and rebuild (with emerge --oneshot pkg) whatever package that is a part of. -Richard -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Directory directive inside VirtualHost
Any Apache guru on the list? Is Directory directive permitted inside VirtualHost directive? example from Gentoo /etc/apache2/vhosts.d/00_default_vhost.conf file: VirtualHost *:80 Directory /var/www/localhost/htdocs . . /Directory /VirtualHost If I comment out the #VirtualHost directive, the Directory directive (along with all its parameter (mainly AllowOveride All) is working. But the default setup that came after Gentoo conversion to new standards is preventing for example: AllowOveride All inside Directory directive to take effect. -- #Joseph -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: How serious is revdep-rebuild failure
On 11/26/05, Harry Putnam [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: Richard Fish [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: Is it normal to have 2 versions installed? Yes. Gcc is slotted, so it is normal to have more than one version installed. Do I need two versions?. Technically, no. But this is where I get a bit paranoid, because if you break the libstdc++ dynamic linking, you cripple the system (including portage!). So, I would only prune the old versions of gcc after doing a emerge -e world to rebuild *everything* with the new gcc. Oh, and a fix_libtool_files.sh also... And making a good backup... -Richard -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
[gentoo-user] Re: Security problem? - Apache access.log has: CONNECT ... 200
On Saturday 26 November 2005 23:56, Joseph wrote: I just have noticed that my Apache2 access.log has few entries: 220.189.234.182 - - [27/Sep/2005:03:21:59 -0600] CONNECT 202.165.103.38:80 HTTP/1.1 200 17505 61.232.83.75 - - [09/Oct/2005:04:33:26 -0600] CONNECT 66.135.208.90:80 HTTP/1.1 200 25952 59.40.34.187 - - [09/Oct/2005:19:05:40 -0600] CONNECT 210.59.228.72:25 HTTP/1.1 200 17368 66.219.100.118 - - [18/Oct/2005:02:04:00 -0600] CONNECT mx2.ToughGuy.net:25 HTTP/1.0 200 30192 213.180.210.35 - - [26/Nov/2005:12:09:14 -0700] CONNECT 213.180.193.1:25 HTTP/1.0 200 16916 These IP's are mostly from Russian or Chines hackers. My proxy is not enabled in /etc/conf.d/apache2 APACHE2_OPTS=-D DEFAULT_VHOST -D SSL -D PHP4 Anybody has similar entries. According to Apache explanation: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/1.3/misc/FAQ.html#proxyscan 200 would indicate that somebody is using my apache as proxy, but how? -- #Joseph The answer is already in the page you posted. Page sizes are different, so you are serving as a proxy. Set NameVirtualHost and VirtualHost directives in /etc/apache2/vhosts.d/00_default_vhost.conf and /etc/apache2/httpd.conf as instructed in the link above. Ciao Francesco -- Linux Version 2.6.12-gentoo-r9, Compiled #2 Wed Aug 24 18:43:16 CEST 2005 One 2.2GHz AMD Athlon 64 Processor, 2GB RAM, 4308.99 Bogomips Total aemaeth -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list
Re: [gentoo-user] autoexpect?
On Fri, Nov 25, 2005 at 08:00:09PM +0100, Andres Becerra Sandoval wrote If you create a private-public pair with ssh-keygen you can access to the other machine without a password. Then your script would call ssh and probably sudo /sbin/poweroff as a parameter to halt the remote machine. That's exactly what I do. I turn on my emergency system every couple of weeks, emerge --sync and emerge --ask --deep --update --world, run etc-update if necessary and then shut down. I have a honking big 19 CRT on my desk at home, and the KVM is used elsewhere. The machine name is m450 (450 mhz PIII). My main machine is m3000 (AMD64 3000+). There is an ordinary user waltdnes on m450. /etc/sudoers on m450 contains the following line... waltdnes m450 = (root) NOPASSWD: /sbin/poweroff I have a short script ~/bin/stopm450 on m3000 ... #!/bin/bash ssh [EMAIL PROTECTED] sudo /sbin/poweroff To shut down... 1) via ssh shut down unnecessary programs on m450 2) exit all ssh sessions to m450 3) stopm450 -- Walter Dnes [EMAIL PROTECTED] In linux /sbin/init is Job #1 My musings on technology and security at http://tech_sec.blog.ca -- gentoo-user@gentoo.org mailing list