Re: [gentoo-user] tango-icon-theme can't be merged
2011/8/28 Tamer Higazi th9...@googlemail.com: Can't locate XML/Simple.pm in @INC (@INC contains: /etc/perl Do you have dev-perl/XML-Simple installed? $ emerge -pv XML-Simple I can't check it right now, but if you don't have it installed then the tango-icon-theme ebuild is probably missing a dependence and you should report a bug about that. -- Jesús Guerrero Botella
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: HP tablets run Gentoo?
On Saturday 27 Aug 2011 15:29:14 James wrote: Neil Bothwick neil at digimed.co.uk writes: I doubt you'll be able to install one now. They went on sale at £89 here yesterday, and all stock was gone before 9am. Yep, can't locate one If you *really* want one of these you may need to search high low for one. Word is that HP is discounting 'old stock' because it is considering or has decided to pull out of the mobile/tablet/desktop PC market. -- Regards, Mick signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
[gentoo-user] Question regarding UTF-8 settings
Hi, following this guide: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml Doing a locale -a | grep de_DE | grep utf I got: de_DE.utf8 . Then I created the file /etc/init.d/02locale with the contents: LC_CTYPE=de_DE.utf8 . As root I did a rc-update , which runs without any error/warning message. I sourced /etc/profile and did a locale . The output was -- despite of what the guide exspected -- LANG= LC_CTYPE=de_DE.utf8 LC_NUMERIC=POSIX LC_TIME=POSIX LC_COLLATE=POSIX LC_MONETARY=POSIX LC_MESSAGES=POSIX LC_PAPER=POSIX LC_NAME=POSIX LC_ADDRESS=POSIX LC_TELEPHONE=POSIX LC_MEASUREMENT=POSIX LC_IDENTIFICATION=POSIX LC_ALL= Since there is no what to do if something else happens-paragraph in the guide, I want to ask here, what I am doing wrong...??? Thank you very much in advance for any help! Best regards, mcc
Re: [gentoo-user] Question regarding UTF-8 settings
rc-update You meant env-update, right? . The output was -- despite of what the guide exspected -- The guide shows the output from setting LANG. You set LC_CTYPE, so unless I'm missing something obvious your result is perfectly normal. The wording in the green box under listing 2.4 is perhaps a bit unclear: depending on what you are trying to achieve, setting LC_CTYPE instead of LANG might be enough, but they are definitely *not* the same thing. Follow the link in the same box for an explanation. andrea
Re: [gentoo-user] Question regarding UTF-8 settings
On Sunday 28 Aug 2011 09:51:36 meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote: Hi, following this guide: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml Doing a locale -a | grep de_DE | grep utf I got: de_DE.utf8 . Then I created the file /etc/init.d/02locale Hmm ... you probably want to create /etc/env.d/02locale instead. Then set in it: LC_LANG=de_DE.utf8 and perhaps: LC_TIME=POSIX LC_COLLATE=C and things should hopefully work out as intended after you run env-update or logout/login. -- Regards, Mick signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
Re: [gentoo-user] Question regarding UTF-8 settings
Andrea Conti a...@alyf.net [11-08-28 12:08]: rc-update You meant env-update, right? . The output was -- despite of what the guide exspected -- The guide shows the output from setting LANG. You set LC_CTYPE, so unless I'm missing something obvious your result is perfectly normal. The wording in the green box under listing 2.4 is perhaps a bit unclear: depending on what you are trying to achieve, setting LC_CTYPE instead of LANG might be enough, but they are definitely *not* the same thing. Follow the link in the same box for an explanation. andrea Hi Andrea, thank you for your help! Currently the arrows (in the thread display) of mutt are not displayed correctly, but ist seems, that the rest works more or less... I installed mrxvt-unicode from svn...currently I cannot decide, which kind or worst I will accept: No Unicode in the terminal or bad tabs with unicode. Unfortunately I dont know of any leight weight (no gui) terminal emu, which supports tabs like mrxvt... Best regards and have a nice sunday ! :) mcc
Re: [gentoo-user] logrotate: /var/log/portage/elog insecure permissions?
On Sunday 07 Aug 2011 16:20:18 Florian Philipp wrote: Am 07.08.2011 02:22, schrieb Mick: On Friday 05 Aug 2011 23:08:38 Neil Bothwick wrote: On Fri, 05 Aug 2011 17:59:00 +0200, Florian Philipp wrote: Yes, this was introduced in 3.8.0 to fix security issues [1]. Change your config to look like this: /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log { su portage portage ... } Disclaimer: I've not really tried this (yet) but I think I'm able to read changelogs and man-pages. ;-) Yes that fixes it. The latest portage ebuilds include an updated config file. Hmm ... it still complains here! error: error setting owner of /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log-20110801.gz: Operation not permitted This is my /etc/logrotate.d/elog-save-summary: === /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log { su portage portage missingok nocreate delaycompress } === # ls -la /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log -rw-rw-r-- 1 root portage 4326 Aug 6 09:44 /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log Can you see anything amiss? At least on my system, /var/log/portage has the following permissions: drwxr-xr-x root root Only root can write, therefore the config must read /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log { su root portage missingok nocreate delaycompress } The latest logrotate update wanted to change the above line from su root portage to su portage portage ... Should I be changing the ownership of /var/log/portage and /var/log/portage elog? -- Regards, Mick signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
Re: [gentoo-user] rc-svcdir mount where from?
In 1581460.4EaZMVgbQ3@weird wo...@wonkology.org (Alex Schuster) writes: Konstantinos Agouros writes: I do not have rc-svcdir in /etc/fstab. I know it comes with openrc but I would need the mount line or an fstab entry for it. A grep in /etc/init.d didn't help. You need to look into /lib/rc/sh/init.sh, the mount_svcdir() function: /lib/rc/sh/init.sh: mount -n -t $fs $fsopts rc-svcdir $RC_SVCDIR You can get the actual content of the $fs and $fsopts variables from the output of mount | grep svcdir. Hmmm but where is it filled with the directory structure? Or is this like a union mount? Konstantin -- Dipl-Inf. Konstantin Agouros aka Elwood Blues. Internet: elw...@agouros.de Altersheimerstr. 1, 81545 Muenchen, Germany. Tel +49 89 69370185 Captain, this ship will not survive the forming of the cosmos. B'Elana Torres
Re: [gentoo-user] Question regarding UTF-8 settings
Mick michaelkintz...@gmail.com [11-08-28 13:08]: On Sunday 28 Aug 2011 09:51:36 meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote: Hi, following this guide: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml Doing a locale -a | grep de_DE | grep utf I got: de_DE.utf8 . Then I created the file /etc/init.d/02locale Hmm ... you probably want to create /etc/env.d/02locale instead. Then set in it: LC_LANG=de_DE.utf8 and perhaps: LC_TIME=POSIX LC_COLLATE=C and things should hopefully work out as intended after you run env-update or logout/login. -- Regards, Mick Hi Mick, I did create /etc/env.d/02locale...I only confused it in my posting... Now I have changed, what you have suggested, but mutt still has problems with the arrows when displaying threads. Is there any other fix known regarding mutt? Best regards and thank you for your help in advance! mcc
Re: [gentoo-user] Question regarding UTF-8 settings
Am Sonntag 28 August 2011, 10:51:36 schrieb meino.cra...@gmx.de: Hi, following this guide: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml Doing a locale -a | grep de_DE | grep utf I got: de_DE.utf8 . Then I created the file /etc/init.d/02locale with the contents: LC_CTYPE=de_DE.utf8 . As root I did a rc-update , which runs without any error/warning message. I sourced /etc/profile and did a locale . The output was -- despite of what the guide exspected -- LANG= LC_CTYPE=de_DE.utf8 LC_NUMERIC=POSIX LC_TIME=POSIX LC_COLLATE=POSIX LC_MONETARY=POSIX LC_MESSAGES=POSIX LC_PAPER=POSIX LC_NAME=POSIX LC_ADDRESS=POSIX LC_TELEPHONE=POSIX LC_MEASUREMENT=POSIX LC_IDENTIFICATION=POSIX LC_ALL= Since there is no what to do if something else happens-paragraph in the guide, I want to ask here, what I am doing wrong...??? Thank you very much in advance for any help! Best regards, mcc why don't you just set: LC_ALL=de_DE.utf8 and LANG=de_DE.utf8 and maybe even LANGUAGE -- #163933
Re: [gentoo-user] Interface eth0 does not exist - e1000e/e1000
Thanks John and Dale. udev was the culprit and everything is now fixed. Cheers, Mark On Sat, Aug 27, 2011 at 6:24 PM, cov...@ccs.covici.com wrote: Mark Knecht markkne...@gmail.com wrote: I meant to do ifconfig -a or just ifconfig eth1 or eth2 and see if you get anything and change your link in /etc/init.d to that. You could use the persistent-net-rules and rename it to eth0 as well. -- Your life is like a penny. You're going to lose it. The question is: How do you spend it? John Covici cov...@ccs.covici.com
Re: [gentoo-user] Question regarding UTF-8 settings
On Sunday 28 Aug 2011 12:41:54 meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote: Mick michaelkintz...@gmail.com [11-08-28 13:08]: On Sunday 28 Aug 2011 09:51:36 meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote: Hi, following this guide: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml Doing a locale -a | grep de_DE | grep utf I got: de_DE.utf8 . Then I created the file /etc/init.d/02locale Hmm ... you probably want to create /etc/env.d/02locale instead. Then set in it: LC_LANG=de_DE.utf8 and perhaps: LC_TIME=POSIX LC_COLLATE=C and things should hopefully work out as intended after you run env-update or logout/login. Hi Mick, I did create /etc/env.d/02locale...I only confused it in my posting... Now I have changed, what you have suggested, but mutt still has problems with the arrows when displaying threads. Is there any other fix known regarding mutt? Although I'm using mrxvt as a terminal I do not use mutt. Where is mutt picking up its encoding for those arrows? Could it be that they are hard coded somehow in it? Sorry I can't suggest anything more useful on this problem ... -- Regards, Mick signature.asc Description: This is a digitally signed message part.
Re: [gentoo-user] Question regarding UTF-8 settings
Mick michaelkintz...@gmail.com [11-08-28 18:08]: On Sunday 28 Aug 2011 12:41:54 meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote: Mick michaelkintz...@gmail.com [11-08-28 13:08]: On Sunday 28 Aug 2011 09:51:36 meino.cra...@gmx.de wrote: Hi, following this guide: http://www.gentoo.org/doc/en/utf-8.xml Doing a locale -a | grep de_DE | grep utf I got: de_DE.utf8 . Then I created the file /etc/init.d/02locale Hmm ... you probably want to create /etc/env.d/02locale instead. Then set in it: LC_LANG=de_DE.utf8 and perhaps: LC_TIME=POSIX LC_COLLATE=C and things should hopefully work out as intended after you run env-update or logout/login. Hi Mick, I did create /etc/env.d/02locale...I only confused it in my posting... Now I have changed, what you have suggested, but mutt still has problems with the arrows when displaying threads. Is there any other fix known regarding mutt? Although I'm using mrxvt as a terminal I do not use mutt. Where is mutt picking up its encoding for those arrows? Could it be that they are hard coded somehow in it? Sorry I can't suggest anything more useful on this problem ... -- Regards, Mick Hi Mick, I switched from mrxvt, which gets screwed up when compiled from svn (the only source for a mrxvt, which a part of unicode support) and confronted then with some key combos like CTRL-SHIFT-UPARROW, to urxvt, which understands unicode fully, but has only a basic tabbed support. This fixes the locks. For the other problem, the arrows in threads, I instructed mutt to use ASCII-symbols like +- or \- instead, which looks a little retro, but may be this will correspond to the IBM Model M keyboard I use (and like so much ;). It just like being retro-progressive: Take the best of both worlds: Run a AMD-hexacore-PC, use Gentoo with openbox, avoid graphically gimmicks (no punt intended!), avoid using the mouse, get used to use vim, sed, awk, col, cmp, diff, join, uniq, fmt and such to their full power and do all this with a 20 year old keyboard, which looks like new. ;) Its feeling like MyGyver inventing the IT-industry from a soldering iron, a 80x40 charakter terminal and a 386 processor, hahahahaha! All this not really meant /THAT/ seriously... :) Best regards and have a nice whatever time of the day you currently may have . mcc
Re: [gentoo-user] logrotate: /var/log/portage/elog insecure permissions?
Am 28.08.2011 13:14, schrieb Mick: On Sunday 07 Aug 2011 16:20:18 Florian Philipp wrote: Am 07.08.2011 02:22, schrieb Mick: On Friday 05 Aug 2011 23:08:38 Neil Bothwick wrote: On Fri, 05 Aug 2011 17:59:00 +0200, Florian Philipp wrote: Yes, this was introduced in 3.8.0 to fix security issues [1]. Change your config to look like this: /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log { su portage portage ... } Disclaimer: I've not really tried this (yet) but I think I'm able to read changelogs and man-pages. ;-) Yes that fixes it. The latest portage ebuilds include an updated config file. Hmm ... it still complains here! error: error setting owner of /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log-20110801.gz: Operation not permitted This is my /etc/logrotate.d/elog-save-summary: === /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log { su portage portage missingok nocreate delaycompress } === # ls -la /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log -rw-rw-r-- 1 root portage 4326 Aug 6 09:44 /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log Can you see anything amiss? At least on my system, /var/log/portage has the following permissions: drwxr-xr-x root root Only root can write, therefore the config must read /var/log/portage/elog/summary.log { su root portage missingok nocreate delaycompress } The latest logrotate update wanted to change the above line from su root portage to su portage portage ... Should I be changing the ownership of /var/log/portage and /var/log/portage elog? Unless portage now drops privileges from root:portage to portage:portage for writing logs, no one except root should be allowed to write in /var/log/portage. So, from my point of view, the answer is no. It seems so: https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=374287 https://bugs.gentoo.org/show_bug.cgi?id=378451 This version of portage has just been stabilized this week. Regards, Florian Philipp signature.asc Description: OpenPGP digital signature
[gentoo-user] Re: /usr/portage index?
Bill Longman bill.longman at gmail.com writes: eix -c -C sci-chemistry Ok, thanks everyone! I was very tired Friday and I appreciate the suggestions of sites and syntax Lots of chemistry based software for my son to play with It's just a darn shame kids today do not get the cool chemistry sets of yore. James
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: /usr/portage index?
James wrote: Bill Longmanbill.longmanat gmail.com writes: eix -c -C sci-chemistry Ok, thanks everyone! I was very tired Friday and I appreciate the suggestions of sites and syntax Lots of chemistry based software for my son to play with It's just a darn shame kids today do not get the cool chemistry sets of yore. James Nowadays, if you mix vinegar and baking soda, you are accused of making a bomb. They called it fun 20 or 30 years ago. lol I still want to know what Spencer puts in the camera film thingys and makes it pop off. It was liquid and what looked like a pill or something. Erin said he was getting some distance on them tho. o_O Dale :-) :-)
Re: [gentoo-user] Re: /usr/portage index?
Dale writes: Nowadays, if you mix vinegar and baking soda, you are accused of making a bomb. They called it fun 20 or 30 years ago. lol I still want to know what Spencer puts in the camera film thingys and makes it pop off. It was liquid and what looked like a pill or something. Erin said he was getting some distance on them tho. o_O Um... Diet Coke and Mentos? Wonko