Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-26 Thread Momesso Andrea
On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 04:14:38PM +0200, Alan McKinnon wrote:
 On Wednesday 25 March 2009 16:54:21 Momesso Andrea wrote:
  On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 12:14:14PM +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
   On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 07:27:09 -0400, James Skinner wrote:
Top-posting is totally fine when emailing from a mobile device. It
does make it hard to follow a thread, but email's are time-stamped.
  
   It doesn't mater what device is used to send the email, it is the
   recipient that is affected by the readability of the mail.
 
  Unfortunatly my BlackBerry doesn't allow bottom posting. I hope you guys
  forgive me for the few times I answer on this list using my mobile
  device.
 
 What? There's no down arrow on a BlackBerry?
 
 I don't have one of those devices, and fully intend to never have one, so if 
 there's a stupid implementation of the reply function, I'd never know it. But 
 just asking, that's all.

Yes, there's down arrow on blackberry, the problem is in the blackberry
email client. It quotes the whole text as a block under the answer, and
does not give you the possibility to browse. I never used outlook, so I 
don't know if this is what other people called here outlook behavior, 
btw it is pretty annoyng.

---
TopperH
http://topperh.blogspot.com


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Alan McKinnon
On Wednesday 25 March 2009 03:40:51 Stroller wrote:
 Every time you bottom post with more than a page or screenful of  
 quoting, a top-posting is justified.

Every time you find you have a screenful of quoted text you should just trim 
out the extraneous crap and return the mail to sanity. As I have done here.


-- 
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 22:49:57 -0500, Dale wrote:

 I don't mind top posting in private emails but not on the list.  Who is
 it with that signature with the backward questions about top posting?

This one?

A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
A: Top-posting.
Q: What is the most annoying thing on usenet and in e-mail?

or this one?

Q:  Why is top-posting evil?
A: backwards read don't humans because

Both have been in my tagfile for years.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

The best things in life are free, but the
expensive ones are still worth a look.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Dale
Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 22:49:57 -0500, Dale wrote:

   
 I don't mind top posting in private emails but not on the list.  Who is
 it with that signature with the backward questions about top posting?
 

 This one?

 A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
 Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
 A: Top-posting.
 Q: What is the most annoying thing on usenet and in e-mail?

 or this one?

 Q:  Why is top-posting evil?
 A: backwards read don't humans because

 Both have been in my tagfile for years.


   

The top one is the one I was thinking about.  Funny thing is, it took me
a couple reads the first time to figure out it was backwards.  It really
didn't make much sense.

I do like the last one tho.  That was cute.  ;-)

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread James Skinner
Top-posting is totally fine when emailing from a mobile device. It
does make it hard to follow a thread, but email's are time-stamped.



On 3/25/09, Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com wrote:
 Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Tue, 24 Mar 2009 22:49:57 -0500, Dale wrote:


 I don't mind top posting in private emails but not on the list.  Who is
 it with that signature with the backward questions about top posting?


 This one?

 A: Because it messes up the order in which people normally read text.
 Q: Why is top-posting such a bad thing?
 A: Top-posting.
 Q: What is the most annoying thing on usenet and in e-mail?

 or this one?

 Q:  Why is top-posting evil?
 A: backwards read don't humans because

 Both have been in my tagfile for years.




 The top one is the one I was thinking about.  Funny thing is, it took me
 a couple reads the first time to figure out it was backwards.  It really
 didn't make much sense.

 I do like the last one tho.  That was cute.  ;-)

 Dale

 :-)  :-)



-- 
Sent from my mobile device

James Skinner
james.skin...@gmail.com



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 07:27:09 -0400, James Skinner wrote:

 Top-posting is totally fine when emailing from a mobile device. It
 does make it hard to follow a thread, but email's are time-stamped.

It doesn't mater what device is used to send the email, it is the
recipient that is affected by the readability of the mail.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

If it doesn't fit, you're not using a big enough hammer.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Momesso Andrea
On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 12:14:14PM +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 07:27:09 -0400, James Skinner wrote:
 
  Top-posting is totally fine when emailing from a mobile device. It
  does make it hard to follow a thread, but email's are time-stamped.
 
 It doesn't mater what device is used to send the email, it is the
 recipient that is affected by the readability of the mail.
 
Unfortunatly my BlackBerry doesn't allow bottom posting. I hope you guys
forgive me for the few times I answer on this list using my mobile
device.

---
TopperH
http://topperh.blogspot.com


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Alan McKinnon
On Wednesday 25 March 2009 16:54:21 Momesso Andrea wrote:
 On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 12:14:14PM +, Neil Bothwick wrote:
  On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 07:27:09 -0400, James Skinner wrote:
   Top-posting is totally fine when emailing from a mobile device. It
   does make it hard to follow a thread, but email's are time-stamped.
 
  It doesn't mater what device is used to send the email, it is the
  recipient that is affected by the readability of the mail.

 Unfortunatly my BlackBerry doesn't allow bottom posting. I hope you guys
 forgive me for the few times I answer on this list using my mobile
 device.

What? There's no down arrow on a BlackBerry?

I don't have one of those devices, and fully intend to never have one, so if 
there's a stupid implementation of the reply function, I'd never know it. But 
just asking, that's all.

-- 
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Paul Hartman
On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 9:14 AM, Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Wednesday 25 March 2009 16:54:21 Momesso Andrea wrote:
 Unfortunatly my BlackBerry doesn't allow bottom posting. I hope you guys
 forgive me for the few times I answer on this list using my mobile
 device.

 What? There's no down arrow on a BlackBerry?

 I don't have one of those devices, and fully intend to never have one, so if
 there's a stupid implementation of the reply function, I'd never know it. But
 just asking, that's all.

There are many devices and webmail services that do quoting in the
Microsoft Outlook style -- putting a one-line divider between the
reply and the original message. No indentation or nesting of replies.
This makes it harder to reply to specific parts of e-mails, but does
show you the entire conversation unaltered (when everyone uses
Outlook, anyway) -- and some companies actually /require/ that style
of quoting, believe it or not.

Replying to specific parts of an e-mail in Outlook (etc) is usually a
joke. People resort to strange combinations of colorizing, changing
fonts, emboldening, italicizing, etc. All of it is hideous and was
solved 30 years ago by simple indentation and nesting of quotes...
Thanks a lot, Microsoft.

I use gmail for this and other mailing lists; it collapses quoted text
and shows e-mails in a conversational view. It really does a good job
of it and the top-posting and quoting-of-entire-emails really becomes
a non-issue. It's the next best thing to having everyone quote
properly.



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Paul Hartman
On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 10:16 AM, Paul Hartman
paul.hartman+gen...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 9:14 AM, Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com 
 wrote:
 On Wednesday 25 March 2009 16:54:21 Momesso Andrea wrote:
 Unfortunatly my BlackBerry doesn't allow bottom posting. I hope you guys
 forgive me for the few times I answer on this list using my mobile
 device.

 What? There's no down arrow on a BlackBerry?

 I don't have one of those devices, and fully intend to never have one, so if
 there's a stupid implementation of the reply function, I'd never know it. But
 just asking, that's all.

 There are many devices and webmail services that do quoting in the
 Microsoft Outlook style -- putting a one-line divider between the
 reply and the original message. No indentation or nesting of replies.
 This makes it harder to reply to specific parts of e-mails, but does
 show you the entire conversation unaltered (when everyone uses
 Outlook, anyway) -- and some companies actually /require/ that style
 of quoting, believe it or not.

I will add that e-mail clients that are geared toward HTML e-mail tend
to go the top-posting route, too, because doing the traditional
quoting of HTML e-mails is nearly impossible.



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Alan McKinnon
On Wednesday 25 March 2009 17:16:51 Paul Hartman wrote:
 On Wed, Mar 25, 2009 at 9:14 AM, Alan McKinnon alan.mckin...@gmail.com 
wrote:
  On Wednesday 25 March 2009 16:54:21 Momesso Andrea wrote:
  Unfortunatly my BlackBerry doesn't allow bottom posting. I hope you guys
  forgive me for the few times I answer on this list using my mobile
  device.
 
  What? There's no down arrow on a BlackBerry?
 
  I don't have one of those devices, and fully intend to never have one, so
  if there's a stupid implementation of the reply function, I'd never know
  it. But just asking, that's all.

 There are many devices and webmail services that do quoting in the
 Microsoft Outlook style -- putting a one-line divider between the
 reply and the original message. No indentation or nesting of replies.
 This makes it harder to reply to specific parts of e-mails, but does
 show you the entire conversation unaltered (when everyone uses
 Outlook, anyway)

haha, fat chance of that on a Gentoo list :-)

 -- and some companies actually /require/ that style
 of quoting, believe it or not.

sigh I know. I work for one. email style is driven by the sales people.

But us techies ignore the rules and do it our way anyway - we admin the mail 
relays

 Replying to specific parts of an e-mail in Outlook (etc) is usually a
 joke. People resort to strange combinations of colorizing, changing
 fonts, emboldening, italicizing, etc. All of it is hideous and was
 solved 30 years ago by simple indentation and nesting of quotes...
 Thanks a lot, Microsoft.

 I use gmail for this and other mailing lists; it collapses quoted text
 and shows e-mails in a conversational view. It really does a good job
 of it and the top-posting and quoting-of-entire-emails really becomes
 a non-issue. It's the next best thing to having everyone quote
 properly.

Yes, gmail is quite good at it in a browser. It's ben ages since I did that 
though - I pop my mail and just use the web end to scan the spam folder once a 
month


-- 
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on? - snippage

2009-03-25 Thread Stroller


On 25 Mar 2009, at 07:06, Alan McKinnon wrote:


On Wednesday 25 March 2009 03:40:51 Stroller wrote:

Every time you bottom post with more than a page or screenful of
quoting, a top-posting is justified.


Every time you find you have a screenful of quoted text you should  
just trim
out the extraneous crap and return the mail to sanity. As I have  
done here.



That's great. Can you do that for all the multipage emails that reach  
my mailbox, please?



I find the inability - of otherwise intelligent people - to  
accommodate or see validity in differing points of view, quite  
astounding.


I'm not saying you should suddenly change your opinion and take the  
opposite position... but I wish that *just once* some of the bottom- 
posting snobs would accept that people who top-post just *might* have  
reasons for doing it.


During top- vs bottom-posting flamewars, one of the standard reasons  
given for top-posting is that it saves you having to scroll to the  
bottom of the post, and the standard reply to this from the bottom  
posters is well, you should be snipping anyway. Don't you think I  
might have heard that line before? So why don't you all practice it,  
then?


Whilst you righteous bottom-posters all fail to snip rigourously - and  
I just chose to highlight just ONE instance of this today - you give  
fuel to the top-posting fire.


Please don't bitch at me for taking the mickey, trying to illustrate a  
point. Bitch at all the fucknuts who are too darn lazy to snip.


Stroller.




Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on? - snippage

2009-03-25 Thread AllenJB

Can you ALL please take this off-topic conversation off list.

This is a general support list used by many users of a wide range of 
experience, therefore you can not expect to be able to enforce any 
standards, either way.


In addition, please keep language clean on this list.

AllenJB



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Graham Murray
Paul Hartman paul.hartman+gen...@gmail.com writes:

 There are many devices and webmail services that do quoting in the
 Microsoft Outlook style -- putting a one-line divider between the
 reply and the original message. No indentation or nesting of replies.
 This makes it harder to reply to specific parts of e-mails, but does
 show you the entire conversation unaltered (when everyone uses
 Outlook, anyway) -- and some companies actually /require/ that style
 of quoting, believe it or not.

Maybe because it follows more closely (one of) the standard ways of
filing correspondence - maintaining a paper file by adding each new
document on top on top of the 'pile'. 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on? - snippage

2009-03-25 Thread Roy Wright
AllenJB wrote:
 Can you ALL please take this off-topic conversation off list.

+1

 In addition, please keep language clean on this list.

+1

Well said.





Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-25 Thread Dale
Graham Murray wrote:
 Paul Hartman paul.hartman+gen...@gmail.com writes:

   
 There are many devices and webmail services that do quoting in the
 Microsoft Outlook style -- putting a one-line divider between the
 reply and the original message. No indentation or nesting of replies.
 This makes it harder to reply to specific parts of e-mails, but does
 show you the entire conversation unaltered (when everyone uses
 Outlook, anyway) -- and some companies actually /require/ that style
 of quoting, believe it or not.
 

 Maybe because it follows more closely (one of) the standard ways of
 filing correspondence - maintaining a paper file by adding each new
 document on top on top of the 'pile'. 


   

So that's why when I need to know the history of a conversation that I
have to flip that pile of papers over and start from the bottom.  I
always wondered why that was.  It made more work then, it still does.

Makes perfect sense.

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-24 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Mon, 23 Mar 2009 22:46:15 -0400, James Skinner wrote:

 Man. Is this thread really going to continue??

As long as people have something to say, yes. Now it can be forked into a
no-top-posting discussion too, so you have helped prolong it that much
longer :)


-- 
Neil Bothwick

If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate. *
Wright


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on? - top posting

2009-03-24 Thread KH
Dale schrieb:
 James Skinner wrote:
   
 Man. Is this thread really going to continue??

   
 

 If you are not careful, you will get someone on the no top posting
 soapbox.  LOL  This is a educational channel and there are teachers and
 learners.  I'm the learner.  We can however change the subject line if
 you wish?

 Dale

 :-)  :-) 

 P. S.  This has a lot of humor in it.  Please laugh a LOT !!

   
I was just searching for this top posting message ... lol

And I also learnd a lot reading this post.

kh



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-24 Thread Stroller


On 24 Mar 2009, at 02:34, Albert Hopkins wrote:


On Mon, 2009-03-23 at 18:58 -0500, Dale wrote:

Albert Hopkins wrote:

On Sun, 2009-03-22 at 22:18 -0500, Dale wrote:


Neil Bothwick wrote:


On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 19:26:40 -0500, Dale wrote:




emerge -pvDu --reinstall changed-use @world

??? Certainly a lot more typing. ;-)






Use an alias and it's less typing.






Or add it to make.conf.  I think that would work too.


It would work, every time you called emerge, whether you wanted  
that
option or not.I prefer to have  aliases for commands with  
options that I

call often, but not every time.




I'm not real familiar with aliases but know what it is.  If you  
use the

alias method, how would you disable it for a one time run?



Uh.. you don't disable it.  You simply don't use the alias.





Oh, OK.  Dale waves hand over head.  If it is set up to add that
option, how do you tell it not to use it?


Unless I'm misunderstanding something...

It's not an option. It's an alias.  If you have

   $ alias myalias=emerge --foo --bar --baz

Then to use the alias you simply type

   $ myalias

If you don't want to use the alias, well, don't type it. I.e.

   $ emerge --la --di --dah

or

   $ someotheralias

Or perhaps you don't aren't understanding what shell aliases are?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alias_(command)



Every time you bottom post with more than a page or screenful of  
quoting, a top-posting is justified.


Stroller.





Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-24 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 01:40:51 +, Stroller wrote:

 Every time you bottom post with more than a page or screenful of  
 quoting, a top-posting is justified.

No it's not, but trimming of the quoted text is.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

There are 10 types of people in this world, those who understand binary
notation and those who don't.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-24 Thread Dale
Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Wed, 25 Mar 2009 01:40:51 +, Stroller wrote:

   
 Every time you bottom post with more than a page or screenful of  
 quoting, a top-posting is justified.
 

 No it's not, but trimming of the quoted text is.

   

+1 

I don't mind top posting in private emails but not on the list.  Who is
it with that signature with the backward questions about top posting?

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-23 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 22:18:09 -0500, Dale wrote:

 I'm not real familiar with aliases but know what it is.  If you use the
 alias method, how would you disable it for a one time run? 

If you gave the alias the same name as the command, just use the full
path to the command to call it directly. But in this case, using a
different name for the alias makes much more sense. I have these two
aliases defined

alias smerge='sudo emerge --update --reinstall changed-use --ask @system'
alias wmerge='sudo emerge --update --deep --reinstall changed-use --ask 
--with-bdeps y @world'


-- 
Neil Bothwick

If ignorance is bliss, you must be orgasmic.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-23 Thread Dale
Albert Hopkins wrote:
 On Sun, 2009-03-22 at 22:18 -0500, Dale wrote:
   
 Neil Bothwick wrote:
 
 On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 19:26:40 -0500, Dale wrote:

   
   
 emerge -pvDu --reinstall changed-use @world

 ??? Certainly a lot more typing. ;-)
 
 
   
   
 Use an alias and it's less typing.
   
   
   
   
 Or add it to make.conf.  I think that would work too.
 
 
 It would work, every time you called emerge, whether you wanted that
 option or not.I prefer to have  aliases for commands with options that I
 call often, but not every time.


   
   
 I'm not real familiar with aliases but know what it is.  If you use the
 alias method, how would you disable it for a one time run? 
 

 Uh.. you don't disable it.  You simply don't use the alias.


   

Oh, OK.  Dale waves hand over head.  If it is set up to add that
option, how do you tell it not to use it?

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-23 Thread Hilco Wijbenga
2009/3/23 Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:
 Oh, OK.  Dale waves hand over head.  If it is set up to add that
 option, how do you tell it not to use it?

alias ls='/bin/ls --color'
alias l='ls -l'

With these aliases in your .bashrc (or whatever is appropriate in your
environment), you can now use 'ls' and 'l'. Of course, you already had
'ls' (namely /bin/ls).

If you simply type 'ls' then you are using the alias and you get
colour output. If you don't want colour output you use '/bin/ls' (the
actual binary). Typing 'l' basically runs '/bin/ls --color -l'. If you
don't want that then you don't use 'l'.



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-23 Thread Albert Hopkins
On Mon, 2009-03-23 at 18:58 -0500, Dale wrote:
 Albert Hopkins wrote:
  On Sun, 2009-03-22 at 22:18 -0500, Dale wrote:

  Neil Bothwick wrote:
  
  On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 19:26:40 -0500, Dale wrote:
 


  emerge -pvDu --reinstall changed-use @world
 
  ??? Certainly a lot more typing. ;-)
  
  


  Use an alias and it's less typing.




  Or add it to make.conf.  I think that would work too.
  
  
  It would work, every time you called emerge, whether you wanted that
  option or not.I prefer to have  aliases for commands with options that I
  call often, but not every time.
 
 


  I'm not real familiar with aliases but know what it is.  If you use the
  alias method, how would you disable it for a one time run? 
  
 
  Uh.. you don't disable it.  You simply don't use the alias.
 
 

 
 Oh, OK.  Dale waves hand over head.  If it is set up to add that
 option, how do you tell it not to use it?

Unless I'm misunderstanding something... 

It's not an option. It's an alias.  If you have

$ alias myalias=emerge --foo --bar --baz

Then to use the alias you simply type

$ myalias

If you don't want to use the alias, well, don't type it. I.e.

$ emerge --la --di --dah

or

$ someotheralias

Or perhaps you don't aren't understanding what shell aliases are?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alias_(command)





Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-23 Thread James Skinner
Man. Is this thread really going to continue??

On 3/23/09, Albert Hopkins mar...@letterboxes.org wrote:
 On Mon, 2009-03-23 at 18:58 -0500, Dale wrote:
 Albert Hopkins wrote:
  On Sun, 2009-03-22 at 22:18 -0500, Dale wrote:
 
  Neil Bothwick wrote:
 
  On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 19:26:40 -0500, Dale wrote:
 
 
 
  emerge -pvDu --reinstall changed-use @world
 
  ??? Certainly a lot more typing. ;-)
 
 
 
 
  Use an alias and it's less typing.
 
 
 
 
  Or add it to make.conf.  I think that would work too.
 
 
  It would work, every time you called emerge, whether you wanted that
  option or not.I prefer to have  aliases for commands with options that
  I
  call often, but not every time.
 
 
 
 
  I'm not real familiar with aliases but know what it is.  If you use the
  alias method, how would you disable it for a one time run?
 
 
  Uh.. you don't disable it.  You simply don't use the alias.
 
 
 

 Oh, OK.  Dale waves hand over head.  If it is set up to add that
 option, how do you tell it not to use it?

 Unless I'm misunderstanding something...

 It's not an option. It's an alias.  If you have

 $ alias myalias=emerge --foo --bar --baz

 Then to use the alias you simply type

 $ myalias

 If you don't want to use the alias, well, don't type it. I.e.

 $ emerge --la --di --dah

 or

 $ someotheralias

 Or perhaps you don't aren't understanding what shell aliases are?

 http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alias_(command)





-- 
Sent from my mobile device

James Skinner
james.skin...@gmail.com



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-23 Thread Dale
Hilco Wijbenga wrote:
 2009/3/23 Dale rdalek1...@gmail.com:
   
 Oh, OK.  Dale waves hand over head.  If it is set up to add that
 option, how do you tell it not to use it?
 

 alias ls='/bin/ls --color'
 alias l='ls -l'

 With these aliases in your .bashrc (or whatever is appropriate in your
 environment), you can now use 'ls' and 'l'. Of course, you already had
 'ls' (namely /bin/ls).

 If you simply type 'ls' then you are using the alias and you get
 colour output. If you don't want colour output you use '/bin/ls' (the
 actual binary). Typing 'l' basically runs '/bin/ls --color -l'. If you
 don't want that then you don't use 'l'.


   


Oh, Cool..  I see now.  So basically you sort of change the command as
well.  Now that command that someone else posted makes sense too.

Thanks.

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Dale
Mike Diehl wrote:

 On Saturday 21 March 2009 21:00:11 Dale wrote:

  Mike Kazantsev wrote:

   On Sat, 21 Mar 2009 19:17:53 -0600

  

   Mike Diehl mdi...@diehlnet.com wrote:

   Has Gentoo become such a moving target that it's no longer
 suitable for

   normal, every day, usage?

  

   If you're prepared to update you system at least once a week and

   have up-to-date knowledge of all the installed stuff, so you can at

   least make a decision whether you need some functionality or not...

   Then yep, I'd suggest gentoo.

  

   If you don't care about either then I don't understand why you started

   using it in first place - red hat or debian-based distro would've been

   much easier and simplier.

 

  I don't know if this is still the case or not but Mandrake updates

  seemed like a reinstall on top of itself to me. Sort of like when you

  reinstall windoze. It doesn't delete anything, user wise anyway, but

  just puts all the new stuff in there.

 

  You don't get the latest updates with Mandrake like Gentoo does but that

  doesn't appear to be to important to you since you don't update very

  often anyway. I suspect some other distro may better suite your needs.

  I been using Gentoo for years and update at least weekly and I rarely

  have trouble. However, if you let the updates pile up, you can have

  issues that are difficult to deal with.

 

  Overall, I agree with Mike here. Update regularly or use some other

  distro as he mentioned.

 

  Dale

 

  :-) :-)

 Ok, when I started using Gentoo, I remember a discussion about how
 often to do an emege world and the prevailing wisdom at the time was
 to do it when you needed a new feature, or fix. If the new wisdom is
 to update, say, weekly, I can live with that on the local machines
 here at the home/office. I'm a bit concerned about the servers I have
 co-located out of state, though. On the other hand, those are
 production machines and probably don't need to be upgraded many times
 during their lifetime.

 I've run several other distributions over the years and up until
 recently I've never looked back from Gentoo.

 I ran Slackware back when it came on 3.5 floppies. Of course it had
 NO package manager, so when Redhat hit the scene, I converted.

 Redhat, back then was built for a generic 486, so when Mandrake came
 along with pentium optimizations, I converted.

 But like you said, upgrading Redhat/Mandrake always seemed a bit
 windoze'ish to me. You really were simply piling the upgrade on top of
 the old system, like you said earlier.

 I used Suse on a project at work and hated every minute of it, and the
 help forums were mostly flamefests. Never even considered Suse for
 real work.

 Like I said, I've been using Gentoo for years now. When I met Daniel
 Robbins, I'd already been using Gentoo for several months. Gentoo is
 still the most customizable and optimize-able distribution available.
 Sometimes it's down right elegant.
 http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/10106

 However, lately, Gentoo seems to have been plagued with problems.
 Circular blockers. 32/64 bit libraries. Package re-organization. Others.

 So here is the question: Are these just growing pains, or is this the
 trend with Gentoo? If I resolve to update frequently, will these
 problems become more rare?

 I'll start a new thread to seek help with my MythTV upgrade problem.

 Thanks for listening.

 Mike.


This is my opinion and I am not a dev by any means.  I think Gentoo is
having some growing pains.  I also think it is making huge leaps right
now and they are really making some serious improvements.  The newer
portage will handle most blocks without you doing anything.  There may
be some exceptions to that but I would say the vast majority of blocks
will be dealt with automagically.  They seam to have came up with a way
for portage to handle those blocks that is pretty seamless.  That said,
reading the elog or the messages after a emerge could be more critical. 
I read where someone may have missed a message and rebooted only to find
that something was screwy and would no longer boot.  I'm not sure they
were running stable but either way these things can crop up.  From what
they posted, they had to boot with the CD and fix it.  I sort of like
that part about Gentoo.  So, while portage may handle a lot for you, you
need to run etc-update or whatever you use to update configs after each
update or before you reboot at least. 

I run a single desktop machine here that runs folding and is my surfing
machine.  I could probably go a couple weeks between updates perhaps
even a month and be OK.  I think one to two weeks just seems to be a
sweet spot for me at least.  Long enough that you are not constantly
updating but often enough that you are up to date.  That would be
especially true with regards to Mandrake, or whatever it is called now,
and some others that take a while to update.  They may be doing more
testing or something but takes longer still. 


Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Philip Webb
090321 Mike Diehl wrote:
 Ok now, I'm getting fed up with all of the breakage
 that I've seen in Gentoo in the last few months.

I haven't experienced any such thing.

 I'm trying to upgrade MythTV.

I don't use that, so can't help directly.

 Emerge told me to upgrade my profile, which I did.  

I have (for a 64-bit system with an Intel Core 2 Duo processor) :

  make.profile - ..//usr/portage/profiles/default/linux/amd64/2008.0

 Now I'm doing an emerge -u world.

I never do that: I always do 'emerge -Dup world',
then decide which packages to update  emerge them individually.
I also have a list of all the pkgs I have installed with dates + deps,
which I keep upto-date by hand as I emerge items.
I've never understood why 'emerge world' is considered standard:
repeatedly, there are appeals for help here resulting from its shortcomings
(was it copied from Free BSD when Gentoo was originally created ? ).

 But before I could do that, I had to upgrade portage, with made sense.
 When I go to emerge -u portage, I'm told:
 sys-apps/mktemp (is blocking sys-apps/coreutils-7.1)

My hand-made list of pkgs tells me that I removed Mktemp 080419
 that it had been required for Debianutils,
of which my current version is 2.28.5 installed 090314 .
Others had problems with this block, perhaps 1 year ago,
so if you really are that far behind in updating,
you should search the list archive to see what the advice was back then:
IIRC a new version of Debianutils incorporated the Mktemp stuff,
so they became incompatible.

 So I do 'emerge -C mktemp'  got a whole page of error messages.
 The most basic msgs indicates the system can't load libselinux.so.1.

Do you have an item in 'make.conf' which requires that somewhere ?
Have you run Revdep-rebuild (pretend), to see what needs updating ?
'slocate' finds no similar file on my system.

 All I want to do is upgrade a machine that I built a few months ago.

A few months can be a long time in the Gentoo world (smile).
For a desktop machine, you should do a full update = once/month :
I do it as a matter of routine every Saturday ('eix-sync' + follow-up).

As others have advised, Gentoo is not for people
who want to install  forget: for that, try Mandriva, a respectable distro.

Anyway, I've offered a few hints above: try them  ask again here.

-- 
,,
SUPPORT ___//___,   Philip Webb
ELECTRIC   /] [] [] [] [] []|   Cities Centre, University of Toronto
TRANSIT`-O--O---'   purslowatchassdotutorontodotca




Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 02:58:57 -0400, Philip Webb wrote:

  Now I'm doing an emerge -u world.  
 
 I never do that: I always do 'emerge -Dup world',
 then decide which packages to update  emerge them individually.

I hope you use --oneshot every time or your world file will be a complete
mess by now :(

 I also have a list of all the pkgs I have installed with dates + deps,
 which I keep upto-date by hand as I emerge items.
 I've never understood why 'emerge world' is considered standard:
 repeatedly, there are appeals for help here resulting from its
 shortcomings

One or two problems a week against the thousands of people running it each
day does not indicate a problem. I'd say that avoiding blockers etc by
selectively skipping upgrades is more likely to lead to problems later.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Windows 98, the most installed system in the world, I know, I've done it
5 or 6 times myself.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Alan McKinnon
On Sunday 22 March 2009 07:50:04 Mike Diehl wrote:
 So here is the question:  Are these just growing pains, or is this the
 trend with Gentoo?  If I resolve to update frequently, will these problems
 become more rare?

I've been using Gentoo for 4 years now, my main desktop is still running code 
that I compiled on the first install in 2005. And I'm on my third Gentoo 
notebook in a row. Absurb update issues simply don't happen, as long as you 
follow the rules:

Update weekly on ~arch
Update monthly on arch
Adjust to suit your needs.

You ran into the mktemp issue, which feels about a year old from this corner, 
so Iguess you have not been updating regularly. I'm not sure where you got the 
advice to update only when you need a new feature or a fix, but it is not 
workable in practice.

Gentoo does have issues, but the majority of them are with changes to 
packages, not changes to Gentoo. Remember that with Gentoo you are rebuilding 
a live system on the actual system itself. We don't have build farms that 
rebuild the entire distro and push out new rpms nightly - so the problems that 
can hit Gentoo don't happen to binary distro users.

Take expat. It got an upgrade a long time ago which coudl break Gnome entirely 
if you didn't do it right. There was nothing the devs could do really, because 
that's how those packages were written. The normal case is to have a bare 
machine, build expat, then build Gnome. On Gentoo, you want to do all of this 
while using the Gnome that needs to be rebuilt. If you update regularly, 
you'll find lots of people around who know what the steps are and can help. 
Today, most of us have forgotten and need to turn to Google to find the 
howtos.

If you find this happens more and more often with gentoo, it is probably a  
symptom of more and more useful packages out there, that are being developed 
faster with more features. See it as a sign of success on the part of FLOSS 
rather than a failing of Gentoo.

And I would advise AGAINST gentoo on your out-of-state servers. They need too 
much pampering to keep them stable. I have about 100 machines at work, a 
mixture of 30% FreeBSD, SuSE ugh, some Centos and even a single lone Solaris 
machine. The worst of the lot has to be the SVN server, running Gentoo. No-one 
will touch it anymore, and the last time I did, I broke it horribly with a 
conflict between portage and cpan Perl modules.

-- 
alan dot mckinnon at gmail dot com



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Sat, 21 Mar 2009 23:50:04 -0600, Mike Diehl wrote:

 However, lately, Gentoo seems to have been plagued with problems.
 Circular blockers.  32/64 bit libraries.  Package re-organization.
 Others.

That's inevitable with a versionless distro like Gentoo. With the other
distros you have mentions, when the relationship between two packages
changes, you don't notice because you only make the switch with what is
effectively a re-install. With Gentoo,it is possible to try to upgrade
one of the packages without the other, hence the need for blockers.

 So here is the question:  Are these just growing pains, or is this the
 trend with Gentoo?  If I resolve to update frequently, will these
 problems become more rare?

It is a reducing trend, as portage gets better at resolving things
automatically. The current method of resolving blockers has greatly
reduced the time spent on them compared with a year ago. Frequent updates
are a definite advantage, because when such issues do occur, they happen
one at a time, making resolution much easier (like the mktemp
which only needed a quick emerge -C then carry on). When you save
up several months' worth of minor issues and let them all hit at once, it
becomes more of a hassle to sort out.

You should also run emerge --sync followed by glsa-check at least once a
week to make sure you don't miss out on important security fixes. Another
reason to keep up to date.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Bother, said Pooh, as he drained the vodka bottle dry.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread KH
Hi,
you also have the chance of running emerge -DuavN system. That way you
can be sure that your system is stable without updating every program
you might only need once in a blue moon or you are allready seticfied with.
I would allways have an eye on the GLSA. You can do this in the forum,
with rss or use something like glsa-check -t all

kh



emerge-log (was: Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?)

2009-03-22 Thread Daniel Pielmeier
Philip Webb schrieb am 22.03.2009 07:58:

 I never do that: I always do 'emerge -Dup world',
 then decide which packages to update  emerge them individually.
 I also have a list of all the pkgs I have installed with dates + deps,
 which I keep upto-date by hand as I emerge items.
 I've never understood why 'emerge world' is considered standard:
 repeatedly, there are appeals for help here resulting from its shortcomings
 (was it copied from Free BSD when Gentoo was originally created ? ).
 
 But before I could do that, I had to upgrade portage, with made sense.
 When I go to emerge -u portage, I'm told:
 sys-apps/mktemp (is blocking sys-apps/coreutils-7.1)
 
 My hand-made list of pkgs tells me that I removed Mktemp 080419
  that it had been required for Debianutils,
 of which my current version is 2.28.5 installed 090314 .
 Others had problems with this block, perhaps 1 year ago,
 so if you really are that far behind in updating,
 you should search the list archive to see what the advice was back then:
 IIRC a new version of Debianutils incorporated the Mktemp stuff,
 so they became incompatible.
 

You know that such a list already exists. It is /var/log/emerge.log. To
get useful information out of it app-portage/genlop comes handy.

genlop -u mktemp
 * sys-apps/mktemp

 Sat Mar  3 18:14:30 2007  sys-apps/mktemp-1.5
 Tue Dec 18 01:37:31 2007  sys-apps/mktemp-1.5
 Sat Apr 12 23:15:42 2008  sys-apps/mktemp-1.5

Regards,

Daniel



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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Philip Webb
090322 Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 02:58:57 -0400, Philip Webb wrote:
 Now I'm doing an emerge -u world.  
 I never do that: I always do 'emerge -Dup world',
 then decide which packages to update  emerge them individually.
 I hope you use --oneshot every time
 or your world file will be a complete mess by now :(

Yes, there's always someone who says that (grin).
Of course, it's 2nd nature to check for 'W' or 'S' in my list
 if the pkg has neither, make sure to 'emerge -1 pkgname'.
Anyway, isn't 'world' going to vanish with the new '@' sets ?

 I also have a list of all the pkgs I have installed with dates + deps,
 which I keep upto-date by hand as I emerge items.
 I've never understood why 'emerge world' is considered standard:
 repeatedly, there are appeals for help resulting from its shortcomings.
 One or two problems a week against the thousands of people running it
 each day does not indicate a problem.  I'd say that avoiding blockers etc
 by selectively skipping upgrades is more likely to lead to problems later.

No, people run 'emerge world' in the background, miss the messages
 then run into nasty trouble for omitting RR or 'etc-update'.
That's the spirit of Ubuntu  the rest, not the hands-on Gentoo approach.

-- 
,,
SUPPORT ___//___,   Philip Webb
ELECTRIC   /] [] [] [] [] []|   Cities Centre, University of Toronto
TRANSIT`-O--O---'   purslowatchassdotutorontodotca




Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Peter Alfredsen
On Sat, 21 Mar 2009 19:17:53 -0600
Mike Diehl mdi...@diehlnet.com wrote:

 It seems that as
 long as I keep rebuilding machines from a current live CD, all is
 well.  But if I try to upgrade anything else, I end up having to
 reformat.  I've been using Gentoo long enough to have actually met
 Daniel Robbins in person, but I'm considering moving to a different
 distribution.

I would say that if you do a complete world update at least every six
months, followed by revdep-rebuild, keeping Gentoo up-to-date should be
relatively painless, excluding all the blockers you have to resolve.
ie.:
emerge -uDNav world
revdep-rebuild -i -- -a

The libselinux problems you ran into are known, but that's also the
reason why libselinux is masked on all recent profiles.

/loki_val



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 07:37:50 -0400, Philip Webb wrote:

 090322 Neil Bothwick wrote:

  I hope you use --oneshot every time
  or your world file will be a complete mess by now :(
 
 Yes, there's always someone who says that (grin).

I wouldn't want to disappoint you :)

 Of course, it's 2nd nature to check for 'W' or 'S' in my list
  if the pkg has neither, make sure to 'emerge -1 pkgname'.

I just use -1 whenever I re-emerge anything, whether it's in world or not.

 Anyway, isn't 'world' going to vanish with the new '@' sets ?

No.

  One or two problems a week against the thousands of people running it
  each day does not indicate a problem.  I'd say that avoiding blockers
  etc by selectively skipping upgrades is more likely to lead to
  problems later.

 No, people run 'emerge world' in the background, miss the messages
  then run into nasty trouble for omitting RR or 'etc-update'.

Don't blame hammers because people try to use them to drive screws.

Letting idiots break their systems is a refreshing sign of Gentoo's lack
of idiot-proofing :)


-- 
Neil Bothwick

All mail what i send is thoughly proof-red, definately!


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Dirk Heinrichs
Am Sonntag, 22. März 2009 02:17:53 schrieb Mike Diehl:

 Ok now, I'm getting fed up with all of the breakage that I've seen in
 Gentoo in the last few months.

 I'm trying to upgrade MythTV.  Emerge told me to upgrade my profile, which
 I did.

 Now I'm doing an emerge -u world.

 But before I could do that, I had to upgrade portage, with made sense.

 When I go to emerge -u portage, I'm told:

 sys-apps/mktemp (is blocking sys-apps/coreutils-7.1)

 So I do:
 emerge -C mktemp

Depending on which package you unmerge before the blocker is resolved, this 
can break your system. This is while paludis and newer versions of portage can 
be told to resolve blockers automatically.

 Has Gentoo become such a moving target that it's no longer suitable for
 normal, every day, usage?

Not if you keep it up to date. Then, even a ~arch system is relatively 
painless to use.

 I've got another machine that needs to be upgraded, but hasn't been
 upgraded in some time.  So it's profile is obsolete and many of the core
 packages have been moved around so much that there is no upgrade path from
 where it is now, to where Gentoo is.

There always is. However, the longer the path, the more pitfalls may be on it.

 Is it time to start looking for a new distribution?  It seems that as long
 as I keep rebuilding machines from a current live CD, all is well.

??? I don't understand.

 But if
 I try to upgrade anything else, I end up having to reformat.

That also doesn't make sense.

 I've been
 using Gentoo long enough to have actually met Daniel Robbins in person, but
 I'm considering moving to a different distribution.

dito.

 Remember, all I want to do is upgrade MythTV.

So, then just do it. People here will help you to resolve the issues.

Bye...

Dirk


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Albert Hopkins
On Sun, 2009-03-22 at 12:44 +0100, Peter Alfredsen wrote:
 I would say that if you do a complete world update at least every six
 months, followed by revdep-rebuild, keeping Gentoo up-to-date should
 be
 relatively painless, excluding all the blockers you have to resolve.
 ie.:
 emerge -uDNav world
 revdep-rebuild -i -- -a

I've done this on a machine I hadn't touched in over 6 months.  And,
surprisingly, I was relieved that it came out fine. Though I did have
the advantage of:

  * Having another machine that I upgrade regularly and so know what
to look out for
  * I read and react to, if necessary, the elog messages from the
ebuild chatter (I have them sent to my mailbox)
  * Checking the bug database if I run into a snag
  * General experience on how to maintain a (Gentoo) system

That and, if a particular version does not work out for you, you often
can downgrade to an older version.  Or if you don't like the way
something is built, even with the available USE flags, you can usually
keep a simple patch and keep your own version in a private overlay.  I
love this stuff.  This is why I use Gentoo.

Contrast with another distro I use.  I recently upgraded to version n+1
and am encountering all kinds of problems.  I have versions of software
installed that don't work or don't work the way they used to, but I
can't go back.  I can't install the older versions of packages because
they depend on older versions of libs that no longer exist on version n
+1 (and there are no such thing as SLOTs and revdep-rebuild). And even
if I thought about downgrading the entire distro to version n that
pretty much means a re-install of the entire OS (and then a re-update of
the downgraded OS).   I've submitted two bugs for version n+1 but one
that I submitted in January hasn't even been responded to and the other
was quickly closed as a WONTFIX.

Not to criticize other distros (which is one reason why I didn't even
name it), but my point is that they all have their pluses and minuses.
For me at least, Gentoo comes with fewer minuses and when they do come
they are usually easier to fix/get fixed.  The caveat is that you
actually have to know/care what you're doing.






RE: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread James Homuth
 

-Original Message-
From: Philip Webb [mailto:purs...@ca.inter.net] 
Sent: March 22, 2009 7:38 AM
To: gentoo-user@lists.gentoo.org
Subject: Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

090322 Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 02:58:57 -0400, Philip Webb wrote:
 Now I'm doing an emerge -u world.  
 I never do that: I always do 'emerge -Dup world', then decide which 
 packages to update  emerge them individually.
 I hope you use --oneshot every time
 or your world file will be a complete mess by now :(

Yes, there's always someone who says that (grin).
Of course, it's 2nd nature to check for 'W' or 'S' in my list  if the pkg
has neither, make sure to 'emerge -1 pkgname'.
Anyway, isn't 'world' going to vanish with the new '@' sets ?

 I also have a list of all the pkgs I have installed with dates + 
 deps, which I keep upto-date by hand as I emerge items.
 I've never understood why 'emerge world' is considered standard:
 repeatedly, there are appeals for help resulting from its shortcomings.
 One or two problems a week against the thousands of people running it 
 each day does not indicate a problem.  I'd say that avoiding blockers 
 etc by selectively skipping upgrades is more likely to lead to problems
later.

No, people run 'emerge world' in the background, miss the messages  then
run into nasty trouble for omitting RR or 'etc-update'.
That's the spirit of Ubuntu  the rest, not the hands-on Gentoo approach.

I run emerge world in the background and still run etc-update when I'm told
to. Crontab emails plus portage's --quiet flag are awesome. Speaking of
that, going to run that now.




Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Dale
Philip Webb wrote:
 090322 Neil Bothwick wrote:
   
 On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 02:58:57 -0400, Philip Webb wrote:
 
 Now I'm doing an emerge -u world.  
 
 I never do that: I always do 'emerge -Dup world',
 then decide which packages to update  emerge them individually.
   
 I hope you use --oneshot every time
 or your world file will be a complete mess by now :(
 

 Yes, there's always someone who says that (grin).
 Of course, it's 2nd nature to check for 'W' or 'S' in my list
  if the pkg has neither, make sure to 'emerge -1 pkgname'.
 Anyway, isn't 'world' going to vanish with the new '@' sets ?
   

Nope, they are still there and the sets are working too. 


Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Dale
Philip Webb wrote:
 090322 Neil Bothwick wrote:
   
 On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 02:58:57 -0400, Philip Webb wrote:
 
 Now I'm doing an emerge -u world.  
 
 I never do that: I always do 'emerge -Dup world',
 then decide which packages to update  emerge them individually.
   
 I hope you use --oneshot every time
 or your world file will be a complete mess by now :(
 

 Yes, there's always someone who says that (grin).
 Of course, it's 2nd nature to check for 'W' or 'S' in my list
  if the pkg has neither, make sure to 'emerge -1 pkgname'.
 Anyway, isn't 'world' going to vanish with the new '@' sets ?
   

Nope, they are still there and the sets are working too. 


Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Mark Knecht
On Sat, Mar 21, 2009 at 6:17 PM, Mike Diehl mdi...@diehlnet.com wrote:
 Ok now, I'm getting fed up with all of the breakage that I've seen in Gentoo
 in the last few months.


Understood and personally felt.

SNIP

 emerge -C mktemp


Generally a *very* bad move unless you are *absolutely* sure that what
you are removing is not needed to keep the system working.

SNIP

 Has Gentoo become such a moving target that it's no longer suitable for
 normal, every day, usage?

OK, I'm a putz who has used Gentoo now for (I think) 8-9 years. I'm
not a developer, a programmer or a sys admin. Keep that in mind.

Gentoo goes through phases of relative stability interrupted by
periods of time where major problems dominate. (As seen by users, not
the Lords of Gentoo (LoG)) Personally I think we're in one of those
unfortunate periods of time where there is a relatively high number of
issues. I'm seeing it on all my machines. It's taking far more of my
time to deal with this than I wish it would.

1) ntp-update problems at boot time.
2) emerge -DuN world building lots of packages that are already on the
system but the LoG has apparently changed flags so emerge wants to
rebuild them.
3) New and unclear (to me) messages about portage flag overrides
caused by overlays I've been using for a while.

Am I frustrated like you? Yep. Very much so. Am I considering using
something else? Quite a few thoughts. Do I think there's a better
distro? Not that I know of.

My workload:

1) Gentoo 64-bit desktop
2) Gentoo 32-bit desktop
3) Gentoo 32-bit mythbackend
4) Gentoo 32-bit mythfrontend
5) Gentoo 32-bit mythfrontend

Cheers,
Mark



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 13:23:38 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:

 2) emerge -DuN world building lots of packages that are already on the
 system but the LoG has apparently changed flags so emerge wants to
 rebuild them.

Don't use --newuse, use --reinstall changed-use.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Most software is about as user-friendly as a cornered rat!


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Albert Hopkins
On Sun, 2009-03-22 at 13:23 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:
 Personally I think we're in one of those
 unfortunate periods of time where there is a relatively high number of
 issues. I'm seeing it on all my machines. It's taking far more of my
 time to deal with this than I wish it would.
 
 1) ntp-update problems at boot time.

Hmm,  I'm not having any ntp-update problems on my machines.  Have you
submitted a bug report or searched the bug database?  Obviously this
isn't happening for everyone so if the right people don't know about it
then you can't expect it to get fixed.

 2) emerge -DuN world building lots of packages that are already on the
 system but the LoG has apparently changed flags so emerge wants to
 rebuild them.

But that's what -N does! That's what it's documented to do. RTFM. If you
don't want that behavior then don't use -N.  Either use --reinstall
changed-use or don't use any USE-specific flags.  Personally I just let
portage re-install as it doesn't really change anything if you haven't
changed your use flags.

 3) New and unclear (to me) messages about portage flag overrides
 caused by overlays I've been using for a while.

These are probably warnings about overlays overriding settings in the
regular portage profile.  Some overlays do this.  It's just a fact of
life.  Again, if you don't want to deal with it then don't use overlays
or at least choose overlays that don't do potentially bad things. It's
not the Gentoo devs responsibility if you bring in 3rd-party overlays
that change stuff.

So with the possible exception of #1, these appear to be but it hurts
when I do that problems, not issues with Gentoo stability.






Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Mark Knecht
On Sun, Mar 22, 2009 at 1:45 PM, Neil Bothwick n...@digimed.co.uk wrote:
 On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 13:23:38 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:

 2) emerge -DuN world building lots of packages that are already on the
 system but the LoG has apparently changed flags so emerge wants to
 rebuild them.

 Don't use --newuse, use --reinstall changed-use.


 --
 Neil Bothwick

Neil,
   As always, thanks.

   So, is this option new in the last few years or something? I
haven't seen it before.

   Also, it seems that there's no shortcut for that command so instead of

emerge -pvDuN @world

if I understand then I might try

emerge -pvDu --reinstall changed-use @world

??? Certainly a lot more typing. ;-)

Thanks. I'll check it out on the next round up updates.

Cheers,
Mark



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Mark Knecht
On Sun, Mar 22, 2009 at 1:55 PM, Albert Hopkins mar...@letterboxes.org wrote:
 On Sun, 2009-03-22 at 13:23 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:
 Personally I think we're in one of those
 unfortunate periods of time where there is a relatively high number of
 issues. I'm seeing it on all my machines. It's taking far more of my
 time to deal with this than I wish it would.

 1) ntp-update problems at boot time.

 Hmm,  I'm not having any ntp-update problems on my machines.  Have you
 submitted a bug report or searched the bug database?  Obviously this
 isn't happening for everyone so if the right people don't know about it
 then you can't expect it to get fixed.

There's something going on here but I haven't tried to debug it. It's
more like ntp isn't finding servers. some machines work. Others don't.
timeouts waiting to boot. I need to find out where server names are
set and then see if there is a difference between all my machines.

No, I haven't filed a bug because:

1) I haven't figured out if it's my problem or Gentoo's yet
2) I have the impression that no one is reading or responding to bug
reports these days, based on my generally negative view of how portage
is being handled. But that's just my impression and not really worthy
of a discussion because it's all free labor and free software to me so
why should I complain?


 2) emerge -DuN world building lots of packages that are already on the
 system but the LoG has apparently changed flags so emerge wants to
 rebuild them.

 But that's what -N does! That's what it's documented to do. RTFM. If you
 don't want that behavior then don't use -N.  Either use --reinstall
 changed-use or don't use any USE-specific flags.  Personally I just let
 portage re-install as it doesn't really change anything if you haven't
 changed your use flags.

Thanks.


 3) New and unclear (to me) messages about portage flag overrides
 caused by overlays I've been using for a while.

 These are probably warnings about overlays overriding settings in the
 regular portage profile.  Some overlays do this.  It's just a fact of
 life.  Again, if you don't want to deal with it then don't use overlays
 or at least choose overlays that don't do potentially bad things. It's
 not the Gentoo devs responsibility if you bring in 3rd-party overlays
 that change stuff.

 So with the possible exception of #1, these appear to be but it hurts
 when I do that problems, not issues with Gentoo stability.

I won't bother responding to the above.

Thanks,
Mark



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Stroller


On 22 Mar 2009, at 22:07, Mark Knecht wrote:

...
1) ntp-update problems at boot time.


Hmm,  I'm not having any ntp-update problems on my machines.  Have  
you

submitted a bug report or searched the bug database?  Obviously this
isn't happening for everyone so if the right people don't know  
about it

then you can't expect it to get fixed.


There's something going on here but I haven't tried to debug it. It's
more like ntp isn't finding servers. some machines work. Others don't.
timeouts waiting to boot. I need to find out where server names are
set and then see if there is a difference between all my machines.


Not sure if this helps:
http://forum.soft32.com/linux/gentoo-user-init-ntpd-ntp-client-ftopict476010.html

Stroller.




Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Dale
Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 15:02:12 -0700, Mark Knecht wrote:

   
Also, it seems that there's no shortcut for that command so instead
 of

 emerge -pvDuN @world

 if I understand then I might try

 emerge -pvDu --reinstall changed-use @world

 ??? Certainly a lot more typing. ;-)
 

 Use an alias and it's less typing.


   

Or add it to make.conf.  I think that would work too.

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Neil Bothwick
On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 19:26:40 -0500, Dale wrote:

  emerge -pvDu --reinstall changed-use @world
 
  ??? Certainly a lot more typing. ;-)

  Use an alias and it's less typing.

 Or add it to make.conf.  I think that would work too.

It would work, every time you called emerge, whether you wanted that
option or not.I prefer to have  aliases for commands with options that I
call often, but not every time.


-- 
Neil Bothwick

Windows Error #09: Game Over. Exiting Windows.


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Dale
Neil Bothwick wrote:
 On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 19:26:40 -0500, Dale wrote:

   
 emerge -pvDu --reinstall changed-use @world

 ??? Certainly a lot more typing. ;-)
 

   
 Use an alias and it's less typing.
   

   
 Or add it to make.conf.  I think that would work too.
 

 It would work, every time you called emerge, whether you wanted that
 option or not.I prefer to have  aliases for commands with options that I
 call often, but not every time.


   

I'm not real familiar with aliases but know what it is.  If you use the
alias method, how would you disable it for a one time run? 

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-22 Thread Albert Hopkins
On Sun, 2009-03-22 at 22:18 -0500, Dale wrote:
 Neil Bothwick wrote:
  On Sun, 22 Mar 2009 19:26:40 -0500, Dale wrote:
 

  emerge -pvDu --reinstall changed-use @world
 
  ??? Certainly a lot more typing. ;-)
  
 

  Use an alias and it's less typing.

 

  Or add it to make.conf.  I think that would work too.
  
 
  It would work, every time you called emerge, whether you wanted that
  option or not.I prefer to have  aliases for commands with options that I
  call often, but not every time.
 
 

 
 I'm not real familiar with aliases but know what it is.  If you use the
 alias method, how would you disable it for a one time run? 

Uh.. you don't disable it.  You simply don't use the alias.





[gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-21 Thread Mike Diehl
Ok now, I'm getting fed up with all of the breakage that I've seen in Gentoo 
in the last few months.

I'm trying to upgrade MythTV.  Emerge told me to upgrade my profile, which I 
did.  

Now I'm doing an emerge -u world. 

But before I could do that, I had to upgrade portage, with made sense.

When I go to emerge -u portage, I'm told:

sys-apps/mktemp (is blocking sys-apps/coreutils-7.1)

So I do:
emerge -C mktemp

Now I've gotten a whole page of error messages.  The most basic of error 
messages indicates that the system can't load libselinux.so.1.

I'm not using SElinux  Nor do I want to.

All I want to do is upgrade a machine that I built a few months ago.  In fact, 
all I want to do is upgrade a SINGLE PACKAGE on that machine!!!

Has Gentoo become such a moving target that it's no longer suitable for 
normal, every day, usage?

I've got another machine that needs to be upgraded, but hasn't been upgraded 
in some time.  So it's profile is obsolete and many of the core packages have 
been moved around so much that there is no upgrade path from where it is now, 
to where Gentoo is.

Is it time to start looking for a new distribution?  It seems that as long as 
I keep rebuilding machines from a current live CD, all is well.  But if I try 
to upgrade anything else, I end up having to reformat.  I've been using Gentoo 
long enough to have actually met Daniel Robbins in person, but I'm considering 
moving to a different distribution.

Remember, all I want to do is upgrade MythTV.

Mike.


Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-21 Thread Mike Kazantsev
On Sat, 21 Mar 2009 19:17:53 -0600
Mike Diehl mdi...@diehlnet.com wrote:

 Has Gentoo become such a moving target that it's no longer suitable for 
 normal, every day, usage?

If you're prepared to update you system at least once a week and
have up-to-date knowledge of all the installed stuff, so you can at
least make a decision whether you need some functionality or not...
Then yep, I'd suggest gentoo.

If you don't care about either then I don't understand why you started
using it in first place - red hat or debian-based distro would've been
much easier and simplier.

-- 
Mike Kazantsev // fraggod.net


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Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-21 Thread Dale
Mike Kazantsev wrote:
 On Sat, 21 Mar 2009 19:17:53 -0600
 Mike Diehl mdi...@diehlnet.com wrote:

   
 Has Gentoo become such a moving target that it's no longer suitable for 
 normal, every day, usage?
 

 If you're prepared to update you system at least once a week and
 have up-to-date knowledge of all the installed stuff, so you can at
 least make a decision whether you need some functionality or not...
 Then yep, I'd suggest gentoo.

 If you don't care about either then I don't understand why you started
 using it in first place - red hat or debian-based distro would've been
 much easier and simplier.

   

I don't know if this is still the case or not but Mandrake updates
seemed like a reinstall on top of itself to me.  Sort of like when you
reinstall windoze.  It doesn't delete anything, user wise anyway, but
just puts all the new stuff in there. 

You don't get the latest updates with Mandrake like Gentoo does but that
doesn't appear to be to important to you since you don't update very
often anyway.  I suspect some other distro may better suite your needs. 
I been using Gentoo for years and update at least weekly and I rarely
have trouble.  However, if you let the updates pile up, you can have
issues that are difficult to deal with.

Overall, I agree with Mike here.  Update regularly or use some other
distro as he mentioned. 

Dale

:-)  :-) 



Re: [gentoo-user] Time to move on?

2009-03-21 Thread Mike Diehl
On Saturday 21 March 2009 21:00:11 Dale wrote:
 Mike Kazantsev wrote:
  On Sat, 21 Mar 2009 19:17:53 -0600
 
  Mike Diehl mdi...@diehlnet.com wrote:
  Has Gentoo become such a moving target that it's no longer suitable for
  normal, every day, usage?
 
  If you're prepared to update you system at least once a week and
  have up-to-date knowledge of all the installed stuff, so you can at
  least make a decision whether you need some functionality or not...
  Then yep, I'd suggest gentoo.
 
  If you don't care about either then I don't understand why you started
  using it in first place - red hat or debian-based distro would've been
  much easier and simplier.

 I don't know if this is still the case or not but Mandrake updates
 seemed like a reinstall on top of itself to me.  Sort of like when you
 reinstall windoze.  It doesn't delete anything, user wise anyway, but
 just puts all the new stuff in there.

 You don't get the latest updates with Mandrake like Gentoo does but that
 doesn't appear to be to important to you since you don't update very
 often anyway.  I suspect some other distro may better suite your needs.
 I been using Gentoo for years and update at least weekly and I rarely
 have trouble.  However, if you let the updates pile up, you can have
 issues that are difficult to deal with.

 Overall, I agree with Mike here.  Update regularly or use some other
 distro as he mentioned.

 Dale

 :-)  :-)

Ok, when I started using Gentoo, I remember a discussion about how often to do 
an emege world and the prevailing wisdom at the time was to do it when you 
needed a new feature, or fix.  If the new wisdom is to update, say, weekly, I 
can live with that on the local machines here at the home/office.  I'm a bit 
concerned about the servers I have co-located out of state, though.  On the 
other hand, those are production machines and probably don't need to be 
upgraded many times during their lifetime. 

I've run several other distributions over the years and up until recently I've 
never looked back from Gentoo.

I ran Slackware back when it came on 3.5 floppies.  Of course it had NO 
package manager, so when Redhat hit the scene, I converted.

Redhat, back then was built for a generic 486, so when Mandrake came along 
with pentium optimizations, I converted.

But like you said, upgrading Redhat/Mandrake always seemed a bit windoze'ish 
to me.  You really were simply piling the upgrade on top of the old system, 
like you said earlier.

I used Suse on a project at work and hated every minute of it, and the help 
forums were mostly flamefests.  Never even considered Suse for real work.

Like I said, I've been using Gentoo for years now.  When I met Daniel Robbins, 
I'd already been using Gentoo for several months.  Gentoo is still the most 
customizable and optimize-able distribution available.  Sometimes it's down 
right elegant.  http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/10106

However, lately, Gentoo seems to have been plagued with problems.  Circular 
blockers.  32/64 bit libraries.  Package re-organization.  Others.

So here is the question:  Are these just growing pains, or is this the trend 
with Gentoo?  If I resolve to update frequently, will these problems become 
more rare?

I'll start a new thread to seek help with my MythTV upgrade problem.

Thanks for listening.

Mike.